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Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Four Seasons by Tony Geiss Tommy DeVito Dies: The Four Seasons Cofounder & ‘’ Inspiration Was 92. Tommy DeVito, a founding member and lead guitarist of chart-topping 1960s vocal group the Four Seasons and the inspiration for a key character in the 2005 jukebox musical Jersey Boys and its 2014 movie adaptation, died Monday nioght from complications related to COVID-19 in Las Vegas. He was 92. His death was announced by his friend, the actor Alfred Nittoli, in a Facebook post Tuesday. Four Seasons frontman and keyboardist- tweeted a joint statement: “It is with great sadness that we report that Tommy DeVito, a founding member of the Four Seasons, has passed. We send our love to his family during this most difficult time. He will be missed by all who loved him.” Formed from previous doo-wop group — which featured both baritone DeVito and, with his instantly recognizable falsetto, Valli — the Four Seasons took their new name in 1960. The founding, classic lineup included DeVito, Valli, Gaudio and producer-singer . By 1962, the group topped the charts with its hit “Sherry,” written by Gaudio and featuring what would become the signature sound: Valli’s wide- ranging, falsetto-reaching vocals harmonizing with DeVito’s baritone. One of the few American doo-wop groups to stand strong against -led British Invasion, the Four Seasons would, within the next five years, follow “Sherry” with such hits as “Big Girls Don’t Cry,” “Walk Like a Man,” “Rag Doll,” — all four of which hit No.1 on the — “Candy Girl,” “ (Go Away), “Let’s Hang On” and “Working My Way Back to You.” DeVito, a native of Belleville, NJ., left the group in 1970, publicly blaming a hearing problem for his departure. In reality, gambling debts to loan sharks and tax issues were behind his exit, with Valli and Gaudio reportedly assuming his debts and buying him out of the group. DeVito’s troubles and his strained friendships within the band would become a central storyline in Jersey Boys , the long-running Broadway musical with songs by Gaudio and Crewe and a book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice. (DeVito was played by Christian Hoff in the original Broadway cast and by The Sopranos alum Vincent Piazza in ’s 2014 film adaptation.) “I’m not proud of what I did,” DeVito said in a 2014 interview with NJ.com. “I’m not ashamed of it either.” It is with great sadness that we report that Tommy DeVito, a founding member of The Four Seasons, has passed. We send our love to his family during this most difficult time. He will be missed by all who loved him.⁰⁰- Frankie Valli & Bob Gaudio — Frankie (@frankievalli) September 22, 2020. The Four Seasons. Although they were one of the very biggest rock & roll groups of the 1960s, the Four Seasons -- unlike, say, the Beatles, Rolling Stones, or the Byrds -- don't excite automatic respect from listeners and critics. A big factor is their most distinguishing trademark, the high falsetto vocals of their lead singer, Frankie Valli. Many also found their material -- romantic tunes with tightly arranged group harmonies that updated the doo wop ethos into the '60s -- a little too clean-cut. Whatever your feelings about the group, though, there's no denying their considerable importance. No other white American group of the time, save the Beach Boys, boasted such intricate harmonies, though the Four Seasons were much more firmly in the Italian-American doo wop tradition. Their uptown production values were contemporary and, in certain respects, innovative. The R&B influence in their music was large, and some of their early singles enjoyed success with the R&B audience. They were immensely successful, making the Top Ten 13 times between 1962 and 1967 with hits like "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Dawn," "Rag Doll," and "Let's Hang On." The Four Seasons had been around for a long time before they had their first hit in 1962. Frankie Valli had made his first record way back in 1953, and in 1956 made a little noise with the Four Lovers' "Apple of My Eye." The Newark, New Jersey group also included future Four Season Tommy DeVito on guitar and on bass, and in subsequent years Valli would record flops for RCA, Decca, Cindy, and Gone, sometimes as a soloist, sometimes with groups. In the early '60s, the group, now known as the Four Seasons, were doing backup vocals for other artists. producer Bob Crewe started working with the Seasons in 1962, and his contributions would be inestimable in the following years. Not only did he produce all of their big '60s hits, but he would write much of their material in collaboration with group member Bob Gaudio. It was Valli's near-soprano, though, that dominated their number one hit "Sherry," as it would on the rest of their hits. "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Walk Like a Man," and "Candy Girl" all followed within the next year -- big smashes all, the first two (like "Sherry") featuring stomping, almost martial handclaps. "Candy Girl" offered evidence of versatility, with its samba-like rhythms and glissando flourishes. The British Invasion did little to diminish the Seasons' fortunes, at least initially. In 1964, they moved from Vee-Jay (which also, for a brief time, had rights to the Beatles) to Philips. Their production became more sophisticated and dramatic while remaining unabashedly pop, and in 1964 they had several of their biggest hits: "Dawn," "Ronnie," "Rag Doll," "," and "" (as well as a B-side gem, "Silence Is Golden," which would be a hit in 1967 for ). The Four Seasons' influence, oddly, was also felt on a couple of tracks by the biggest British Invasion bands: the Beatles' "Tell Me Why" and the Rolling Stones' "The Singer Not the Song" both launched into ear-straining falsettos at points, whether as a satire, tribute, or both. The Seasons' winning streak continued through 1967, although they would never again be as huge. "Let's Hang On," "Working My Way Back to You," "Opus 17," "I've Got You Under My Skin," "Beggin'," and "Marianne" were all big hits, though, working in some mild soul influences. Just for kicks, they released a couple of silly singles under a pseudonym, the Wonder Who?, that even pre-teens quickly identified as the Seasons in disguise. The Wonder Who?'s 1965 Top 20 hit, "Don't Think Twice," easily qualifies as the most incongruous Dylan cover ever to hit the Top 40. Guitar-oriented, more socially conscious rock and soul had been making inroads into the Four Seasons' audience for a while, but the times really caught up with them by the end of 1967. The group would only make the Top 40 one more time before their mid-'70s comeback. In the late '60s, Valli, while maintaining his position in the Seasons, had kicked off a solo career that went straight for the heart of showbiz pop with his biggest single, the number two hit "Can't Take My Eyes Off You." The Four Seasons did attempt to address social concerns of the day on the late-'60s album Genuine Imitation Life Gazette, but it was not generally well received. The Four Seasons struggled into the '70s; by the time they signed with a Motown subsidiary in 1971, Valli and Gaudio were the only original members left. They briefly returned to the top of the charts in the mid-'70s with "" and the nostalgic "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)"; at the same time, Valli had a resurgence as a soloist, reaching number one with "" and making the Top Ten with "Swearin' to God." It couldn't last, though; they couldn't turn back the clock to December 1963, when they reigned as the most successful white rock group in the world, unaware of the oncoming invasion of the Beatles. Still, Valli's full-time solo career was given an enormous boost when he was chosen to sing the newly written Barry Gibb title song for the movie version of the Broadway musical Grease; the single rose to number one in August 1978. Sporadic Four Seasons reunion tours followed in the '80s and '90s, some with Valli and some without. The group also recorded, releasing Streetfighter in 1985 and Hope + Glory in 1992, both of which contemporized the group's sounds. During the 2000s, Valli and Gaudio were involved in developing the Four Seasons story into a Broadway musical, a stage biography based on the lives and careers of Valli, Tommy DeVito, Massi, and Gaudio. Jersey Boys became the hit of the 2005-2006 season, winning the Tony Award for best musical. The show, and its inevitable film version released in 2014, helped revitalize the group's career. Tommy DeVito died on September 21, 2020, due to complications from the COVID-19 virus. He was 92 years old. Tommy DeVito, founding member of The Four Seasons, dead at 92. Fox News Flash top entertainment and celebrity headlines are here. Check out what's clicking today in entertainment. Tommy DeVito, one of the four original members of the band The Four Seasons, has died. He was 92. DeVito's friend actor Alfred Nittoli announced the news Tuesday on Facebook. "My dear friend Tommy passed away in Las Vegas at 9:45 last night with deep regret I am writing this sitting in his living room," he wrote alongside a photo of the entertainer. "I was informed by his daughter Darcel there will be a service in New Jersey." Tommy DeVito has died at the age of 92. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Caesars) DeVito's former bandmate Frankie Valli also wrote a post on Facebook on behalf of himself and band member singer-keyboardist Bob Gaudio. "We send our love to his family during this most difficult time," the post read. "He will be missed by all who loved him." NJ.com reported that DeVito died from the coronavirus. The Four Seasons pose for a group portrait in 1964. From left: Tommy DeVito, Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio and Nick Massi. (Photo by GAB Archive/Redferns via Getty Images) DeVito, Valli, Gaudio and Nick Massi founded the American rock and pop band the Four Seasons in 1960 and went on to create such hit songs as "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Sherry" and "Walk Like a Man." The band inspired the 2005 Broadway musical "Jersey Boys." The musical eventually won a Tony Award for best musical, a Grammy Award for best cast album, and was made into a feature film. DeVito was a baritone vocalist and lead guitarist for the group. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1990. Tony Geiss. Tony Geiss is a producer, staff writer, executive producer and songwriter of , Madeline and related productions, he teams up with . Geiss conceptualized the Honkers (based on his own childhood habit of honking noses), Abby Cadabby and Ken Strawberry. Geiss' early TV career was spend in London scripting The David Frost Show and first joined Children's Television Workshop as a writer on the health series Feelin' Good. He also scripted television specials and revues for the likes of Dick Cavett and Bill Cosby. In the 1980s, after scripting Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird as his cinematic debut, Geiss and Freudberg co-wrote the Academy Award-winning Animated features and The Land Before Time . Freudberg and Geiss also wrote the Screenplay for Madeline: Lost in Paris , again with Don Bluth. They won Academy Award categories include Best Original Screenplay, Best Original Score, Best Original Song and Best Picture, his first Academy Award was for Don't Eat the Pictures. He is also credited as head writer of for several Sesame Street home videos and Madeline . His Father Anthony Geiss was a painter and an animator, while his Mother Marjorie Thirer was a press agent and Composer. Geiss grew up in Greenwich Village, spending two years as a rardar technician for the US Navy, before attending Cornell University from 1943 to 1946. He began acting in theater productions in his freshman years. His Wife Phyllis Eisen was met on Campus. They gave birth to 12 Children, 6 Girls and 6 Boys. He began writing at Disney in Movies like Song of the South , Lady and the Tramp , The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and Alice in Wonderland . He also began composing and songwriting in Alice in Wonderland , Mary Poppins and Lady and the Tramp . Tommy DeVito, founding member of the Four Seasons, dies from COVID-19 at 92. "I will always remember him for his great voice and for the character that he was," said longtime friend of DeVito. Tommy DeVito, a founding member of the popular doo-wop group the Four Seasons, died Monday night of complications from COVID-19. He was 92. DeVito was being treated at Siena St. Rose Dominican Hospital in Henderson, Nev., for weeks and was on a ventilator until he died, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal . Frankie Valli and Bob Gaudio of the Four Seasons sent their condolences to DeVito's family in a statement provided to EW. "It is with great sadness that we report that Tommy DeVito, a founding member of the Four Seasons, has passed," the statement said. "We send our love to his family during this most difficult time. He will be missed by all who loved him." Joe Pesci, who honored DeVito in 1990 by having his character in Goodfellas named after him, is also in mourning. "I was greatly saddened to hear this morning of the passing of my lifelong friend Tommy DeVito," Pesci said in a statement. "He was truly a gifted musician who dedicated his life to making people happy through his music. The time he spent as part of the Four Seasons produced some of the most iconic music of that era and continues to inspire young musicians to this day. I will always remember him for his great voice and for the character that he was. My heartfelt condolences go out to his family and loyal fans. I will never forget him. RIP." Longtime friend and actor Alfredo Nitolli, who starred alongside DeVito in The Good Shepherd , said services for the performer would be forthcoming in New Jersey. "My dear friend Tommy passed away in Las Vegas at 9:45 last night with deep regret I am writing this sitting in his living room I was informed by his daughter Darcel there will be a service in New Jersey," he wrote on Facebook on Tuesday. DeVito, born Gaetano DeVito, not only served as guitarist and singer in the Four Seasons in the '60s but was also their manager before abruptly departing in 1970. The behind-the-scenes drama that led to his disassociation with the group played out for audiences in Jersey Boys , a hit Broadway play that was later adapted for the big screen. DeVito said that his portrayal in the film was "around 75% right." "I left [the group] because I had had enough," DeVito told the Las Vegas Sun in 2008. "I had it up to here with the road and the group." During DeVito's tenure with the Four Seasons, they found success with songs including "Sherry," Big Girls Don't Cry," and "Walk Like a Man." He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame alongside his bandmates in 1990, and the in 1999.