Irish singer Eileen Reid has had a career that might've made a wonderful
movie, or a mini-series, except for the fact that no one would believe
the story of a career that took her from singing in Irish showbands in
the early 1960s, turning her into one of the most popular singers in Ireland
while scarcely in her twenties; to the theatrical stage in Dublin during
the 1970s and 1980s; and into a Carmelite religious order in the 1990s,
even as she also did filmwork. Born in Dublin during 1943, the fourth oldest
of seven children, she was the daughter of Charlie Reid, an international-level
football player for Ireland. She was educated at St. Bridget's Holy Faith
School from ages 4 to 15 -- upon leaving school, Reid worked for a time
at a clothing factory, and later for a biscuit factory. While working for
the clothes manufacturer, she was asked by a friend to sing at a concert
he'd organized, and proved impressive enough to get other invitations.
Soon Reid was fronting a local Dublin band, singing two nights a week for
a few dollars' remuneration. By age 16, she'd tripled this figure, and
soon moved up to a group called the Melody Makers, whose engagements took
her outside of Dublin for the first time. By then, Reid was having trouble
juggling her musical commitments with her day job at the biscuit-makers.
She broke into Dublin's booming showband scene at an event sponsored by
her employer, which included a performance by the Blue Clavons, one of
the more popular groups of the period -- they were persuaded to allow her
to sing a couple of numbers with them, and one of the members helped lead
her to an opening for a singer's spot with a rival band called the Cadets.
Reid passed the audition and joined the band, whose look was unusual, to
say the least -- they wore naval uniforms, in keeping with their name.
The other members of the band were Patrick Murphy on harmonica, Paddy Burns
on vocals and trumpet, Jas Fagan on trombone, Gerry Hayes on piano, Brendan
O'Connell on lead guitar, William Devey playing drums, and Jimmy Day --
whom Reid would later marry -- on tenor saxophone and guitar. From two
nights a week, Reid was now working six nights a week, often up to five
hours at a stretch, and she became a star -- female lead vocalists were
unusual to star with among the showbands, and with her good looks and outsized
beehive-style hair, she cut an enticing visual as well as musical figure
with the group. From 1962 through 1966, Reid was voted the top vocalist
in Ireland, and the group's fortunes reflected this string of honors. The
Cadets were good enough to rate a spot on Johnny Cash's and June Carter
Cash's tour of Ireland in the fall of 1963, and got a special introduction
to the Beatles when the Liverpool group made their first Irish tour later
the same year. Even more astonishing, in early 1964 -- a time when, admittedly,
any five guys from that side of the Atlantic with mop-top hair and a beat
could be brought to the United States as potential stars -- the Cadets
got a month-long tour of the United States. They later reached the Top
10 in Dublin with "Fallen Star," the first Irish showband with a female
lead singer to crack that summit of the sales charts. And Reid was as astonished
as anyone when the song topped the national charts in Ireland in the spring
of 1964. The follow-up, "I Gave My Wedding Dress Away," was also a huge
hit, and led to the recording of a debut LP entitled The Cadets. And in
late 1964, Pye Records tried Reid in a distinctly American girl group musical
setting when it released "Chapel of Love" in a rendition credited to Eileen
Reid & the Cadets -- Reid was convincingly soulful, if not quite in
the league of the Dixie Cups, but the record failed to dent the charts
in England. They enjoyed a third hit single in Ireland with "Are You Teasin',"
and they also scraped the lower reaches of the British charts for a week
in 1965 with "Jealous Heart." She continued with the group until 1967 when
she married Day and chose to give up performing with the band. The Cadets
broke up in 1970 and Reid and her husband left the music business, apart
from the occasional cabaret performance as a duet. By the second half of
the 1970s, however, she was back, this time as an actress on-stage, under
the aegis of director Noel Pearson, who put her into the musical You Ain't
Heard Nothin' Yet, which led to her work in pantomime. By the 1980s, she
and her husband were back in music, as songwriters as well as performers,
and Reid enjoyed new success on-stage throughout the decade. Her personal
life, however, was left in shambles as she engaged in a series of extra-marital
affairs that led to a miscarriage of another man's child and a crisis of
faith for her. Reid's marriage survived, and she turned toward religion
in the early 1990s and chose to join the Carmelite order as a lay follower.
She has continued to act, in films as well as on-stage, portraying Imelda's
mother in Alan Parker's The Commitments, and a woman suffering from smallpox
in the 1996 version of Moll Flanders, but most of Reid's work has been
of a more directly charity-oriented nature since the early 1990s, and she
remains a well-known celebrity/performer in Ireland
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