In Memoriam|

Photo: The Shangri-Las | Mary Louise Weiss (December 28, 1948 – January 19, 2024) was an American singer, best known as the lead singer of the Shangri-Las in the 1960s. Their single “Leader of the Pack” went to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in 1964. She vanished from the music scene for decades, returning in 2007 to record her first and only solo album with Norton Records.

Mary Louise Weiss was born on December 28, 1948, in Cambria Heights, Queens, in New York City. She had an older sister, Betty, and an older brother, George. Her father, Harry Weiss, died when she was six weeks old and her mother, Elizabeth (née Treubig), brought up three children in poverty, surviving on welfare and handouts. Mary sang in school plays and choirs and she listened to her brother, an Elvis fan, and his friends performing popular songs of the day. She attended her first Everly Brothers concert in 1963 at Freedomland U.S.A. at age 14.

The Shangri-Las
In high school, Weiss and her sister Betty became friends with twins Mary Ann and Margie Ganser. In 1963 the four girls formed a group, taking their name from a neighborhood restaurant, and they sang at local dances and hops. They came to the attention of local producer Artie Ripp, who signed them to Kama Sutra Productions. Their first single, 1963’s “Simon Says”, was a flop. After recording demos, signing with Red Bird Records in 1964 and making it to the Brill Building, where they worked with hit-writing team Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, they recorded “Remember (Walking in the Sand)”, their first hit; and “Leader of the Pack”, both co-written and produced by Shadow Morton. “Leader of the Pack” went to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in 1964. “Remember (Walking in the Sand)” had reached number five in the US charts, competing with six singles by the Beatles and hits by the Rolling Stones and other British groups. Weiss and the Shangri-Las played support at concerts by the Beatles and the Stones.

The Shangri-Las became a leading girl group in the 1960s. After several years together, they split in 1968 and Weiss went to San Francisco to try a different lifestyle. She gave up singing, married Ed Ryan, and went to work for an architectural firm. She later became a commercial interior designer in New York. She occasionally performed shows with the Shangri-Las during the 1970s, which led to an unsuccessful attempt to re-form the band with Sire Records in 1976. In 1989, the Shangri-Las reunited for a Cousin Brucie show at The Meadowlands in New Jersey.

In 2019, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio, honored the Shangri-Las’ song “Leader of the Pack” in its Singles category.
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Weiss died from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD] at her home in Palm Springs, California, on January 19, 2024, at the age of 75.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Weiss

Photo The Shangri-Las | Promo photo from Pop, Rock & Doo Wopp’s Facebook page

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