Frankie Sardo

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Frank Sardo Avianca (1936/37 – 26 February 2014),[1] who performed as Frankie Sardo, was an American rock and roll singer, actor and film producer. He opened the bill on the 1959 concert in Clear Lake, Iowa, the evening before the plane crash that claimed the lives of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper.

He was born in Brooklyn, New York,[1] and served in Korea.[2] On his return he joined a comedy group, before making his first recordings as a singer for MGM Records in 1958.[3] His second record, "Fake Out", written by his brother Johnny Sardo and released by ABC-Paramount, became a regional hit, and he was invited to join the 1959 Winter Dance Party tour starring Holly, Valens, the Big Bopper, and Dion and the Belmonts, as the opening act. After the tour concert at Clear Lake, Iowa on February 2, 1959, Sardo travelled to the next venue by bus with Dion and the Belmonts and Holly's backing group The Crickets, while Holly, Valens, and the Big Bopper took a plane. The plane crashed and the three stars were killed.[2][4]

Sardo continued to release singles on several different record labels until 1962; on some, he performed with his brother as a duo, Frankie and Johnny.[3] Using the name Frank Avianca, he later worked as a film actor, in movies such as Existence (1973), and The 'Human' Factor (1975); and co-wrote and co-produced the horror film Blood Song in 1982.[5] In 2010 he was interviewed by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame about his experiences on the 1959 tour.[4]

He died of cancer in Somers, New York on February 26, 2014, aged 77.[1][6]

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