Born 1935 (age 91) ยท Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, USA
Appears in 20 titles

Stanley Robert Vinton (born April 16, 1935) is an American pop music singer. At 16, Vinton formed his first band, which played clubs around the Pittsburgh area. With the money he earned, Vinton helped finance his college education at Duquesne University, where he studied music and graduated with a degree in musical composition. While at Duquesne, he became proficient on all of the instruments in the band: piano, clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, drums and oboe. After a brief spell in the US Army, Vinton was signed to Epic Records in 1960 as a bandleader: "A Young Man With a Big Band." Two albums and several singles were not successful however, and with Epic ready to pull the plug, Vinton found his first hit single literally sitting in a reject pile. The song was titled "Roses Are Red (My Love)." It spent four weeks at No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Arguably, his most famous song is 1963's "Blue Velvet" that also went to No.1. 23 years later, David Lynch named his movie Blue Velvet after the song. In 1964, Vinton had two #1 hits, "There! I've Said It Again" and "Mr. Lonely", the latter now being the basis for Akon's hit "Lonely."

Filmography

Big Jake
6.9
Big Jake
1971
as Jeff McCandles
The Train Robbers
6.3
The Train Robbers
1973
as Ben Young
Surf Party
4.5
Surf Party
1964
as Len Marshal
The Gossip Columnist
7.3
The Gossip Columnist
1980
as Marty Kaplan
Hamburgers
โ€”
Hamburgers
1974
as self