NETSCAPE NETCENTER spacer   Search  -  WebMail  -  My Netscape  -  Buddy Chat  -  Help  -  Download

Harry Connick, Jr.

Jazz Musician / Actor / Jazz Singer

Born: 11 September 1967
Birthplace: New Orleans, Louisiana
Best known as: Jazz heartthrob and Independence Day star

Name at birth: Joseph Harry Fowler Connick Jr.

Sometimes called the heir apparent to Frank Sinatra, Harry Connick, Jr. brought a crooner's voice, lean good looks and a classic pop sensibility to jazz in the 1990s. Connick was a child prodigy in New Orleans, playing piano in French Quarter clubs and rubbing elbows with fellow jazz prodigies Wynton and Branford Marsalis. By 1987 he was in New York and had released his self-titled first album for Columbia. His 1998 album 20 (named for his age) was later followed by 25 and 30, plus many other jazz and swing albums. Connick composed the score to the 1989 film When Harry Met Sally and later turned to acting himself, playing a WWII flyboy in Memphis Belle (1990), wingman for Will Smith in Independence Day (1996), and a small-town Texas Romeo in Hope Floats (1998, with Sandra Bullock). In 2001 he made his Broadway debut, scoring the New Orleans-tinged musical Thou Shalt Not.

Extra credit: He married the model Jill Goodacre in 1994... Connick's father is the longtime District Attorney of New Orleans.

Copyright © 1998-2006 by Who2?, LLC. All rights reserved.

More on Harry Connick Jr from Fact Monster:

  • Harry Connick, Jr. - Harry Connick, Jr. musician, actor Born: 9/11/1967 Birthplace: New Orleans, Louisiana Musician ...
  • Harry Connick, Jr. - Biography of Harry Connick, Jr., Jazz heartthrob and Independence Day star
  • Jill Goodacre - Biography of Jill Goodacre, Victoria's Secret model and Mrs. Harry Connick, Jr.
  • The Iron Giant - Starring Jennifer Aniston, Christopher McDonald, Harry Connick Jr., Cloris Leachman, Vin Diesel
  • Mickey - Starring Harry Connick, Jr, Mike Star, Michelle Johnson, Sam Wells, Shawn Salinas

Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

© 2000–2008 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster