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Luigi Creatore

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Name
  
Luigi Creatore


Role
  
Songwriter

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Died
  
December 13, 2015, Boca Raton, Florida, United States

Albums
  
Maggie Flynn (Original Broadway Cast Recording)

Awards
  
Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album

Similar People
  

Luigi Creatore Interview on The Paul Leslie Hour


Luigi Federico Creatore (December 21, 1921 – December 13, 2015) was an American songwriter and record producer.

Contents

Luigi Creatore Luigi Creatore Songwriter and Producer for Presley and Sam Cooke

Creatore was born in New York City in 1921. From a musical family, Creatore began his career as a writer. After serving with the United States military during World War II, in the 1950s he became a writer then partnered with his cousin Hugo Peretti to form the songwriting team of Hugo & Luigi that also produced records. In 1957, they bought into Roulette Records where they both wrote songs for various artists such as Valerie Carr and produced major hits for Jimmie Rodgers including "Honeycomb" (Billboard # 1) and "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" (Billboard # 3), and "Oh-Oh, I'm Falling in Love Again" and "Secretly".

Luigi Creatore Luigi Creatore songwriter obituary Telegraph

Two years later, Creatore and Peretti signed a deal with RCA Victor records where they produced pop crooner and [NBC] television personality Perry Como. In addition, they produced Sam Cooke and Ray Peterson and wrote English lyrics for the song "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" (with the original bulk of the song written by Solomon Linda), producing the hit for The Tokens. With George David Weiss they co-wrote "Can't Help Falling in Love" for Elvis Presley. Peretti and Creatore also wrote the Presley film theme "Wild in the Country". He and Peretti left RCA in 1964 to join Weiss in writing a musical about the American Civil War. Titled Maggie Flynn (starring Shirley Jones) it briefly ran on Broadway in 1968.

In the 1970s, Creatore and Peretti owned part of Avco Records and then established H&L Records which they operated until retiring at the end of the decade. Among their successes were recordings by The Stylistics and The Softones. They also won the 1977 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album as producers for Bubbling Brown Sugar.

His play An Error of the Moon, a speculative exploration of the relationship between the actor Edwin Booth and his brother John Wilkes Booth, directed by Kim Weild, was performed off-Broadway until October 10, 2010.

Creatore died from complications of pneumonia on December 13, 2015, eight days before his 94th birthday in Boca Raton, Florida.

Hugo peretti luigi creatore and george david weiss can t help falling in love arr fariborz lachini


References

Luigi Creatore Wikipedia