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Discussing
Frankie Avalon's career as a mover and shaker in 1950s rock & roll
with anyone who takes their rock & roll even halfway seriously is
to court derision. Avalon was the first of the manufactured teen idols,
before Fabian and Bobby Rydell and the myriads of other pretenders to
the throne who worked the turf with tight black pants and red, red sweaters
to the fore while Elvis cooled his heels in Germany. In the late '50s
and early '60s, post-Twist and pre-Beatles, these generally untalented
pretty boys were the cardboard no-threat remnants of a post-Elvis age.
But Avalon had a real musical background to go with the pretty boy looks,
and was no drugstore teenager waiting to be discovered. |