The Many Faces Of James Darren

MoondoggieSee the guy in this picture?

That’s Moondoggie from the Gidget movies, and it’s Gidget he’s standing next to.

Moondoggie was played by a teen idol of the day known as Jimmy Darren (who was popular enough that he later appeared in animated form on The Flintsones as Jimmy Darrenrock.)

As part of his teen heartthrob career, Jimmy recorded a number of albums.

But he moved out of this phase of his career (as teen idols tend to do). He tried to move on to more "serious" roles, like this one . . .
Tony
Here he is as Dr. Tony Newman, one of two time-travelling scientists on the Irwin Allen thriller TV show, The Time Tunnel.

I recently blogged about the release of the DVDs of that series, which I was a fan of as a boy.

This was the role in which I first became aware of Jimmy Darren, though I had no clue who he was in real life any more than I did any actors I saw on TV at the time.

During this period of is career he also went for "serious-er" roles than that of a time-travelling scientist, such as Pvt. Spyros Pappadimos in The Guns of Navarrone.

I like The Guns of Navarrone, but I was oblivious to Darren’s role in it, too. It wouldn’t be until he started performing another role that I really became aware of who he was.

That role–which is the one for which I’ll always best remember him–is this one:
Vic
Here he’s appearing as the holographic 1962 lounge singer Vic Fontaine on Star Trek: Deep Space 9.

This was a great role for him! It drew on his musical and sci-fi background and he did an absolutely outstanding job as a suave, wise, strong, and (once in a while) vulnerable lounge singer who could really sing.

There was also some irony to the role since in the imaginary 1962 world that Vic inhabited, he sang at a Vegas nightclub and hung with members of the Rat Pack like Frank and Dino and Sammy–and in real life the actor Jimmy Darren was a close friend of Frank Sinatra.

The Vic Fontaine role came along at an important point for Darren and allowed him to re-enter the kind of musical world that he had worked in at the beginning of career. His role on DS9 proved so popular that not only did he become a virtual regular on the show (in more than one sense of the term), it also re-launched his career as a singer.

After the show he started recording albums again, and a number of his older ones have been re-released.

In fact, there’s ten of ’em on iTunes for download right now (search on the term "James Darren").

From_the_heartI haven’t heard all ten, but if you enjoyed his singing on DS9–or if you just like really well-sung American standards in the Frank Sinatra/Mel Torme tradition–then I’d like to recommend one album in particular: This One’s From The Heart.

This is the first album he did after DS9, and as a thank you to the fans of the show who would form a key part of its purchasers, it includes virtually all the songs he sang as Vic Fontaine–only this time without them being interrupted for story or covered over by dialogue or cut short for time.

Here’s the playlist of standards it includes:

"The Best Is Yet To Come," "Come Fly With Me," "That Old Black Magic," "All the Way," "It’s Only A Paper Moon," "I’ve Got the World on a String," "You’d Better Love Me," "Sophisticated Lady," "Just In Time," "I’ve Got You Under My Skin," "The Way You Look Tonight," "Here’s to the Losers," "You’re Nobody Till Somebody Loves You," "Dancing in the Dark," "Night and Day," "I’ll Be Seeing You," and "Satin Doll."

That’s quite a lineup! And Darren’s rendition of these songs is excellent.

I have a bunch of the same songs done by Frank Sinatra, but despite Sinatra’s undeniable mastery of this form of singing, I find that I enjoy Darren’s versions better. Darren’s voice has a more velvety quality, like Mel Torme’s, compared to Sinatra, and this makes it warmer. This kind of Rat Pack singing requires the singer to project a kind of strengh through his voice, but there are different kinds of strengths, and if you listen to Sinatra’s voice he at times projects a cruel streak.

Darren, by contrast, projects a friendliness and warmth, even when the song would lend itself to a cruel treatment. For example, a personal favorite are the songs "You’d Better Love Me" and "Here’s to the Losers," both of which have to be handled just right or the singer comes off sounding aloof and arrogant. That’s how Sinatra might do them. But in Darren’s hands, "You’d Better Love Me" sounds friendly and playful and "Here’s to the Losers" sounds compassionate and optimistic.

Not every song on the album is a winner to my mind. I don’t really like "Sophisticated Lady," for example. (It’s a slow song, and I have a constitutional aversion to slow songs.)

Growing up when I did, I didn’t discover this type of music until I was an adult. Back in high school, singers like Frank Sinatra were considered square, but when I grew up enough to appreciate types of music that weren’t popular with my high school buddies, I came to appreciate this genre.

Unfortunately, it’s a little hard to refer to because there isn’t a standard name for it. Some are calling it "classic pop" (i.e., the type of music that was popular before rock & roll). Others are calling it "pop standards." Or "lounge music." Whatever you want to call it, there’s just something comforting and classy about this type of music.

Overall, Darren’s This One’s From The Heart is an outstanding introduction to and example of the genre, and I’d heartily recommend it if you were a DS9 fan, if you’re a lover of this style of music, or even if you’ve never really gotten into this style of singing and would like to see what the fuss was about.

Enjoy!

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

19 thoughts on “The Many Faces Of James Darren”

  1. Sounds cool. I love Frank so I’ll have to take a listen to this Darren guy.

  2. He’s almost as cool as Regis Philbin!
    I remember seeing him alot growing up. Alawys the earnest and sincere young man. I think he was the inspiratiuon for DEVO’s plastic hair.
    Okay, I’m not sure about that last part.

  3. Oh, and I have to admit, I had NO interest in Frank Sinatra until I heard his “Live in Las Vegas” cd.
    He was THE MAN. Better live than in the studio.

  4. Ed,
    We all know that Johnny Depp is…
    Take care and God bless,
    Inocencio
    J+M+J

  5. Inocencio, please use polite language and refrain from vulgarities like “J—–D—“.

  6. Bill,
    I have no excuse for using such language other than Ed did it first.
    JDEPP rocks in WW. well, he does in anything, even a useless film like Chocolate. Posted by: Ed Peters | Jan 31, 2006 3:28:59 PM
    Please forgive me!
    Take care and God bless,
    Inocencio
    J+M+J

  7. I think that James Darren sounded like a cross between young Sinatra and The Velvet Fog. I remember when he appeared on DS9; at first I thought his singing must be dubbed because it was so good.

  8. “Growing up when I did, I didn’t discover this type of music until I was an adult. Back in high school, singers like Frank Sinatra were considered square, but when I grew up enough to appreciate types of music that weren’t popular with my high school buddies, I came to appreciate this genre.”
    Same with me (I’m now 48 and grew up on late sixties pop and seventies rock and R&B). Same with a lot of people my age, apparently. Here in the Phoenix area we have an FM radio station that plays nothing but cool swing and big band. Not the old fogey stuff with the Geritol (c) and Depends (c) ads, but real swinging standards by cool, young artists like Michael Buble.
    As my tastes evolve, I tell people “I’m not getting older, I’m getting better!”

  9. IF you want to sample another singer whose voice is better adn richer than Sinatra’s, and whose phrasing is equal, check out the incomparable Matt Monro.

  10. Now there’s something I never thought I’d see on an apologetics website – Moondoggie!
    I love this style of music, which I call “Standards” because “Lounge Music” makes me think of “Lounge Lizard” which makes me think of Wayne Newton, who I’m not fond of, musically.
    I’ll have to check out “Moondoggie Sings!” though. I love Sinatra, and Perry Como, and I’m really getting into Louis Prima right now.
    We used to have a great standards station around here, but it went the “soft oldies from the 60s 70s and 80s” way. Think lots of Carpenters, some Beatles, and that stupid “Up, Up and Away in my Beautifiul Balloon” song (which must have some underground drug reference which neither the fogies nor I get). Sigh. I’d much rather listen to Sinatra, Deano, Patti Page, Peggy Lee etc.

  11. Jimmy wrote:
    if you listen to Sinatra’s voice he at times projects a cruel streak.
    Indeed. His is the most selfish voice in this genre, which makes it particularly annoying to hear him sing Christmas standards. Though I recall browsing at a local bookstore and hearing a guy begin singing somewhere across the store behind me. I froze in awe and listened to the most confident singing I’d ever heard – he’s clearly mastered his voice and could do anything with it. After listening a while I turned around to watch him, and realized they’d just put on a Sinatra cd.

  12. FINALLY…. FUTURE PRIEST SPEAKS OUT AGAINST BIRTH CONTROL! (WATCH VIDEO OF SPEECH BELOW)
    VIDEO….
    Watch the video (WARNING: some offensive language): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sbPSPAxBnk
    ———–
    Catholic U. Students And Staff Complain About Catholic Teaching in Grad Speech
    An audible roar of protest erupted when Kessler asked, “What in society is selfish? I would point to the common practice of birth control…Birth control is selfish.” On a videotape of the speech obscene comments can be heard as well as shouts of “Way to go Matt!” whistles and cheers. The tape shows numerous students and parents leaving the ceremony. Kessler was interrupted several times by his audience but carried on.
    Kessler was one of St. Thomas’ more celebrated undergraduates. A defensive tackle on the St. Thomas football team with a 4.0 grade-point average majoring in philosophy and business, he is also an undergraduate seminarian with plans for the Catholic priesthood.
    Kessler’s comments included references to some actions by staff who, earlier this year protested a university policy that prohibited unmarried couples from travelling together for school-sponsored trips. He also took aim at some of the unruly behaviour of students, including a food fight that required campus security to break up.
    “We find true hope,” he said, “by completely giving of ourselves, emptying ourselves into our community. The only way that human beings…can be truly happy… is by emptying ourselves. And I don’t mean the happiness of instant pleasure, instant satisfaction, I mean true, lasting happiness.”
    Kessler praised the “impressive group of young people” who were graduating and exhorted his listeners to have hope for the future.
    While none of his remarks were contrary to the teaching of the Catholic Church, the school has issued an apology and forced Kessler to apologize. Kessler said in a written statement Monday, “Instead of providing hope to all, I offended some by my words and by my decision to speak those words at commencement.”
    MORE http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2006/may/06052407.html

  13. My father was a musician (a bass, non-electric!) so I grew up listening to Sinatra, Tony Bennett, the Big Bands, Peggy Lee, etc. I’m only 3 years older than you, Vince C.

  14. Yes, the CD is awesome, I love it too. Though I think the duett with Avery Brooks should’ve been there but other than that, it’s perfect. 🙂

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