Jump to content

Gloria Loring

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gloria Loring
Loring in 1969
Born
Gloria Jean Goff

(1946-12-10) December 10, 1946 (age 78)
New York City, U.S.
Occupation(s)Actress, singer
Years active1961–present
Spouse
(m. 1970⁠–⁠1984)
Children2, including Robin Thicke

Gloria Loring-Lagler (born Gloria Jean Goff, December 10, 1946)[1] is an American singer and actress.[2] She is known for playing Liz Chandler on Days of Our Lives for six years (1980–86). She and singer-actor Carl Anderson performed the duet "Friends and Lovers," which reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1986.

Early life

[edit]

Gloria Jean Goff was born in New York City, the daughter of Dorothy Ann (née Tobin), a singer, and Gerald "Buzzy" Lewis Goff, a professional trumpet player with the Tommy Dorsey big band as well as other renowned swing groups; a salesman and hospitality/restaurant industry consultant.

Career

[edit]

Loring began her music career at age 14, singing with a folk group known as Those Four. Loring released her first album in 1968. It was titled Today on MGM Records. Several singles, including cover versions of Fred Neil's "Everybody's Talkin'" and Roger Whittaker's "New World in the Morning" were released on the Evolution label, though none charted. She also released, as a single, an early cover version of Joni Mitchell's "Chelsea Morning" in 1968.

She went on to perform on a wide range of television shows in the late 1960s and 1970s, from The Carol Burnett Show (Season 1, Episode 4, which first aired October 2, 1967)[3] to the Academy Awards ceremony. Signed to Atco Records, she released the single "Brooklyn", produced by Mike Post, in 1977 under the alias Cody Jameson, and it became her first chart single, climbing to No. 74 on the Billboard Hot 100 and also appearing on the Adult Contemporary and Country Charts.

In March 1977, she flew to Toronto to be the special guest star on the popular weekly variety program The Bobby Vinton Show which was seen all across the United States and Canada. The program was produced by her husband Alan Thicke. Loring performed "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" and performed a duet with Vinton on "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do".

In 1978 and 1979, Loring and then-husband Alan Thicke composed the theme songs to Diff'rent Strokes and The Facts of Life. There were two versions of the Facts of Life theme song that Loring sang.[4] One version was used from seasons two through six, and a second was used from seasons seven to nine.

Her son, Brennan, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes in 1979. A year later, Loring joined Days of Our Lives and got the idea to create and self-publish the Days Of Our Lives Celebrity Cookbook to raise money for diabetes research. Volume One was published in 1981 and the follow-up Volume Two in 1983. The cookbooks, along with her recording "A Shot in the Dark", raised more than $1 million for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation ("JDRF"). She followed that success with three commercially published books, Kids, Food and Diabetes, Parenting a Child with Diabetes, and Living with Type 2 Diabetes: Moving Past the Fear.

For more than 30 years she has served as a spokesperson for JDRF. JDRF was the official philanthropy of her college sorority, Alpha Gamma Delta, before shifting its focus to fighting hunger in 2017.[5]

In 1980, when Loring joined the NBC daytime soap Days of Our Lives as chanteuse Liz Chandler, the show was going through a dry spell, with many veterans dropped and many new faces alienating long-time fans. Of the nine new characters introduced in the 1980–1981 season, only Liz garnered a fan following, and was the only one to have her contract renewed. For three years, in real-life, Loring dated Don Diamont, the actor who played Carlo Forenza who was murdered by her TV husband Dr. Neil Curtis. Loring returned to the show in December 2024.

In 1986, Loring scored a No. 2 Pop and No. 1 Adult Contemporary hit record in the United States with "Friends and Lovers", with Carl Anderson (also a No. 1 country hit in 1986 for Eddie Rabbitt and Juice Newton under the title "Both to Each Other"). She originally performed "Friends and Lovers" on Days of Our Lives more than a year before it hit the charts. Her performance of the song generated the largest mail response of any song in NBC daytime history. First recorded as a duet with Anderson (who appeared on Days of Our Lives to sing the song with Loring) in 1985, its release as a single was delayed for a year by legal complications.[6]

Loring left Days in 1986 and made sporadic film and television appearances over the next few decades. Her main efforts were spent in theater and in her recording career (though "Friends and Lovers" was her only major hit single).

In 2003, Loring released her first holiday album, You Make It Christmas. In 2008, she released A Playlist, which included a new recording of the song "Friends and Lovers" with Carl Anderson, recorded one year before he died.

Loring's book, Coincidence Is God's Way of Remaining Anonymous, is a spiritual autobiography of how a series of coincidences transformed her life. It was released in October 2012 by HCI, Inc.

Bibliography

[edit]
Year Title Publisher
1981 Days of Our Lives Celebrity Cookbook Self-published
1983 Days of Our Lives Celebrity Cookbook - Vol. II Self-published
1986 Kids, Food and Diabetes Contemporary Books
1991 Parenting a Child with Diabetes: A Practical, Empathetic Guide to Help You and Your Child Live with Diabetes Contemporary Books
2007 Living with Type 2 Diabetes: Moving Past the Fear M Press
2012 Coincidence Is God's Way of Remaining Anonymous: Reflections on Daytime Dramas and Divine Intervention HCI, Inc.

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
1965 Once Upon a Coffee House Betty's Friend Feature film
2016 Heavenly Johnnie Short film (independent)

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
1967 The Carol Burnett Show Herself - performed Goin' Out of My Head" Episode: "Lucille Ball, Tim Conway and Gloria Loring" (S1:E4)
1968 The Carol Burnett Show Jennifer (Valley of the Dollars sketch) Episode: "Dionne Warwick and Jonathan Winters" (S1:E19)
The Ed Sullivan Show Herself - performed "Can't Take My Eyes Off of You" Episode: Unknown
1977 The Bobby Vinton Show Herself - performed "Breaking Up is Hard to Do" with Bobby Vinton Episode: Unknown (the show was syndicated in the U.S.)
1980–1986, 2024 Days of Our Lives Liz Chandler Curis Daytime serial (contract role 1980-1986); (guest role 2024)
1984 Fantasy Island Charlene Hunt Episode: "Mermaid and the Matchmaker/The Obsolete Man"
1985 Hotel Adrianne Fitzpatrick Episode: "Distortion"
1987 Convicted: A Mother's Story Kate Devers TV movie (NBC)
Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer (1984 TV series) Marian Collins Episode: "Deadly Collection"
Police Story (1973 TV series) Kate Devers TV movie
Another World (TV series) Herself Episode: #5970
1989 Murder, She Wrote Margo Bowman Episode: "Weave a Tangled Web"
Freddy's Nightmares Ellen Kramer Episode: "Heartbreak Hotel"
Living Dolls Liz Wyler Episode: "The Flash Is Always Greener"
1993 Saved by the Bell: The College Years Mrs. Burke Episode: "The Homecoming"
1994 Burke's Law (1994 TV series) Sam Episode: "Who Killed the Starlet?"
Silk Stalkings Sable Shannon Episode: "Whore Wars"
1995 Renegade (TV series) Melissa Dixon Episode: "Sins of the Father"
1996 Beverly Hills, 90210 Mrs. Cleveland Episode: "Fearless"
Renegade (TV series) Melissa Dixon Episode: "For Better, For Worse"
1997 Renegade (TV series) Melissa Dixon Episode: "The Bad Seed"
2014 Correcting Christmas (original title was Back to Christmas) Robin TV movie
2016 Growing Up Viral Gram TV movie (Disney XD)
TBA (pending) I Love You But Ruby TV series

Music Videos

[edit]
Year Title Notes
1986 Friends and Lovers (Gloria Loring and Carl Anderson song) Duet with Carl Anderson

Personal life

[edit]

Loring was married to actor Alan Thicke from 1970 until 1986. She has two sons with Thicke, Brennan and singer Robin.

Loring has been honored with the Lifetime Commitment Award from JDRF, and received the Woman of Achievement Award from the Miss America Organization. She has been featured in Who's Who in America.

Discography

[edit]
  • 1968: Today (MGM Records); includes the original version of "One Way Ticket"
  • 1970: And Now We Come to Distances (Evolution Records)
  • 1972: Sing a Song for the Mountain (Evolution Records)
  • 1984: A Shot in the Dark (Glitz Records); includes the full version of "The Facts of Life"
  • 1986: Gloria Loring (Atlantic Records); includes the original version of "Friends and Lovers" with Carl Anderson – AUS #83;[7] CAN #78[8]
  • 1988: Full Moon/No Hesitation (Atlantic Records) – AUS #62[7]
  • 1991: Is There Anybody Out There (Silk Purse); includes a solo version of "Friends and Lovers"
  • 1999: Turn The Page (Silk Purse)
  • 2000: By Request (Silk Purse); includes an acoustic recording of "Tonight, I Celebrate My Love", the song adopted by Bo & Hope as their theme song on Days of Our Lives
  • 2001: Friends and Lovers (Silk Purse)
  • 2003: You Make It Christmas (Silk Purse)
  • 2008: A Playlist (Silk Purse); she and Carl Anderson re-recorded "Friends and Lovers" for this project, just one year prior to his death

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Leszczak, Bob (June 25, 2015). From Small Screen to Vinyl: A Guide to Television Stars Who Made Records, 1950–2000. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-4274-6. Retrieved September 18, 2023 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Ellis, Rosemary (November 1987). "Health Front". Working Mother. p. 76. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
  3. ^ Burnett, Carol (October 1967). "Lucille Ball, Tim Conway & Gloria Loring on The Carol Burnett Show – FULL Episode: S1 Ep.4". youtube.com. The Carol Burnett Show Official.
  4. ^ "Back to the 80s: Interview with Gloria Loring of 'Friends and Lovers' – Kickin' it Old School | tBlog.com". Oldschool.tblog.com. Archived from the original on April 11, 2016. Retrieved September 7, 2013.
  5. ^ "Alpha Gamma Delta – Accomplished Alpha Gams". Alpha Gamma Delta. Archived from the original on August 25, 2010. Retrieved March 12, 2007.
  6. ^ "Friends and Lovers by Carl Anderson, Gloria Loring – Track Info". AllMusic. Retrieved September 18, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 181. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  8. ^ "RPM Top 100 Albums - November 15, 1986" (PDF).
[edit]