Peter Lemongello
Time
MAY 31, 1976
TELEVISION
THE $390,OOO MAN
It is well after the late news and deep into the monster-movie hours,
the time when TV punishes insomniacs with ads for truck drivers' academies and
once-in-a-lifetime offers-"Send $6.98 for eight-track tapes"-for Tchaikovsky's
Greatest Hits and the Best of Connie Francis. Suddenly, a smoothly handsome,
oddly familiar looking young crooner appears on a softly back-lighted stage.
While he pumps a microphone and purrs out a ballad, viewers begin to wonder:
Como's kid brother maybe? An Italian Goulet? Then on comes the voice-over,
hailing the "mood rock" sound of that nationwide heartthrob, Peter Lemongello.
Peter who? Lemongello, 29, is a bland-voiced but relentlessly
enterprising tenor from Islip, Long Island. For years he struggled to build a
career through such gimmicks as sending out little boxes of lemon Jell-O to
dee-jays and record-company executives to remind them, should the occasion
arise, how to pronounce his name. Now Lemongello and some home-town backers have
forcefully raised the momentous question: Can an independent singer hit the big
time by marketing himself like so much, well, Jell-O?
In 1974 Lemongello decided that his eight-year struggle to become a
nation-wide singing idol was hopeless. Too bad, because he certainly looked the
part, with his long brown Prince Valiant locks, rosebud lips and gray-green
almond-shaped eyes. He had also had all the prescribed early breaks. He had been
"discovered" on the Tonight Show four times, sung with Don Rickles in Reno and
Vegas, played the Copa, Jimmy's and the Rainbow Room in Manhattan, signed a
$7,500 contract with Epic Records and toured the top spas on the Borscht Belt.
Selling Eggs. But it all turned sour. Tonight said "Enough." Rickles
replaced him with Vic Damone. His record contract, after studio and musician
costs were paid, netted him $180 and produced one single that tested well in
Omaha but died in Atlanta-after which Epic dropped him too. Even in the
Catskills, audiences played mahjongg while he sang them love ballads, and they
clacked their tiles on the table to show their bored approval. He quit, he says,
"in disgust and revulsion."
But while he was bombing in show business, Lemongello was succeeding
in a lot of other fields. In Islip, he turned an egg-selling job into a
distributorship, using the profits to invest in some gas stations, which he then
swapped for a chain of coin-operated laundries. He was moving into land
speculation and home building when he told the local Islip banker who was
financing his housing deals about his moribund career as a crooner. The banker
gave him an idea: If he could sell eggs and laundries and houses, why not
himself?
Lemongello and his banker chum formed a corporation and invested
$32,000 in a one-shot showcase performance at the Westbury Music Fair, a theater
near Islip, aimed at attracting other partners. They found six, among them the
owner of a Long Island Midas Muffler franchise and an Islip doctor. The six put
up $390,000, and Lemongello worked out a plan to hit the New York
metropolitan-area market, as he puts it, "like a slow-release time bomb." He cut
a two-record album, Love 76, then in January activated his bomb: a 13-weed,
$187,000 campaign jamming all six New York City TV channels with 70 to 100
commercials a week.
They worked: Lemongello fans were born. One Brooklyn girl started
staying up until 4:30 a.m. just to see his one-minute ad on TV. Another kissed
the tube whenever he appeared. He booked a concert at Manhattan's Lincoln
Center, and it sold out. Westbury asked him back for a one-week gig for
$100,000. Love 76 has sold 43,000 copies, through mail orders drawn by the TV
spots. Lemongello was becoming a household word of sorts-at least in New York,
New Jersey and Connecticut. But, as he ruefully admitted, "if you mentioned my
name in Philadelphia, no one would know me." He realized that unless he could
get a recording contract, his instant success would evaporate.
Chance to Buy. So last month Lemongello took his pitch to Los Angeles
and Las Vegas with a $210,000 TV-commercial campaign. If that did not bring the
record companies to their knees, promised Lemongello's banker friend, it would
be on to Chicago and Texas and Florida: "We'll take him to eight or twelve
cities, if necessary, to give people a chance to buy our product.
Last week Private Stock, a scrambling, young recording company that
handles Frankie Valli, Jose' Feliciano and the Troggs, signed on Lemongello. His
backers in Long Island-not to mention viewers in Chicago, Texas and Florida-can
relax for a while.
Concerts were an immediate
"Sell Out" in a matter of hours. Carnegie Hall, Madison Square Garden, Lincoln
Center for the Performing Arts, The Westbury Music Fair, Las Vegas, Atlantic
City, Branson Missouri and so many more venues over the years.
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