Katherine Anderson | |
---|---|
Born | Katherine Elaine Anderson January 16, 1944
Inkster, Michigan, U.S. |
Died | September 20, 2023
Dearborn, Michigan, U.S. | (aged 79)
Occupation | Singer |
Known for | Member of the Marvelettes |
Spouse |
Joe Schaffner
(
m. 1965, divorced) |
Katherine Elaine Anderson Schaffner (January 16, 1944 – September 20, 2023) was an American singer best known as a member of the Marvelettes.
Anderson was born in Inkster, Michigan, United States, and was raised in a housing project built by Henry Ford. [1] She was one of four children born to Robert, a cement finisher, and Florence Anderson, a nurse's aide. [2] [1] While Anderson was not able to afford records growing up, she performed in gospel groups and the high school glee club. [1] Early in life she planned to become a legal secretary. [2]
Anderson co-founded the Marvelettes, originally called the Casinyets, in 1960 with four fellow students at Inkster High School to enter a competition that could lead to an audition with Motown Records. [1] Although they did not win the competition, a teacher convinced Motown to give the group an audition. [1] The audition was successful and in August 1961 they released " Please Mr Postman" on the label which was at the top of the charts six months later. [1] Throughout the 1960s, the Marvelettes recorded a number of other chart topping single including " Playboy", " Beachwood 45789", " Don’t Mess with Bill", and " The Hunter Gets Captured by the Game". [1]
Following Motown's move from Detroit to Los Angeles, Anderson ceased her involvement with the record label. [1] Anderson moved to Las Vegas with her husband Joe Schaffner, who had previously managed the Temptations, who was studying lighting at the University of Nevada. [1] Anderson co-wrote Gladys Knight & the Pips' hit " I Don't Want to Do Wrong". [3]
Anderson later returned to Inkster and worked with troubled teens in Detroit. [1] She received her high school diploma at aged 52, something touring had prevented her from doing in her youth. [1] In 2005, Anderson wrote a musical based on her life story called Now That I Can Dance 1962. [1]
She died in September 2023 at the age of 79 of heart failure. This leaves Juanita Cowart Motley as the only surviving original member of The Marvelettes. [4] [5]