Antoinette Ardizzone (February 15, 1924 – May 29, 2012), known professionally as Toni Arden, was an American
traditional popsinger.
Family
Arden was born in
New York City. Her father, Phillip Ardizzone, was a singer with the
Metropolitan Opera and
La Scala.[1] Her brother, Jan Arden, was also a singer.[2] The siblings teamed up for night club performances in the late 1950s.[3]
She started
recording as a
soloist in 1946 for the minor
National Records company. After her appearance on the early television talent series Doorway to Fame, Arden signed her first
solorecording contract with a major
record label,
Columbia Records, in 1949 (Arden was arguably the only performer out of 20,000 over Doorway to Fame's two-year run on air to become relatively famous); at Columbia, she had several hits including "
I Can Dream, Can't I?" (which reached No. 7 on the
Billboard charts), "
Too Young" (which reached No. 15), "
Kiss of Fire" (which reached No. 14) and "
I'm Yours" (which reached No. 24). CD compilations of these earlier recordings can be found on the Sepia Records label[4] and a two-CD set released by
Jasmine Records.[5]
In the mid-1950s she moved to
Decca Records, where her biggest selling
record (her only million-seller)[6] was "Padre" in 1958, which peaked at No. 13.[7] LP albums included Miss Toni Arden, Besame!, Sing a Song of Italy and Italian Gold.[8] She sang in both Italian and English.[9] The first two albums have been compiled on a second CD by the Sepia Records label.[10] She also recorded briefly for
RCA Victor and
Mercury Records. Her last album, My World is You (on GPRT Records), featured the compositions of
Gladys Shelley.
Radio
In 1952, Arden appeared in episode 55 of the Big Show with
Tallulah Bankhead. In 1954, Arden recorded 13 radio programs for the
US Marine Corps via
electrical transcription. The Toni Arden Show was broadcast on participating local stations.[11] In 1956, she was featured on an episode of What's New in Music on
CBS.[12]
^Sasso, Joey (November 13, 1950).
"Meet Youthful Toni Arden". The Ogden Standard-Examiner. The Ogden Standard-Examiner. p. 13. Retrieved May 5, 2015 – via
Newspapers.com.