Newspaper Articles





Remember the Cowsills?; A Comback In the Wind
by Michael Blumstein
July 24, 1977
The Bridgeport Post
Bridgeport, Connecticut

WEST WARWICK, R.I. (UPI)
- It was the American dream. A mother, her five sons and one daughter sang together in their living room, practiced constantly, and ended up with three gold records an a slew of television appearances. The Cowsills were America's number one singing family. Their first big song - "The Rain, the Park and other Things" - hit the top of the charts in 1967. The next two years brought five albums and other hits, including "Indian Lake," "We Can Fly," and "Hair."

THE KIDS started out in Newport playing dates in a local hotel in 1965. They lived in neighboring Middletown. Their father, retired from the Navy after a career as an enlisted man, became the manager.

The Cowsills had their own TV special in 1968 and made guest appearances on such shows as Ed Sullivan, Johnny Carson and Dean Martin.

The money rolled in - and right back out - as the family bought a 23-room mansion in ritzy Newport, as well as land elsewhere in Rhode Island and in California. The family also took an apartment in New York.

But the bubble burst.

SINCE 1970, a fall in the group's popularity has been matched only by a fall in the family's bank account. In the last two years, parents William and Barbara Cowsill have each had to file in court for bankruptcy.

They sought to rid themselves of an accumlated $445,700 worth of debts to hotels, recording studios, credit card companies, lawyers, agents and airlines - among other concerns.

All the real estate, of course, has been sold or repossed.

TODAY, Mrs. Cowsill lives in a garden apartment in West Warwick where she works nights in a local nursing home.

She very calmly insists she's not bitter. "It was poor business management. It happens to the best of us. YOu just have to pick yourself by your boot straps. It was a wonderful thing and I enjoyed it thoroughly."

She also sais disbanding the group was really best for her family.

"These were children and they needed room to grow," she said.

Mrs. Cowsill said her husband has gone back to sea. He is home two weeks every month and works the balance of the time offshore drilling rigs in such far-away places as Egypt and Turkey.

Of her children, Mrs. Cowsill said, "They've just been busy growing up." The youngest, Susan, is now 18. The oldest, Bob, is 27 and has just finished his pre-medical undergraduate education.

ALTHOUGH the group has not played publically for some time now, Mrs. Cowsill said America has not heard the last of her children.

"It's all just in the infancy stage now," she said, "but you're going to see some big things happening."

According to the Cowsills' new manager, Jonathan Myer, of North Hollywood, Calif., "the time is right" for a comback. He said Susan and three brothers - Bob, Paul, 25, and John 21 - have signed on with Elektra Asylum records and "They'll essentially start wher they left off."





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