The Cowsills are haunted by ghosts and good luck.
The Cowsills, a family of seven singers and musicians who are making a variety of music they call "Conglomerate rock" famous across the nation, star in "A Family Thing," music special to be colorcast on NBC Saturday, Nov. 24 at 8:30 p.m.
The good luck started haunting them last last year with the release of their first million-selling record, "The Rain, the Park and Other Things." Since then they have hit it big with albums entitled "The Cowsills," "We Can Fly" and the recent "Captain Sad and His Ship of Fools" and best-selling singles of "We Can Fly," "Indian Lake" and "Poor Baby." And the first single featuring a solo by 12-year-old Johnny Cowsill, an October edition entitled "The Path of Love," also appears headed for the top of the charts.
Doing Special
On television, the Cowsills have been featured in their own one-hour segment of NBC-TV's "Today" show, have appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show" and other variety programs. They now are doing the first special of their own. In addition, they have completed successful tours of England, Italy and the United States.
The good luck started just in time. Bud Cowsill, father-founder of the group had backed his faith in his family by borrowing $100,000 to get them moving up to professional status. Encountering only modest success, even Bud was ready to throw in the towel.
The Cowsills were down to their last penny when they etched their first big hit in 1967. They were about to lose the 27-room neo-Gothic they owned in Newport, R.I.
The ghostly portion of the haunting started in this same Rhode Island home, which formerly was owned by a seafaring Captain McCormack.
Don't Believe
"We don't really believe in ghosts," explained Barbara Cowsill, wife, mother and singer with the group. "But we had a lot of weird things happening without explanation; pipes banging, doors slamming, locked shutters flying open, pans rattling, the whole bit.
Then a Ouija board said we were haunted. So, as time went by, everything that happened around the house for no apparent reason we blamed on the ghost of Captain McCormack."
Now the Cowsills, moved to where the action is, live in a Mediterranean-style mansion in the seaside Los Angeles suburb of Santa Monica. Strange things still are happening, Barbara reports, and the family is more-than-a-little convinced that Captain McCormack came West with them.
"Does the ghost sing?" Barbara was asked.
"No . . . I don't think so," she replied, uncertainly.
"Did the ghost have anything to do with your success?"
"No," she laughed. "All my kids got talent."
An almost eerie coincidence caps this haunting tale: The Cowsills special on Nov 23 preempts "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" - the story of a house haunted by the ghost of the seafaring Captain Gregg.
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