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Henry Mancini’s widow Ginny dies at 97

Jazz singer was also known as benefactor to music halls, programs

By Steve Marble, Los Angeles Times
Published: November 4, 2021, 9:25pm

LOS ANGELES — Ginny Mancini, a jazz singer in the heyday of the big-band era who became a generous benefactor to the concert halls of L.A. as well as the city’s small and often struggling music academies for children, has died at her home in Malibu.

One of Hollywood’s leading philanthropists, Mancini died Oct. 25. She was 97.

In the postwar era, she joined band leader Mel Torme right out of Los Angeles City College, then threw in with the Tex Beneke Orchestra as a member of the Mello-Larks. Beneke had recently taken over the Glenn Miller Orchestra and was looking for fresh talent. He found it in the young jazz singer, as well as an uber-talented pianist and arranger named Henry Mancini.

The two married in 1947. Henry Mancini’s career would soon skyrocket, establishing him as one of the most popular and best-known film and TV composers of the 20th century, with 72 Grammy and 18 Oscar nominations.

While Henry Mancini was writing scores for films such as “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “The Pink Panther” and the “Peter Gunn” TV series, Ginny Mancini threw herself into causes. She founded a group that raised millions to help support singers who’d fallen on hard times, served as president of a Los Angeles music academy that encouraged young musicians and was an honorary director at the L.A. Philharmonic.

Late in life, Ginny Mancini received a letter from a Boyle Heights nonprofit that caught her attention. It was the sort of place, she later told Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez, that she wished should she could have escaped to as a child. The young students, she imagined, were much like she’d been — struggling but talented.

She wrote the first of several checks to the Neighborhood Music School. When she visited the academy, with its largely Latino student body, she was struck by its warmth.

“I was able to relate it to my childhood and how much I would have appreciated that school,” she said. “It really resonated for me.”

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