Tiny Tim at Ukulele Hall of Fame (found recording of musician's heart attack; 1996): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
{{NSFL|discussion of near-fatal heart attack}}
|title=<center>Tiny Tim's Heart Attack</center>
{{InfoboxFound
|title=<center>Tiny Tim's heart attack footage</center>
|image=TinyPortrait.jpg
|image=TinyPortrait.jpg
|imagecaption=A portrait photo of Tiny Tim
|imagecaption=A portrait photo of Tiny Tim.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span>
|datefound=21 Dec 2019
|foundby=[https://archive.org/details/@savage_17 Savage 17 (Savox on YouTube)]
}}
}}
 
'''Footage of musician Tiny Tim having a heart attack at a performance in 1996''' was broadcast on television all over the news, but it had never found its way online for over two decades.
'''Footage of musician Tiny Tim having a heart attack at a performance in 1996''' was broadcast on television all over the news, but has never found its way online.


Tiny Tim was a ukulele player famous for his falsetto rendition of ''Tiptoe Through The Tulips'' and his marriage to Miss Vicki Budinger on ''The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson'' in the late 1960s. However, in just a few years, his popularity faded away, and he continued a career of scarce singles, albums, and consistent live performances. In the 1990s, he emerged again with newfound popularity after numerous appearances on ''The Howard Stern Show''.
Tiny Tim was a ukulele player famous for his falsetto rendition of ''Tiptoe Through The Tulips'' and his marriage to Miss Vicki Budinger on ''The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson'' in the late 1960s. However, in just a few years, his popularity faded away, and he continued a career of scarce singles, albums, and consistent live performances. In the 1990s, he emerged again with newfound popularity after numerous appearances on ''The Howard Stern Show''.


==The 1996 Ukulele Expo==
==The 1996 Ukulele Expo==
On September 28th, 1996, Tiny was invited to perform at the Ukulele Hall Of Fame Expo at the Montague Book Mill in Massachusetts.  He was recorded several hours before his performance being interviewed and singing a selection of old songs from artists such as Rudy Vallee, Russ Columbo and Byron G Harlan, singers from the early 1900s.
The 40-minute interview was later released on a DVD entitled ''Tiny Tim's Songs and Stories Of The Crooners'', and it can be bought online.
This video was thought to have been the last recorded video interview with Tiny, but in 2015 a video of Tiny being interviewed with a bandage on his head from the fall was posted, along with other news footage, but was taken down later.
However, When Tiny got up on stage to perform his set at the show, he announced ''"And if you hear any coughing during the show... well that's because... well, you know..."''. As he said this, he fell off of the stage with the cameras rolling. This footage was played on national news stations everywhere. He came to later on, and it was revealed he had a heart attack. Tiny was advised to retire from performing but did not listen to the warnings, and thus he died of a massive heart attack two months later at a gala benefit in Minneapolis, Minnesota.<ref>[https://www.deseretnews.com/article/528062/TINY-TIM-DIES-AFTER-SINGING-TULIP-SONG.html An article on Tiny Tim's death.] Retrieved 02 Jun '19</ref>


On September 28, 1996, Tiny was invited to perform at the Ukulele Hall Of Fame Expo at the Montague Book Mill in Massachusetts.  He was recorded several hours before his performance being interviewed and singing a selection of old songs from artists such as Rudy Vallee, Russ Columbo and Byron G Harlan, singers from the early 1900s.


The 40-minute interview was later released on a DVD entitled "Tiny Tim's Songs and Stories Of The Crooners", and it can be bought online. A segment from that interview can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrHam4Fosr8
The footage of the heart attack was lost and had not surfaced until December 21st, 2019, when Archive.org user Savage 17 uploaded the footage of the incident onto his account. Savage said that he obtained the recording from the Vimeo upload of ''Tiny Tim's Songs and Stories Of The Crooners''.
(This video was thought to have been the last recorded video interview with Tiny, but in 2015 a video of Tiny being interviewed with a bandage on his head from the fall was posted, along with other news footage: https://youtu.be/f7A4CPsra54 )


However, When Tiny got up on stage to perform his set at the show, he announced, "I'm not feeling very well, so If I happen to a cough, or anything, that's why."  Right when the first note was played by his backing band, he fell off of the stage with the cameras rolling. This footage was played on national news stations everywhere. He came to later on and it was revealed he had a heart attack. Tiny was advised to retire from performing, but did not listen to the warnings, and he died of a massive heart attack two months later at a gala benefit in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The footage of the heart attack is lost and has not surfaced.
==Gallery==
<gallery mode=packed heights=175px>
tinytim1.jpg|A photo taken a few moments before Tiny Tim's second heart attack in November 1996.
tinytim2.jpg|Another photo that was taken a few moments before Tiny Tim's collapse.
</gallery>
==References==
{{reflist}}
Footage of the incident: https://youtu.be/UEm_zKFmyiU?si=Q1v_RxuBy4yIFSTM


[[Category:Lost recordings of real incidents]]
[[Category:Found media]][[Category:Found_recordings_of_real_incidents]]
[[Category:NSFL]]
<no-comment-streams />

Latest revision as of 10:05, 8 January 2024

Nsfl.png


This article has been tagged as NSFL due to its discussion of near-fatal heart attack.



TinyPortrait.jpg

A portrait photo of Tiny Tim.

Status: Found

Date found: 21 Dec 2019

Found by: Savage 17 (Savox on YouTube)

Footage of musician Tiny Tim having a heart attack at a performance in 1996 was broadcast on television all over the news, but it had never found its way online for over two decades.

Tiny Tim was a ukulele player famous for his falsetto rendition of Tiptoe Through The Tulips and his marriage to Miss Vicki Budinger on The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson in the late 1960s. However, in just a few years, his popularity faded away, and he continued a career of scarce singles, albums, and consistent live performances. In the 1990s, he emerged again with newfound popularity after numerous appearances on The Howard Stern Show.

The 1996 Ukulele Expo

On September 28th, 1996, Tiny was invited to perform at the Ukulele Hall Of Fame Expo at the Montague Book Mill in Massachusetts. He was recorded several hours before his performance being interviewed and singing a selection of old songs from artists such as Rudy Vallee, Russ Columbo and Byron G Harlan, singers from the early 1900s.

The 40-minute interview was later released on a DVD entitled Tiny Tim's Songs and Stories Of The Crooners, and it can be bought online.

This video was thought to have been the last recorded video interview with Tiny, but in 2015 a video of Tiny being interviewed with a bandage on his head from the fall was posted, along with other news footage, but was taken down later.

However, When Tiny got up on stage to perform his set at the show, he announced "And if you hear any coughing during the show... well that's because... well, you know...". As he said this, he fell off of the stage with the cameras rolling. This footage was played on national news stations everywhere. He came to later on, and it was revealed he had a heart attack. Tiny was advised to retire from performing but did not listen to the warnings, and thus he died of a massive heart attack two months later at a gala benefit in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1]


The footage of the heart attack was lost and had not surfaced until December 21st, 2019, when Archive.org user Savage 17 uploaded the footage of the incident onto his account. Savage said that he obtained the recording from the Vimeo upload of Tiny Tim's Songs and Stories Of The Crooners.

Gallery

References

  1. An article on Tiny Tim's death. Retrieved 02 Jun '19

Footage of the incident: https://youtu.be/UEm_zKFmyiU?si=Q1v_RxuBy4yIFSTM