Chuck Negron
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Singer Chuck Negron was born on June 8, 1942 in New York City. He grew
up in the Bronx. His parents were Charles and Elizabeth Negron. At age
fifteen, Negron had already recorded his first single and performed at
the legendary Apollo Theater with his doo-wop group
The Rondells. Moreover, Chuck played
basketball in both schoolyard pick-up games and at Taft High School. He
attended Allan Hancock College in Santa Maria, California on an
athletic scholarship and was subsequently recruited by coach
Bill Sharman to play basketball for
California State University in Los Angeles. Negron decided to leave his
promising sports career behind in order to pursue music instead. He
recorded the singles "Sharon Lee" for Marlinda Records and "I Dream of
An Angel" for the Heart Van label. After a brief and helpful tenure
with Columbia Records in the mid-1960s, Chuck became one of the original
founding members of the rock group
Three Dog Night in 1967. Three Dog Night went on to become one of the most popular and successful rock
bands of the 1970s; they not only scored numerous hit songs on the Top
10, Top 20, and Top 40 Billboard pop charts, but also sold millions of
records and played to huge audiences at sold-out concerts all over the
world. Alas, by the time Three Dog Night split up in 1976, the
rock'n'roll lifestyle had taken a massive toll on Negron. Suffering
from a serious and life-threatening addiction to heroin, Chuck did
stints in over thirty drug rehabilitation centers before finally
kicking his habit in September, 1991. Negron opened for
Howie Mandel's Atlantic City show
in 1994 and released the solo album "Am I Still In Your Heart" in
1995. In 1999, he wrote his autobiography "Three Dog Nightmare: The
Chuck Negron Story." Chuck released the album "The Long Road Back"
that same year. Negron now divides his time between raising his family,
performing, lecturing, and working with such anti-drug organizations as
Cri-Help, MusiCares, and Musicians Assistance Program.