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Earl-Jean Reavis (née McCrea; born 1942) [1] is an American former pop and R&B singer who was a member of the vocal group the Cookies. Credited as Earl-Jean , she had a solo hit with the original version of " I'm into Something Good ", written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King , and later a bigger hit for Herman's Hermits .
Earl-Jean McCrea - 1961–1964; Margaret Ross - 1961–1967; Dorothy, Beulah, and Margaret were first cousins; their respective mothers were sisters. Beulah and Margaret were not members of the group during the same period, but both performed with Dorothy. Darlene and Earl-Jean were sisters, but were not members of the group during the same period.
Goffin also had a daughter, Dawn, with Jeanie Reavis (Earl-Jean McCrea). He married Barbara Behling in the early 1970s and had a son, Jesse Dean Goffin, in 1976. They divorced later that decade. Goffin then married songwriter Ellen Minasian in the 1980s and had one daughter, Lauren, in 1984.
If you're a mega fan of the royal family (or a royals reporter like myself), you likely recognize July 1 as an extremely important date: Princess Diana's birthday. Today, Prince William and Prince ...
The song was originally recorded (as "I'm into Somethin' Good") by Cookies member Earl-Jean on Colpix Records in 1964. Her version entered the U.S. Cash Box Top 100 charts in the US on 4 July 1964 and spent eight weeks there, reaching a high of number 42 on 15 August 1964, and number 38 Billboard .
Former President Donald Trump falsely said Friday that a decades-old photo of him with E. Jean Carroll, the writer he has been found liable for sexually abusing and defaming, might have been ...
A photo of young James Earl Jones, after the success of Broadway show, "The Great White Hope." AP Photo. Years before he was known for his legendary voice, Jones was a shy, stuttering student in ...
The record features girl group the Cookies on background vocals, with the Cookies' lead Earl-Jean McCrea getting some solo lines. The song's title is a reference to the turkey trot dance step , a step that was only briefly popular fifty years before the song was released; the song is played at a tempo much slower than the one used for the dance ...