Margie Hendrix | |
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Birth name | Marjorie Hendrix |
Born | Register, Georgia, U.S. | March 13, 1935
Died | July 14, 1973 New York City, New York, U.S. | (aged 38)
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Years active | 1954–1973 |
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Robert Fulson
(m. 1966; div. 1968) |
Marjorie Hendrix (sometimes Hendricks) (March 13, 1935 – July 14, 1973)[1] was an American rhythm and blues singer and founding member of the Raelettes, who were the backing singers for Ray Charles, the father of her child, Charles Wayne Hendrix.
She sang lead and background on several of Charles's hit songs of the late 1950s and early 1960s, but after she was ejected from the group in 1964 she attempted a solo career with the labels Mercury Records and Sound Stage 7 before she was dropped from both of them due to her music not charting. She experienced alcoholism, heroin addiction, depression, and poverty until she died in mid 1973 at the age of 38.