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Persoonlijke gegevens John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS 

Bron 1

Gezin van John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS

(1) Hij is getrouwd met (Niet openbaar).

Zij zijn getrouwd op 7 mei 1957, hij was toen 21 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. (Niet openbaar)

Het echtpaar is in 1962 gescheiden.


(2) Hij is getrouwd met (Niet openbaar).

Zij zijn getrouwd op 31 december 1962, hij was toen 27 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. (Niet openbaar)

Het echtpaar is op mei 1969 gescheiden.


(3) Hij is getrouwd met Geneviève WAÏTE.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1972, hij was toen 36 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. (Niet openbaar)

Het echtpaar is in 1985 gescheiden.


(4) Hij is getrouwd met (Niet openbaar).

Zij zijn getrouwd op 3 februari 1995, hij was toen 59 jaar oud.


Notities over John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS

John Edmund Andrew Phillips (August 30, 1935 – March 18, 2001) was an American singer, guitarist, songwriter, and promoter of the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. Phillips was a member and leader of the vocal group The Mamas & the Papas.

Contents
Early life
Phillips was born August 30, 1935 in Parris Island, South Carolina.[1] His father, Claude Andrew Phillips, was a retired United States Marine Corps officer. Claude Phillips, while on his way home from France following World War I, managed, in a poker game, to win a tavern business located in Oklahoma from another Marine. His mother, Edna Gertrude (née Gaines),[2] who had English ancestry,[3] met his father in Oklahoma. According to his autobiography, Papa John, Phillips' father was a heavy drinker who suffered from poor health.

Phillips grew up in Alexandria, Virginia, where he was inspired by Marlon Brando to be "street tough." From 1942 to 1946, he attended Linton Hall Military School in Bristow, Virginia. According to his autobiography, he "hated the place," citing "inspections," and "beatings," and recalls that "nuns used to watch us take showers."[4][5] He formed a musical group of teenage boys, who sang doo-wop songs. He played basketball at George Washington High School, now George Washington Middle School in Alexandria, Virginia, where he graduated in 1953, and gained an appointment to the Naval Academy. However, he resigned during his first (plebe) year. Phillips then attended Hampden–Sydney College, a liberal arts college for men in Hampden Sydney, Virginia, dropping out in 1959.

Career
Early years
Phillips longed to have success in the music industry and traveled to New York to gain a record contract in the early 1960s. His first band, The Journeymen, was a folk trio, with Scott McKenzie and Dick Weissman.[6] They were fairly successful, putting out three albums and several appearances on the 1960s TV show Hootenanny. All three albums, as well as a compilation known as Best of the Journeymen, have since been reissued on CD. He developed his craft in Greenwich Village, during the American folk music revival, and met future The Mamas & the Papas group vocalists Denny Doherty and Cass Elliot there around that time. Lyrics of the group's song "Creeque Alley" describe this period.

The Mamas & the Papas

The Mamas and the Papas in 1968; Michelle Phillips, Mama Cass Elliot, Denny Doherty, John Phillips
Main article: The Mamas and the Papas
Phillips was the primary songwriter and musical arranger of The Mamas & the Papas. In a 1968 interview, Phillips described some of his arrangements as "well arranged two-part harmony moving in opposite directions".[7] After being signed to Dunhill, they had several Billboard Top Ten hits, including "California Dreamin'", "Monday, Monday", "I Saw Her Again", "Creeque Alley", and "12:30 (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)". John Phillips also wrote "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)" in 1967 for former Journeymen bandmate Scott McKenzie.[7] "San Francisco" is widely regarded as emblematic of 1960s American counterculture music. Phillips wrote the oft-covered "Me and My Uncle", which was a favorite in the repertoire of the Grateful Dead.

Phillips helped promote and performed with The Mamas & the Papas in the Monterey International Pop Music Festival held June 16 to 18, 1967 in Monterey, California. The festival was planned in just seven weeks and was developed as a way to validate rock music as an art form in the way jazz and folk were regarded. It was the first major pop-rock music event in history.

John and Michelle Phillips became Hollywood celebrities, living in the Hollywood Hills and socializing with stars such as Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, and Roman Polanski. The Mamas & the Papas broke up in 1968 largely because Cass Elliot wanted to go solo and because of personal problems between Phillips, his wife Michelle, and Denny Doherty, including Michelle's affair with Doherty. As Michelle Phillips later recounted, "Cass confronted me and said 'I don't get it. You could have any man you want. Why would you take mine (Doherty)?'" Michelle was fired briefly in 1966 for having affairs with Gene Clark and Doherty, she was replaced for two months by Jill Gibson, their producer Lou Adler's girlfriend. Although Michelle Phillips was forgiven and asked to return to the group, the personal problems continued until the group split. Cass Elliot went on to have a successful solo career until her death from heart failure in 1974.

Later years and death
Phillips released his first solo album John, the Wolf King of L.A. in 1970. The album was not commercially successful, although it did include the minor hit "Mississippi", and Phillips began to withdraw from the limelight as his use of narcotics increased.

Phillips produced his third wife, Geneviève Waïte's, album, Romance Is on the Rise and wrote music for films. Between 1969 and 1974, Phillips and Waïte worked on a script and composed over 30 songs for a space-themed musical called Man on the Moon, which was eventually produced by Andy Warhol but played for just two days in New York after receiving disastrous opening night reviews.

Phillips moved to London in 1973, where Mick Jagger encouraged him to record another solo album. It was to be released on Rolling Stones Records and funded by RSR distributor Atlantic Records. Jagger and Keith Richards produced and played on the album, as well as former Stone Mick Taylor and future Stone Ronnie Wood. The project was derailed by Phillips' increasing use of cocaine and heroin, which he injected, by his own admission, "almost every fifteen minutes for two years".[8] In 2001, the tracks of the Half Stoned or The Lost Album album were released as Pay Pack & Follow a few months after Phillips' death. In 1975 Phillips, still living in London, was commissioned to create the soundtrack to the Nicolas Roeg film The Man Who Fell to Earth, starring David Bowie. Phillips asked Mick Taylor to help out; the film was released in 1976.

In 1981, Phillips was convicted of drug trafficking.[9] Subsequently, he and his daughter Mackenzie Phillips made the rounds in the media in an anti-drug campaign, helping to reduce his prison time to only a month in jail, of which he spent three weeks (one week off for good behavior) at Allenwood Prison Camp, Allenwood, Pennsylvania. Upon his release, he re-formed The Mamas & the Papas with Mackenzie Phillips, Spanky McFarlane (of the group Spanky and Our Gang) and Denny Doherty. Throughout the rest of his life, Phillips toured with various incarnations of this group.

His best-selling autobiography, Papa John, was published in 1986.

With Terry Melcher, Mike Love, and former Journeyman colleague Scott McKenzie he co-wrote the number one single for the Beach Boys, "Kokomo". The song was used in the 1988 film Cocktail, and was nominated for a Grammy Award (Best Song Written specifically for a Motion Picture or Television) and a Golden Globe Award for Best Song.

His years of drug addiction resulted in health problems that required a liver transplant in 1992. Several months later photographs of him drinking alcohol in a bar in Palm Springs, California were published in the National Enquirer. Questioned on the Howard Stern radio show, he said "I was just trying to break in the new liver".

Phillips spent his last years in Palm Springs, California, with Farnaz, his fourth wife. On March 18, 2001, he died of heart failure in Los Angeles at the age of 65,[10] days after completing recording sessions for a new album. He is interred at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Cathedral City, near Palm Springs.[11][12]

On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed John Phillips among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.[13]

Personal life
Phillips married Susan Adams[10] of a wealthy Virginia family on May 7, 1957. They had a son, Jeffrey, and a daughter, Mackenzie.

While touring California with The Journeymen, Phillips met teenager Michelle Gilliam, with whom he had an extramarital affair.[9] Their affair forced the dissolution of his marriage to Adams, and he married Michelle on December 31, 1962. The couple had one child together, Chynna Phillips, vocalist of the 1990s pop trio Wilson Phillips. They divorced in May 1969.

Phillips married actress and model Geneviève Waïte, who became his third wife, on January 30, 1972.[14] The couple had two children, Tamerlane and Bijou Phillips. Phillips and Waïte divorced in 1985.[15]

On February 3, 1995, artist Farnaz Arasteh became Phillips' fourth wife.[16][17]

Incest allegations
In September 2009, eight years after Phillips's death, his eldest daughter Mackenzie claimed that she and her father had a 10-year incestuous relationship. Mackenzie wrote of the relationship, which she said began when she was 19 years old in 1979, in her memoir High on Arrival. Mackenzie wrote that the relationship began after Phillips raped her while they were both under the influence of heavy narcotics on the eve of her first marriage.[18] Mackenzie Phillips appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show on September 23, 2009, and told Winfrey that her father injected her with cocaine and heroin. According to Phillips, the incestuous relationship ended when she became pregnant and did not know who had fathered the child. As her story goes, these doubts resulted in an abortion, which her father paid for, "and," she stated, "I never let him touch me again."[19][20]

Geneviève Waïte, John's wife at the time, denies the allegations, saying they were inconsistent with his character. Michelle Phillips, John's second wife, also stated that she had "every reason to believe [Mackenzie's account is] untrue."[21] Chynna Phillips, Michelle Phillips' daughter, stated that she believed Mackenzie's claims and that Mackenzie first told her about the relationship during a phone conversation in 1997, approximately 11 years after the supposed relationship had ended.[22] Mackenzie's half-sister Bijou Phillips from her father's marriage to Geneviève Waïte has stated that Mackenzie informed her of the relationship when Bijou was 13 years old, and the information had a devastating effect on Bijou's teenage years, stripping her of her innocence and leaving her "wary of [her] father."[23] She also stated "I'm 29 now, I've talked to everyone who was around during that time, I've asked the hard questions. I do not believe my sister. Our father [was] many things. This is not one of them."[24] Jessica Woods, daughter of Denny Doherty, said that her father had told her that he knew "the awful truth,"[25] and that he was "horrified at what John had done."[25]

Awards and honors
In 1996, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to Phillips.[26]

The Mamas and the Papas were inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame on January 12, 1998, and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2000.

Discography
Singles
Year Title Catalog Number US[27] US A/C[28] US Country[28] Album
1970 "Mississippi"
B-side: "April Anne"

Dunhill 4236 # 32 #13 #58 John Phillips
Solo
Solo work
Year Name Type Label Additional artist(s) Notes
1970 John Phillips (John, the Wolf King of L.A.) Album Dunhill Records The backing musicians included members of Wrecking Crew. [29]
1970 Brewster McCloud Soundtrack MGM Records Merry Clayton at vocals.
2001 Pay Pack & Follow Album Eagle Rock / Red Ink Records Mick Jagger on vocals, Keith Richards, Mick Taylor, and Ron Wood on guitar. Recorded in the 1973–1979, but released one month after his death in April 2001.
2001 Phillips 66 Album Eagle Rock / Red Ink Records Released in August 2001.
2008 Pussycat Album Varèse Vintage Recorded in 1978, released in September 2008.
2009 Andy Warhol Presents Man on the Moon Musical Varèse Sarabande Written by John Phillips and produced by Andy Warhol and directed by Paul Morrissey. 1975 musical. Released as part of the John Phillips Presents series of CDs.[30]
Compilations
2007: Jack of Diamonds

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS

John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS
1935-2001

(1) 1957
(Niet openbaar)
(2) 1962
(Niet openbaar)
(3) 1972
(4) 1995
(Niet openbaar)

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Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 30 augustus 1935 lag tussen 7,9 °C en 19,4 °C en was gemiddeld 13,3 °C. Er was 11,2 mm neerslag gedurende 4,7 uur. Er was 4,0 uur zonneschijn (29%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 4 Bft (matige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het zuiden. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 26 mei 1933 tot 31 juli 1935 was er in Nederland het kabinet Colijn II met als eerste minister Dr. H. Colijn (ARP).
  • Van 31 juli 1935 tot 24 juni 1937 was er in Nederland het kabinet Colijn III met als eerste minister Dr. H. Colijn (ARP).
  • In het jaar 1935: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 8,4 miljoen inwoners.
    • 2 januari » Bruno Hauptmann, die ervan verdacht wordt de tweejarige zoon van luchtvaartpionier Charles Lindbergh te hebben gekidnapt en vermoord, staat terecht. Later wordt hij schuldig bevonden en geëxecuteerd.
    • 1 mei » De dorpen Soetermeer en Zegwaard fuseren als gemeente Zoetermeer.
    • 25 mei » Jesse Owens loopt en springt vier wereldrecords binnen één uur bij wedstrijden in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
    • 27 mei » Oprichting van de Boliviaanse voetbalclub Club Aurora.
    • 11 augustus » Oprichting van de Paraguayaanse voetbalclub Club Sportivo Trinidense.
    • 15 december » Max Euwe wordt wereldkampioen schaken.
  • De temperatuur op 3 februari 1995 lag tussen 2,5 °C en 8,9 °C en was gemiddeld 5,7 °C. Er was -0.1 mm neerslag. Er was 4,0 uur zonneschijn (44%). Het was zwaar bewolkt. De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 4 Bft (matige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het zuid-zuid-westen. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Beatrix (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 30 april 1980 tot 30 april 2013 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van maandag 22 augustus 1994 tot maandag 3 augustus 1998 was er in Nederland het kabinet a href="https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabinet-Kok_I" class="extern">Kok I met als eerste minister W. Kok (PvdA).
  • In het jaar 1995: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 15,4 miljoen inwoners.
    • 8 mei » Dagblad De Telegraaf ziet de oplage weer verder stijgen in het eerste kwartaal van 1995, nadat de combinatie De Telegraaf/Courant Nieuws van de Dag in 1994 een record van meer dan 800 duizend exemplaren per dag heeft bereikt.
    • 27 mei » De Amerikaans acteur Christopher Reeve raakt bijna volledig verlamd na een val van zijn paard.
    • 9 juni » De Kroatische president Franjo Tudjman waarschuwt de opstandige Serviërs in de Krajina dat zij "hetzelfde lot zullen ondergaan als de extremisten in West-Slavonië" als zij niet bereid zijn tot een vredesakkoord.
    • 16 juni » Leden van het Internationaal Olympisch Comité besluiten in Boedapest om de Olympische Winterspelen van 2002 toe te kennen aan de Amerikaanse stad Salt Lake City.
    • 20 juni » België wordt om even voor vier uur 's ochtends getroffen door een lichte aardbeving die vrijwel in het hele land voelbaar is. Het epicentrum bevindt zich in Houdeng bij La Louvière, een plaatsje tussen Charleroi en Mons. De schok heeft een kracht van 4,5 op de Schaal van Richter.
    • 23 juli » Miguel Indurain wint de 82ste editie van de Ronde van Frankrijk. Het is de vijfde eindoverwinning op rij voor de Spaanse wielrenner.
  • De temperatuur op 18 maart 2001 lag tussen 1,7 °C en 4,5 °C en was gemiddeld 2,7 °C. Er was 7,4 mm neerslag gedurende 12,3 uur. Het was vrijwel geheel bewolkt. De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 2 Bft (zwakke wind) en kwam overheersend uit het noord-noord-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Beatrix (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 30 april 1980 tot 30 april 2013 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van maandag 3 augustus 1998 tot maandag 22 juli 2002 was er in Nederland het kabinet Kok II met als eerste minister W. Kok (PvdA).
  • In het jaar 2001: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 16,0 miljoen inwoners.
    • 27 januari » Aardbeving in de Indiase deelstaat Gujarat: ongeveer 20.000 doden en 167.000 gewonden.
    • 21 februari » Paus Johannes Paulus II creëert 42 nieuwe kardinalen, onder wie de Litouwse oud-nuntius in Nederland Audrys Juozas Bačkis.
    • 11 april » Het voetbalelftal van Australië verslaat dat van Amerikaans-Samoa met 31-0, de grootste zege bij een interlandwedstrijd. Archie Thompson scoort dertien maal.
    • 24 mei » Er vallen 23 doden bij een bruiloftsfeest in Tel Aviv doordat de dansvloer op de derde verdieping het begeeft.
    • 7 oktober » Amerikaanse invasie van Afghanistan, begin van de Afghaanse Oorlog
    • 12 november » In België start het eerste commerciële landelijke radiostation met uitzenden: Qmusic.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam PHILIPS

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Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Kees Willems, "Stamboom Willems Hoogeloon-Best", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-willems-hoogeloon-best/I273706.php : benaderd 26 april 2024), "John Edmund Andrew PHILIPS (1935-2001)".