20/20: Nat "King" Cole, An American Legend
Dec. 15, 2000 -- Even at the height of his fame, when his songs were adored across the country, singer Nat “King” Cole was not protected from the rampant racism and hypocrisy that existed in America.
He hid his tensions and frustrations with a cool, confident outward manner, but the racism in everyday life took its toll. Cole’s damaged health may have been the side effect of the pressures the musician felt during his career.
Cole’s wife Maria, daughter Natalie, close friends and a biographer talk with ABCNEWS correspondent Joel Siegel about the beloved entertainer’s strengths and weaknesses and life in America in the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s.
Top of the Charts
In 1946, Cole recorded “The Christmas Song,” his first hit as a balladeer. It was a happy time personally and professionally.
“Nat was in love when he recorded it,” says biographer Daniel Mark Epstein.“Maybe some of the warmth and sentiment that comes through in those great recordings has something to do with his being in love with Maria [his future wife].”
Cole was at the top of the American pop charts, second only to Frank Sinatra. And his ballad “Nature Boy” had made him a huge international star as well.
‘Undesirable Neighbors’
Although he rode the top of the music charts, the prejudice Cole faced was blatant and sometimes scary. In 1948, for example, the Waldorf Astoria in New York refused to allow him to get married at the hotel.
When Cole moved his family into an exclusive area of Los Angeles, he was told at a community meeting that an “undesirable neighbors committee” had been formed. Some people expressed their displeasure by firing shots through the windows and poisoning one of the family’s dogs.
Life on the road could also be humiliating. Cole was sometimes not allowed to sleep in the same place where he performed. Natalie Cole remembers a trip with her father to Las Vegas when the two had to stay at a motel instead of the hotel where Cole was singing.
Even in 1956, when Cole had his own show at NBC television — the first network program to have an African-American as host — he could not find a national sponsor.
“I think my dad probably developed his ulcers because he really didn’t express himself a lot in the negative or frustrating things that might have made him anxious,” Natalie Cole says. “That just wasn’t his nature.”
Smoking was one outlet for his tension and it took a terrible toll. In 1964 Cole was diagnosed with lung cancer. He died of the disease in 1965 at the age of 45.
The period of his illness was marked with difficult family times. Cole had started an affair with a chorus girl, but reconciled with his wife before his death.
In Her Father’s Footsteps
Natalie Cole was a teenager when Cole died. She became a singer despite her father’s wish that she find another career.
She has helped keep her father’s fame alive through some miracles of recording engineering. In 1991, decades after his death, she released a father-daughter duet of the song “Unforgettable” — a huge hit that sold 11 million records.
Her holiday CD, titled The Magic of Christmas, has another duet with her dad, this time of his famous “Christmas Song.”