Tiny Tim (Herbert Buckingham Khaury) was an American singer, musical archivist and multi-instrumentalist
@Singers, Life Achievements and Family
Tiny Tim (Herbert Buckingham Khaury) was an American singer, musical archivist and multi-instrumentalist
Tiny Tim born at
He married thrice. His first marriage with Victoria Mae Budinger happened on the popular American talk show ‘The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson’ on December 17, 1969. It was watched by 40 million people. The marriage however culminated into divorce in 1977. His only daughter Tulip Victoria Khaury Stewart was born out of this marriage in 1971.
He was then married to Jan Alweiss from 1984 to 1995; and lastly with Susan Marie Gardner from 1995 till his death.
He suffered a heart attack on September 28, 1996 while performing at a ukulele festival at the Montague Grange Hall in Montague, Massachusetts and was subsequently hospitalised. Although he was advised against performances, Tim continued.
He was born on April 12, 1932 in Manhattan, New York City, US to Butros Hanna Khaury and Tillie (née Staff). His father was a textile worker from Beirut, Lebanon and a Maronite Christian priest. His mother Tillie (née Staff), who immigrated from Brest-Litovsk in 1914 was a garment worker.
His musical talent was quite apparent from his childhood and it was his father who first gave the five year old boy a vintage wind up Gramophone and a 78 RPM record of Henry Burr’s ‘Beautiful Ohio’. He began learning the guitar at age six and at eleven he started learning violin. Eventually he learnt to play mandolin and ukulele with the latter becoming his signature instrument with time. He would display his early talents with oomph and style to his parents at home.
In 1945 while recovering from an appendix operation, he would spend time reading the Bible and singing along with the songs played on radio. He was a mediocre student at school and dropped out from high school after repeating his sophomore year.
Meanwhile, he developed an interest for records particularly from the 1900-30’s era. He would visit New York Public Library during his free time and go through history of phonograph industry and about initial artists of the industry. Gradually he developed a lifetime hobby of researching sheet music and would many a times make photographic copies so as to study at home.
He got a messenger’s job at the MGM Studios in New York sometime in the early 1950s which only furthered his interest in showbiz. He took part in a talent show where he sang ‘You Are My Sunshine’ in falsetto voice that he only recently found that he can pull of while casually singing along with a radio song.
He then started using different names like Emmett Swink and Vernon Castle and performed at dance club amateur nights. Geared up with wild clothing and flaunting shoulder-length hair (inspired by poster of long-haired Italian actor Rudolph Valentino) in addition to wearing pasty white facial makeup Tim made effort to catch the eye of audience among other performers.
Seeing such change in appearance of the young man in his twenties, Tim’s mother became worried and wanted to take him to a psychiatrist at Bellvue Hospital, which however did not happen as his father intervened.
In 1959 he used the name ‘Larry Love, the Singing Canary’ to perform at Hubert's Museum and Live Flea Circus in Times Square, New York City. It was there that he signed with a manager that led him to attend auditions across the Greenwich Village. While there he sang the song ‘Tiptoe Through The Tulips’ in his falsetto voice, played ukulele and performed amateur gigs for free. With time ‘Tiptoe Through The Tulips’ would become his signature song that he continued to perform all through his career.
He started performing in a gay and lesbian club in Greenwich Village called Page 3 in 1963 for 6 hours a night, 6 nights a week earning $96 monthly, marking his first paying gig. For next couple of years he performed as Sir Timothy Timms and Dary Dover and it was his manager George King who later zeroed in his stage name as Tiny Tim.
He played the ukulele with left hand and the guitar with right hand.
Australian writer Ursula Dubosarsky mentioned that the character of Isador's Daddy with long red hair playing the ukulele from her children’s trilogy ‘The Strange Adventures of Isador Brown’ was inspired by him.
He is also mentioned in the lyrics "I love your blue-eyed voice, like Tiny Tim shines thru" from the 1992 song ‘How Do You Do!’ by Roxette.