
Bobby Sherman, 60s teen idol and singer of hit Little Women, dies aged 81
His wife, Brigitte Poublon, announced the death Tuesday and family friend John Stamos posted her message on Instagram: 'Bobby left this world holding my hand — just as he held up our life with love, courage, and unwavering grace.' Sherman revealed he had stage 4 cancer earlier this year.
Sherman was a squeaky-clean regular on the covers of Tiger Beat and Sixteen magazines, often with hair over his eyes and a choker on his neck. His face was printed on lunchboxes, cereal boxes and posters that hung on the bedroom walls of his adoring fans. He landed at No 8 in TV Guide's list of TV's 25 Greatest Teen Idols.
He was part of a lineage of teen heartthrobs who emerged as mass-market, youth-oriented magazines and TV took off, connecting fresh-scrubbed Ricky Nelson in the 1950s to David Cassidy in the 60s, all the way to Justin Bieber in the 2000s.
Sherman had four Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart – Little Woman, Julie, Do Ya Love Me, Easy Come, Easy Go, and La La La (If I Had You). He had six albums on the Billboard 200 chart, including Here Comes Bobby, which spent 48 weeks on the album chart, peaking at No 10. His career got its jump start when he was cast in the ABC rock'n'roll show Shindig! in the mid-60s. Later, he starred in two television series — Here Come the Brides (1968-70) and Getting Together (1971).
After the limelight moved on, Sherman became a certified medical emergency technician and instructor for the Los Angeles police department, teaching police recruits first aid and CPR. He donated his salary.
'A lot of times, people say, 'Well, if you could go back and change things, what would you do?'' he told the Tulsa World in 1997. 'And I don't think I'd change a thing – except to maybe be a little bit more aware of it, because I probably could've relished the fun of it a little more. It was a lot of work. It was a lot of blood, sweat and tears. But it was the best of times.'
Sherman, with sky blue eyes and dimples, grew up in the San Fernando Valley, singing Ricky Nelson songs and performing with a high-school rock band.
'I was brought up in a fairly strict family,' he told the Sunday News newspaper in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, in 1998. 'Law and order were important. Respect your fellow neighbor, remember other people's feelings. I was the kind of boy who didn't do things just to be mischievous.'
He was studying child psychology at a community college in 1964 when his girlfriend took him to a Hollywood party, which would change his life. He stepped onstage and sang with the band. Afterward, guests Jane Fonda, Natalie Wood and Sal Mineo asked him who his agent was. They took his number and, a few days later, an agent called him and set him up with Shindig!
Sherman hit true teen idol status in 1968, when he appeared in Here Come the Brides, a comedy-adventure set in boom town Seattle in the 1870s. He sang the show's theme song, Seattle, and starred as young logger Jeremy Bolt, often at loggerheads with his brother, played by David Soul. It lasted two seasons.
Following the series, Sherman starred in Getting Together, a spinoff of The Partridge Family, about a songwriter struggling to make it in the music business. He became the first performer to star in three TV series before the age of 30. That television exposure soon translated into a fruitful recording career: His first single, Little Woman, earned a gold record in 1969.
'While the rest of the world seemed jumbled up and threatening, Sherman's smiling visage beamed from the bedroom walls of hundreds of thousands of teenage girls, a reassuring totem against the riots, drugs, war protests and free love that raged outside,' the Tulsa World said in 1997.
His movies included Wild In Streets, He is My Brother and Get Crazy.
Sherman pulled back from his celebrity career after several years of a frantic schedule, telling the Washington Post: 'I'd film five days a week, get on a plane on a Friday night and go someplace for matinee and evening shows Saturday and Sunday, then get on a plane and go back to the studio to start filming again. It was so hectic for three years that I didn't know what home was.'
Sherman's pivot to becoming an emergency medical technician in 1988 was born out of a longtime fascination with medicine. Sherman said that affinity blossomed when he raised his sons with his first wife, Patti Carnel. They would get scrapes and bloody noses and he became the family's first-aid provider. So he started learning basic first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation from the Red Cross.
'If I see an accident, I feel compelled to stop and give aid even if I'm in my own car,' he told the St Petersburg Times. 'I carry equipment with me. And there's not a better feeling than the one you get from helping somebody out. I would recommend it to everybody.'
In addition to his work with the Los Angeles police department, he was a reserve deputy with the San Bernardino county sheriff's department, working security at the courthouse. Sherman estimated that, as a paramedic, he helped five women deliver babies in the backseats of cars or other impromptu locations.
In one case, he helped deliver a baby on the sidewalk and, after the birth, the new mother asked Sherman's partner what his name was. 'When he told her Bobby, she named the baby Roberta. I was glad he didn't tell her my name was Sherman,' he told the St Petersburg Times in 1997.
He was named LAPD's Reserve Officer of the Year for 1999 and received the FBI's Exceptional Service Award and the 'Twice a Citizen' Award by the Los Angeles County Reserve Foundation.
In a speech on the floor of the US House of Representatives in 2004, the then representative Howard McKeon said: 'Bobby is a stellar example of the statement 'to protect and serve.' We can only say a simple and heartfelt thank you to Bobby Sherman and to all the men and women who courageously protect and serve the citizens of America.'
Later, Sherman would join the 1990s-era Teen Idols Tour with former 1960s heartthrobs Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones of the Monkees and Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits.
The Chicago Sun-Times in 1998 described one of Sherman's performances: 'Dressed to kill in black leather pants and white shirt, he was showered with roses and teddy bears as he started things off with 'Easy Come, Easy Go.' As he signed scores of autographs at the foot of the stage, it was quickly draped by female fans of every conceivable age group.'
Sherman also co-founded the Brigitte and Bobby Sherman Children's Foundation in Ghana, which provides education, health and welfare programs to children in need.
He is survived by two sons, Christopher and Tyler, and his wife.
'Even in his final days, he stayed strong for me. That's who Bobby was – brave, gentle, and full of light,' Poublon wrote.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
OnlyFans tennis star claps back at haters with another raunchy post after US Open match got cancelled
American tennis player and OnlyFans star Sachia Vickery has clapped back at haters with a raunchy post on her Instagram. The 30-year-old, currently ranked No. 559 in the world, has faced backlash from fans after revealing she had joined adult content site OnlyFans earlier this year. For $12.99 a month, subscribers have access to 'the content too spicy for Instagram,' according to Vickery's OnlyFans bio. She also charges men $1,000 to date her. Vickery has since faced harsh criticism from traditional tennis fans, who have brutally torn into her over the decision, but now the American has hit back. Taking to her Instagram story on Wednesday, Vickery shared a video of herself in a bikini with the caption: 'Imagine hating me and I'm in my room like this everyday'. The following post on her Instagram story appeared to promote her OnlyFans page. The American, ranked No. 559, played her first match since February on Tuesday when she beat Anastasiya Soboleva in the first round of US Open qualifying. However, Vickery has discovered more lucrative means of keeping herself busy over the past few months - and they don't require her to swing a racket. Her OnlyFans platform teases her 'longest shower vid yet,' strip teases and 'spicier' pictures, while also asking her fans to rate her 'riding skills' as she shares risque videos and saucy snaps. Vickery has banked just over $2million throughout her 14-year career on the court. Outside of the sport, she demands a $1,000 deposit fee just to date her. 'I no longer date for free due to the behavior of men I now require a pre-date deposit send me 1,000 and we can make it happen my cashapp is $Sachiavick,' she told her 39,4000 followers during an Instagram Q&A session earlier this week. While Vickery's move may have sent ripples through the tennis world, she has no regrets. She previously revealed that she's always seen herself as something of a revolutionary. 'I've always pushed boundaries,' she said on the Black Spin Global podcast earlier this year. 'I've always been outspoken about racial hate I get online, bodyshaming. I'm very open about a lot of stuff. 'I'm still playing tennis, my career is still going but I also want to do things outside of tennis. I'm starting to explore more opportunities on social media.' 'Obviously there are levels to OnlyFans, you have athletes like Nick [Kyrgios] and Alex [Muller] who are going to be posting tennis content for the most part and then you have the other complete extreme, which I'm not. I'm in that middle gap,' she added. 'I set it up in January and it just took off. Being a tennis player definitely helped my marketing. I'm at a stage where I don't do the absolute most on there but I'm comfortable as I need to be. I'm doing really well. 'Obviously, I'm going to get some negative feedback but that's just normal. Whatever you do in life there's always going to be some criticism. If I was doing nothing I'd be getting criticism, so I might as well get on the platform and make money while I'm at it.' Yet as she stepped onto the Grand Slam stage in Flushing Meadows again this week, Vickery once again hit back at her critics. 'I'm very open-minded and I don't care what people think of me … it's also the easiest money I've ever made and I enjoy doing it,' said Vickery when asked about balancing the two entirely different worlds together in an Instagram Q&A session. 'I will never talk s*** about girls on OnlyFans ever again for the rest of my life. Because the amount I made on there in my first two days, I am overwhelmed. I am just shook really.' Vickery, whose father Rawle is a former soccer player and brother Dominque Mitchell played football at South Carolina State, turned professional in 2011 after training with USTA and Mouratoglou Academy in France. But her career peaked back in 2018, when she managed a career-high ranking of World No 73. Now, the Florida native has slumped to No 559, without a single victory to her name. She failed to qualify for the Australian Open in January, stumbling in the third round of qualifying, and skipped Roland Garros and Wimbledon all together. However, she appears to save her best performances for the US Open with her best Grand Slam record coming in New York. She's made the second round of the tournament four times. Vickery is far from the first tennis player to have flirted with an alternate career on the x-rated website to fund their tennis ambitions. The sport's renowned babd boy, Nick Kyrgios, raised eyebrows earlier this year when he signed onto a saucy OnlyFans collaboration after his breakup from longtime girlfriend Costeen Hatzi. Kyrgios, who publicly split from his girlfriend of four years in March, hosted a new reality series for OnlyFans TV alongside adult entertainers Sophie Stonehouse and Rachel Starr in June. Titled Smash City, the series saw OnlyFans creators, including Vickery, battle it out on the pickle ball court to win $20,000. Kyrgios first joined OnlyFans in 2023, revealing in a statement that he wanted fans to see 'all different sides' of him after an injury saw him sidelined from his sport.


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Friend of Bill Belichick's ex Linda Holliday hits out at Jordon Hudson for 'grossly inappropriate' act
A friend of Linda Holliday has slammed Bill Belichick 's girlfriend Jordon Hudson for 'grossly inappropriate' appearance at a Nantucket Christmas gala last December. Belichick, 73, and Holliday, 62, were together for 16 years, and broke up around September 2022. The following year, and despite their 49-year age gap, Belichick started dating Hudson after meeting her on a flight in 2021. Earlier this month, Hudson and Holliday suffered through an awkward meeting at a fundraiser for Nantucket Cottage Hospital. It was a tense follow-up to Hudson, 24, being kicked out of a Christmas party on the island last year at Holliday's request. Hudson and her beauty pageant bestie Melissa Sapini reportedly enraged Holliday by appearing at the event where her daughters were DJing. They were asked to leave close to the end of the night, agreeing to depart alongside an employee at the venue. As they waited by the exit, Hudson supposedly then told the employee that Holliday had threatened Sapini during the clash on the dance floor. Now, according to The New Yorker, a friend of Holliday has shed light on the situation. Elin Hilderbrand, a novelist and longtime friend of Holliday, said: 'No punches were thrown, no hair was pulled. 'But we did suggest she leave because we thought it was grossly inappropriate for her to be there. Bill and Linda were together since the girls were, like, fourteen years old, and they thought of him as a father figure.' Hudson reportedly refused to leave at first, and the situation escalated enough that a venue employee filed an internal incident report - later published by TMZ. Though the report stated Hudson was 'a paying guest' and had caused no disruption, she was eventually escorted out. Holliday reportedly told staff at the time, 'If this didn't involve my girls, I don't think this would have bothered me as much. The 'momma bear' in me came out.' Hudson has tried keeping a low profile following an excruciating April CBS interview with Belichick, where she was exposed for interrupting questions from off-camera about how the couple met. The fallout led to friends of Belichick publicly discussing an intervention, while others questioned his sanity and if Hudson was taking advantage of him. Then, at the beginning of August, two podcasters claimed they spoke to Hudson over the course of a week in several phone calls that left them with a growing sense of unease. They were trying to get Hudson to appear on their show but talks broke down, with Hudson allegedly shouting and crying over how the podcasters had previously spoken about her. This all comes with Belichick's first UNC game on the horizon. His team faces TCU in Chapel Hill on Monday, September 1. After Belichick failed to clinch another NFL job following his departure from the New England Patriots, he is deeply determined to be a success in North Carolina. Perhaps, then, it is no surprise to Belichick that his ex is causing more trouble at a time like this.


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Struggling pop star Ava Max breaks silence over rumored feud with Lady Gaga as furious fans weigh in
Ava Max is speaking out about her rumored feud with Lady Gaga. The American pop star, 31, has long been pitted against Gaga, 39, by music fans due to their strikingly similar looks. Fans have also accused the Sweet but Psycho singer of copying Gaga's signature dance-pop sound. Seemingly fed up with the comparisons and chatter, Ava addressed the drama head on in the lyrics of her upcoming song, Don't Click Play. 'She samples, singing Gaga imitations. Can't kings and queens look good with poker faces?' she sings, referencing her own hit Kings & Queens and Gaga's classic smash Poker Face. 'But I'm loving myself even if you hate it,' adds Ava. The song has already caused quite the stir online, with fans from both sides weighing in on the issue. 'She's flopping so she needs to mention Gaga AGAIN. Work on new sounds, Ms Ava,' commented one. 'I like Gaga, but her fans can be unbearable. They act as if the world revolves around her, while constantly throwing shade at Ava on Twitter and YouTube,' wrote another. A third added, 'Way to stay relevant. While Gaga doesn't need to name drop or address anyone to stay relevant in the game.' Another wrote, 'Not being mean but do people actually compare her to Gaga? I think Ava is very talented I just haven't really seen anyone comparing specifically to Gaga.' This isn't the first time that Ava has addressed the comparisons between herself and the Born This Way singer. In 2023 she told Nylon, 'No matter how many haters there are out there, or people who want to bring you down — or people who think I'm a Lady Gaga comparison, which is huuuh-larious. 'Who doesn't love Gaga?! I can't help that I look like this. I was born the way I was born too!' she continued. 'I can't help that I'm 5-foot-2 as well. Like what do they want me to do, dye my hair black?! I did that, and then they started comparing me to Dua! You can't win.' Last year, both Ava and Gaga went viral on social media after fans noticed how similar the two pop stars look. The confusion began when Gaga posted a closeup photo of her made-up face on Instagram to promote her Haus Labs line of liquid eyeliner. The photo was a hit with fans, but several commenters were shocked at how similar the singer and actress — Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta — looked to Ava. Ava is best known for her hits Sweet but Psycho, Kings & Queens, and My Head & My Heart. However, her career seems to have taken a downturn over the last year. The Wisconsin-born songstress has struggled to crack the charts with all the singles from her upcoming third album, Don't Click Play. Her last track, Wet Hot American Summer, only reached 2.2 million views on YouTube despite its provocative music video.