Jimmie Davis(1899-2000)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
American politician and songwriter who appeared in a number of films.
Davis was born in the now-nonexistent town of Beech Springs, Louisiana,
the son of sharecroppers. He and his ten siblings lived in dire
poverty, but Davis paid his way through Louisiana College and Louisiana
State University as a street musician. After graduate school, he taught
at Dodd College for Women, supporting himself with a singing job on a
local radio station. He got a chance to record one of his songs when a
record talent scout heard him on a broadcast, and in 1934 his song
"Nobody's Darling But Mine" was a hit. A 1931 song, "You Are My
Sunshine," became a 1939 hit, a standard eventually recorded by a score
of singing stars from Bing Crosby to Aretha Franklin. No longer poor, but unable to
live off his songs, Davis entered politics and was elected police chief
of Shreveport. He continued to record songs and occasionally acted in
movies, especially B-Westerns, until in 1943 he decided to run for
governor of Louisiana. Although Davis's opponent tried to use his
singing background against him, it actually was a great factor in
Davis's election to the post. Even after he was elected governor, he
continued to record songs and played himself in a movie of his life,
Louisiana (1947). During the 1950s, he made records and concert appearances,
then ran again for governor again in the 1960s. He was elected again
and reluctantly presided over Louisiana's difficult transition into
greater racial equality. After this second term, Davis spent the rest
of his career singing, recording over fifty albums. He died at 101,
enormously popular in his home state and likely to be remembered less
as a politician or actor than as the composer of "You Are My Sunshine,"
one of the most familiar American songs of all time.