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Dennis Crosby

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Dennis Crosby
Crosby in 1961
Born
Dennis Michael Crosby

(1934-07-13)July 13, 1934
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedMay 4, 1991(1991-05-04) (aged 56)
Spouses
(m. 1958; div. 1964)
Arleen Newman
(m. 1964; div. 1991)
PartnerMarilyn Miller Scott
Children7, including Denise
Parent(s)Bing Crosby
Dixie Lee
RelativesGary Crosby (brother)
Phillip Crosby (twin brother)
Lindsay Crosby (brother)
Harry Crosby III (half-brother)
Mary Crosby (half-sister)
Nathaniel Crosby (half-brother)
Larry Crosby (uncle)
Bob Crosby (uncle)
Chris Crosby (cousin)

Dennis Michael Crosby (July 13, 1934 – May 4, 1991) was an American singer and occasional actor, the son of singer and actor Bing Crosby and his first wife Dixie Lee, and twin brother of Phillip Crosby. He was the father of Star Trek TNG actress Denise Crosby, who was named after him.

Early life

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Dennis Crosby attended Bellarmine College Preparatory in San Jose with his other brothers where he graduated in 1952. He subsequently enrolled at Washington State University at Pullman on an animal husbandry course with his twin brother.[1] He dropped out of the course after two years and was inducted into the Army in January 1955. He was initially posted to Fort Ord, California and then transferred to Fort Riley in Kansas for training with the US 10th Infantry Division, which transferred for duty in West Germany in the summer of 1955.[1]

When he was 21 in 1955, Dennis inherited $200,000, equivalent to $2,275,000 in 2023, from his late mother's trust.[1]

Career

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Crosby (right) with Garry Moore, Betsy Palmer and his brothers Lindsay and Phillip on I've Got a Secret in 1961

In the late 1950s, Dennis and his brothers Gary, Lindsay, and Phillip often performed as the Crosby Brothers in nightclubs and on The Ed Sullivan Show, though Dennis reputedly wished to avoid such appearances.[1]

Personal life

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On May 4, 1958, Crosby married Pat Sheehan, a Las Vegas showgirl and model who had once dated his father, shortly after his mother had died. She was Miss San Francisco of 1950, Playmate of the month of October 1958, and a part-time actress.[2]

Within days, Crosby was sued by another woman, Marilyn Miller Scott, over the paternity of her daughter, Denise Crosby. The sensational lawsuit lasted three years, and ended with Dennis being ordered to pay Scott child support and legal fees.[1] This and the marriage to Sheehan and other details caused deep embarrassment for both him and his father. Although Bing Crosby died when his granddaughter was 19, the two reportedly never met.

Crosby and Sheehan had two sons: Dennis Michael Jr and Patrick Anthony. He adopted Gregory Crosby, who was his wife's son by a previous marriage.[3]

In 1963, while working in Los Angeles for Bing Crosby Productions, he met Arleen Newman. On July 3, 1964, Crosby and Sheehan were divorced. Later that year, Crosby married Newman. The couple had three daughters, including: Erin Colleen Crosby, born February 25, 1971, in Los Angeles, and Kelly Lee Crosby. Crosby adopted Newman's daughter, Catherine Denise Crosby, from her first marriage to Mike Buell, which ended in divorce. Crosby and Newman divorced in 1991.

On December 11, 1989, Crosby's younger brother Lindsay died by suicide by gunshot.

Death

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Deeply distraught by his brother Lindsay's suicide and his own recent divorce, Crosby died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on May 4, 1991, in Novato, California, aged 56.[4] On January 14, 2006, Crosby's former wife, Pat Sheehan, died at the age of 74.

Their son Dennis Michael Crosby Jr. died on January 15, 2010. Patrick Anthony Crosby, born New Year's Eve 1960, died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, on September 19, 2011, after a lengthy illness.

Family relations

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Discography

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The Crosby Boys

  • The Crosby Brothers – Dennis – Philip – Lindsay Crosby (1960)
  • Presenting the Crosby Brothers (MGM-C-846) (2000)

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1945 Out of This World Himself
1945 Duffy's Tavern
1962 Sergeants 3 Pvt. Page

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "BING magazine". BING magazine. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
  2. ^ Clemens, Samuel (2020). Pat: A Biography of Hollywood's Blonde Starlet. Sequoia Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-578-68282-2.
  3. ^ "Dennis Crosby wants to adopt stepson". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Fort Worth, Texas. September 9, 1958.
  4. ^ "Bing Crosby's Son, Dennis, an Apparent Suicide at 56". The Washington Post. Washington, DC. May 8, 1991.
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