PARIS
(Reuters) - U.S. rhythm and blues musician Screamin' Jay Hawkins, famous
for performing his trademark voodoo-inspired blues lying in a coffin,
has died in Paris aged 70, local media said on Saturday.
Hawkins,
who scored his biggest hit in the 1950s with his hollering rendition
of ``I Put A Spell On You,'' died in a hospital after suffering a hemorrhage
following an operation on an intestinal obstruction.
He
sang and played the piano and tenor sax, and cultivated a reputation
for outrageousness with stage outfits of gold and leopardskin and props
including a smoking skull called Henry.
He
was born Jalacy Hawkins on July 18, 1929, in Cleveland, Ohio. According
to published accounts, he spent the first 18 months of his life in an
orphanage before being adopted by a tribe of Blackfoot Indians.
``I
came into this world black, naked and ugly. And no matter how much I
accumulate here, it's a short journey. I will go out of this world black,
naked and ugly. So I enjoy life,'' he told one interviewer.
An
early musical talent, Hawkins joined the army aged 14 and won several
middleweight boxing titles before joining the army's entertainment unit.
He
got his start in show business in the early 1950s playing with jazz
and R&B musician Tiny Grimes and was said to have played briefly
with Fats Domino, before getting fired for trying to upstage the singer
onstage.
Legend
has it that Hawkins earned his own nickname from an obese lady he met
in a nightclub, who was downing scotch and exhorted him to ``Scream,
baby, scream!.''
Hawkins
went on to cult fame with hits like ``Constipation Blues'' and in later
life found a second career as a movie actor after director Jim Jarmusch
hired him to star in ``Mystery Train'' in 1989.
He
never realised his lifelong ambition of singing an opera. The globe-trotting
musician was living in a Paris suburb at the time of his death.
20:56
Saturday 12 February 2000
Screamin'
Jay Hawkins, the veteran blues singer and pianist, has died. The musician,
whose real name was Jalacy Hawkins, died at the Ambroise Pave clinic
in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a suburb of Paris. He died of multiple organ failure
following emergency surgery earlier in the week to treat an aneurysm,
said his doctor. Hawkins, who was 70 and from Cleveland, Ohio, was best
known for his song "I Put a Spell On You".