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Greg Page (musician)
Actor, musician

Greg Page (musician)

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Actor, musician
Gender
Male
Birth
Age
52 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Gregory John Page, AM (born 16 January 1972) is an Australian singer, musician, and actor. He is best known as the original lead singer and a founding member of the children's band The Wiggles. Page has also recorded several solo albums.

Career

While still a teenager, Page was a roadie for and sang with the Australian band The Cockroaches during their final years. On bandmate Anthony Field's recommendation, he enrolled in Macquarie University to study Early Childhood Education.While students, Page, Field, and guitarist Murray Cook, along with former Cockroaches member and keyboardist Jeff Fatt, combined their music backgrounds and teaching skills to form The Wiggles.

The youngest member of the group, Page was 19 years old when he began touring with the group. Field described him as "the perfect straight man", with a "big friendly smile and easy stage manner" which made him engrossing for both children and adults. Also according to Field, Page "has an authoritative, though not overbearing, tone when he speaks to children and is a relaxed and clever emcee". When performing with The Wiggles, Page wore a yellow skivvy. Like the other Wiggles, Page had a shtick, which was doing magic tricks.

His 2005 solo album, Taking Care of Country, reflects Page's interest in Elvis Presley's music. It was recorded with the TCB Band, Elvis' back-up band. In spring 2003, Page performed in Las Vegas with the TCB Band. In 2002, Page sang back-up with Australian Elvis impersonator Mick Gerace. His second album with the TCB Band, Let It Be Me, was released in 2012. Production of the album began in 2004, but was interrupted due to Page's medical issues.

Illness and retirement

On 29 November 2006, The Wiggles announced that Greg Page would leave the group due to poor health.

Page had experienced health difficulties since December 2005, when he underwent a double hernia operation and withdrew from his group's U.S. tour after suffering repeated fainting spells, slurred speech, fatigue, and trembling. Although Page was missing for virtually all of the late 2006 U.S. tour, audiences were informed of Page's absence at concerts moments before the curtain went up.

At first, Page was told that he had seven years to live, but he was diagnosed with a non-life-threatening and difficult to diagnose chronic illness called orthostatic intolerance or dysautonomia, which causes symptoms such as fatigue and loss of balance. Specialists believed that Page had mild episodes of the illness going back twelve years, and that his symptoms worsened after his hernias. It was decided that Page would retire from performing with The Wiggles to better manage his health.

In the months following the announcement of Page's retirement, he received an "overwhelming outpouring of public support". He reported that it took his parents six months to respond to the "mountains of letters, emails and sympathy notes". As part owner of The Wiggles, Page received a payout of about $20 million for his share in the business. Page was succeeded by Sam Moran as a full member of the entertainment side of the group (although still an employee, rather than a partner, in its business side).

After their final tour of 2006 (their Christmas tour of USA, where Page mysteriously fell ill with OI), Page addressed the crowd:

By late 2009, Page had recovered enough from his illness to begin touring with another country rock band, but with a more limited schedule than The Wiggles. He had also started his own foundation, the Greg Page Fund, to raise funds and educate the public about orthostatic intolerance.

In addition, he is a supporter of, and spokesperson for, the Dysautonomia Youth Network of America (DYNA). When he left it upset many of the viewers of the show.

Reunion with The Wiggles

In January 2012, and amidst a great deal of controversy, The Wiggles announced that Page had regained his health and was returning to his role as the Yellow Wiggle. It was reported that he would return to touring with the group in March of that year.

However, on 17 May 2012, it was announced that Page, along with Murray Cook and Jeff Fatt, would again be retiring from The Wiggles at the end of the year. He was to be replaced by Wiggles cast member Emma Watkins, the first female member of The Wiggles. In a November 2012 interview with 702 ABC Sydney, Page stated that he was only slated to stay with the group until August of that year, but when Cook and Fatt decided to retire at the end of the year, they asked him to stay until then so he would leave alongside them, to which he agreed. Page and the others expected to remain involved with the creative and production aspects of the group.

Post-Wiggles

Shortly after leaving The Wiggles, Page joined the cast of the children's educational television program Butterscotch's Playground. Page helped develop the show with its creators.

Personal life

Page was born in Sydney, New South Wales. He owned the fourth-largest collection of Elvis Presley memorabilia in the world.

His collection included Elvis' personal and movie clothing, marriage certificate, guitar, piano, the last Cadillac owned by Elvis, and original TCB Band necklaces. In 2008 he decided to donate the collection, reportedly worth $1.5 million, to a new Elvis museum in Parkes, New South Wales.

Some of the collection was lent for display at the 2008 Parkes Elvis Festival.

Page was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia on 26 January 2010: "For service to the arts, particularly children's entertainment, and to the community as a benefactor and supporter of a range of charities". His nickname, according to Anthony Field, is "Pagey".

Solo discography

  • Greg Page (1998)
  • I Believe in Music (2002)
  • Greg Page Live in Concert (2003)
  • Throw Your Arms Around Me (2004)
  • Taking Care of Country (2005)
  • Let It Be Me (2012)
  • Here Comes Christmas! (2015)

Books

  • Page, Greg; Cadigan, Neil (2011). Now and then: the life-changing journey of the original Yellow Wiggle / Greg Page. Sydney: HarperCollins.  ISBN 978-0732289263 (paperback, 341pp.), ISBN 978-0730497295 (e-book, 352pp.)

Works cited

  • Field, Anthony; Truman, Greg (2012). How I Got My Wiggle Back: A Memoir of Healing. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. 272pp. ISBN 978-1-118-01933-7. 

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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