April Byron


April Elizabeth Dove Potts, professionally April Byron, is an Australian pop singer and songwriter. She was the first chart-topping female artist to collaborate with the Bee Gees.

Early life and career

April attended St. Peters Collegiate Girls School in Adelaide, South Australia. Her earliest employers/mentors include Rupert Murdoch, Clyde Packer, producer/songwriter Nat Kipner, and Australian rock legend Johnny O'Keefe. Her then business managers were Ron Tremaine and his wife Patricia Tremaine. April relocated to Melbourne in 1963 to play the Ivan Dayman dance circuit, including Festival Hall and the Palais St. Kilda, with other Australian teenage pop singers including Normie Rowe, Olivia Newton-John and Bobby and Laurie. Due to a resemblance to Elizabeth Taylor, April was sometimes referred to as 'Australia's Liz Taylor'.
April's first recording on Festival's Leedon Label, 'Make the World Go Away', won the 3UZ Golden Sound Award 1963–64 for best-produced song in Australia. April was also awarded the 5KA Best Female Artist Award 1964–65. During this time, April's image appeared under Coca-Cola bottle caps in Australia.

Australian music career

In 1964, Everybody's Magazine's headline read 'Oh, to be in Melbourne, Now that April's There' – mentioning April's Golden Sound Award and focusing the Australian pop industry on Melbourne. April's award plus The Go!! Show, where April was resident female star of the first season, set the cornerstone for the second wave of pop/rock in Australia that began in Melbourne at that time and produced the next Australian 'king of pop', Normie Rowe.
April was touted as being "second only to The Beatles" when her cover of 'Make the World Go Away' stayed near the top of the charts for many weeks in several States, while the Beatles occupied the top four or five spots.
April's manager at this time was Horrie Dargie, head of DYT Productions, which produced The Go!! Show. After the first season of The Go!! Show, April was let go by DYT Productions due to her being 16 years old, pregnant, and unmarried. Her pregnancy was shrouded in secrecy and termed a ‘mystery illness’ in the music columns of the time period. According to Australian music historian Bill Casey, the pregnancy derailed April's pop career and it "never really regained momentum."
April moved to Sydney, where she and her family were supported by promoter Ivan Dayman, and later the Jacobsen Agency. After her daughter was born, April joined Johnny O'Keefe, Dinah Lee, and Max Merritt and the Meteors on the Johnny O'Keefe/Jacobsen Agency train tour of New South Wales and Queensland.
In Sydney, April played the RSL and Leagues clubs, the Motor Club and other major venues, television shows and performed with Helen Reddy, Dudley Moore, Peter Allen, John Rowles, young guitarist Rick Springfield, and toured with the Mills Brothers. It was during this time in Sydney that April first collaborated with the Bee Gees, Nat Kipner, and Ossie Byrne at the St. Clair Studio, Hurstville. In 1969, April toured New South Wales and Queensland with Johnny Farnham and later played venues in Brisbane and the Gold Coast with The Masters Apprentices. April's second daughter, Candy, was born in October 1969.
During the 1970s April was awarded Queensland Entertainer of the Year 1974–75. In 1977, April joined Johnny O'Keefe and the cast of "The Return of J.O.K and the Good Ol' Days of Rock n' Roll" at the St. George's Leagues Club.

Work with the Bee Gees

In 1965–66, when April was the current recipient of the 5KA Best Female Artist Award and Barry Gibb was the current 5KA Songwriter of the Year Award recipient, April collaborated on a single with the Bee Gees, then also in their teens. The single, 'A Long Time Ago/He's a Thief', began the Gibb's succession of collaborations with female singers, which later included Samantha Sang, Barbra Streisand, Dionne Warwick, Dolly Parton, and Celine Dion.
In 1982, April again collaborated with the Bee Gees at their Middle Ear Studio in Miami Beach, FL. April was given songs by the Bee Gees which she recorded in Music City, Nashville, TN, but were never released.

Move to the United States

April left Australia with her family in 1978 to pursue a film career in the US.
April continued her singing career, touring the US, playing the Stardust Hotel, the Sheraton Resort Hotel, and the Bourbon Street Blues and Boogie Bar, among other venues.

Personal life

April has two daughters, Cinderella Abrams and Candy Potts, and four grandchildren – Ashenputtel Abrams, Melanie Abrams, Emmalee Rainbow Abrams, and Kingsley Knecht.
April's first daughter Cinderella, at age 9, became one of the youngest stars of the 1970s Australian nationwide children's television series Happy Go 'Round.
April's second daughter Candy appeared in 3 episodes of VH1's reality show 'Saddle Ranch' in 2011–12.
April resides in Beverly Hills, CA, where she manages the entertainment careers of daughter Candy and granddaughters Ashenputtel, Melanie, and Emmalee Rainbow.

Discography