Priscilla Cory - Biography

Was born in Long Beach, California along with three brothers. Her parents are, singers, actor, producer, and songwriters, Troy Cory, and her mother Dorothy Sweford.

Both of her parents teamed up as songwriters with Robert B. Sherman and his brother Richard M. Sherman Academy Award winners. Priscilla's parents also co-wrote songs with Sonny Bono who was also the A & R man for Prisicilla's father Troy Cory during the late 1950's.

Priscilla Cory started out at about 6 years old modeling professionally with the William Adrian Teen Modeling Agency, in Pasadena, CA (before being a teenager) and was in The Rose Parade in 1967 and 1973 on winning floats.

Priscilla Cory's first television appearances were on her father's Troy Cory Variety Show, The Troy Cory Evening Show (1974), on channels KTLA-5 and KCOP-13. Priscilla Cory and her father Troy Cory were the hosts and sang together on the show as a "duet," and did comedy skits, written by Vic Dunlop. They were compared to other family duets such as, "Frank and Nancy Sinatra," "Donny & Marie Osmond," and Sonny & Cher.

Priscilla Cory has recorded a about 60 songs, some specifically for The Troy Show. Her first recording at 13 years old was a rewritten version of, "That's My Weakness Now," made popular by "The It Girl," Helen Kane_(1928).

Priscilla recorded her first album with her father Troy Cory, entitled Troy and Priscilla Cory "Easy Lovin," which was later re-released on the 'British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) [gb]', BBC Radioplay Record Label.

Her main movie breakthrough was in the biographical made-for-TV movie, Deadman's Curve (1978), a World Premiere Movie on CBS about "Jan and Dean", a surf music singing duo from the early 1960's. This movie was a door opener for 'Jan Berry', and Dean Torrence, it gave them a whole new opportunity for a comeback music career, many years after Jan Berry's traumatic automobile accident. Priscilla Cory co-starred as Linda along with the stars Richard Hatch, as Jan and Bruce Davison as Dean, aka "Jan and Dean". She sang the hit song "Linda" written by Jack Lawrence (1946), in the movie which was recorded by the duo Jan and Dean in the 1960's.

Priscilla Cory did a Coca Cola Commercial playing a Homecoming Queen.

Priscilla Cory and her father Troy Cory later performed in Europe, recording and filming. They starred in "Just in the Nick of Time," a Christmas movie filmed in Bavaria, Germany and Austria, made for American and German television. Priscilla did the narration for the film in both English and German.

Priscilla Cory's agents over the years were, Bill Robards Talent Agency in Burbank, CA, Herb Tannen Agency (commercials), Hollywood, CA, Leon Raper Agency, Beverly Hills, CA and also represented by the Agent Walter Kohner, at his brother's legendary Beverly Hills, CA Paul Kohner, Agency.

Troy Cory Show's were also produced in "The People's Republic of China," beginning in 1988-2004, by back-up singers known as the "Brooke Sisters." Back-up dancers in 1988 were, Joey Lauren Adams and Angelica Bridges who lip synced to some of Priscilla Cory's recorded songs.

Her father Troy Cory was the first American singing artist to perform in, The People's Republic of China.

Her great grandfather, is inventor Nathan B. Stubblefield who invented the Wireless Telephone and is the pioneer of today's Mobile Phone and known as the first person to transmit the human voice wirelessly in 1892. He is known particularly in the state of Kentucky for inventing the Radio and the Father of Broadcasting. He invented many electrical devices patented in Canada and the U.S. The Wireless Telephone is U.S. Patent No. 887,357, on May 12, 1908 in his birthplace of Murray, Kentucky, and is the official birthplace commemorating him as such with highway plaques saying so and a monument honoring him at the Murray State University where his vast farmland and industrial school,"Teléph-on-délgreen" once was.