Read about Huey Lewis net worth, age, wife, children, family, parents, height and albums as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Huey Lewis is an American singer, songwriter, and actor. Lewis sings leads and plays harmonica for his band, Huey Lewis and the News, in addition to writing or co-writing many of the band’s songs. The band is perhaps best known for their third, and best-selling, album Sports, and their contribution to the soundtrack of the 1985 feature film Back to the Future. Lewis previously played with the band Clover from 1972 to 1979. Lewis sued Ray Parker Jr. in 1985 over similarities between Parker’s theme for the 1984 movie Ghostbusters and Lewis’s “I Want a New Drug”. The case was settled out of court with both parties agreeing to keep the settlement secret. In 2001, Parker sued Lewis, alleging that in a Behind the Music episode, Lewis had discussed the settlement in violation of their nondisclosure agreement.
Early life
Name | Huey Lewis |
Net Worth | $25 million |
Occupation | Singer, Songwriter, Actor |
Age | 73 years |
Height | 1.82m |
Hugh Anthony Cregg III was born on July 5, 1950 (age 73 years) in New York City, United States. His father, Hugh Anthony Cregg Jr., was an Irish-American from Boston, and his mother, Maria Magdalena Barcinska, was Polish, from Warsaw. His grandfather, Hugh Cregg, was the district attorney of Essex County, Massachusetts from 1931 to 1959. Lewis was raised in Marin County, California, living in Tamalpais Valley and Strawberry, and attending Strawberry Point Elementary School (where he skipped a second grade) and Edna Maguire Junior High School in Mill Valley. When he was 13, his parents divorced.
Lewis attended and graduated from the Lawrenceville School, a then-all-male prep school in New Jersey, in 1967, and he achieved a perfect score of 800 on the math portion of the SAT. He was also an all-state baseball player. Lewis attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. His mother had an extramarital affair with Beat Generation poet Lew Welch, who became his stepfather. Lewis credits Welch with inspiring him in his early teenage years. His mother was close friends with the Grateful Dead’s manager and extended family.
In an interview with David Letterman, Huey Lewis talked about hitchhiking across the country back to New York City and how he learned to play the harmonica while waiting for rides. He talked about hanging out at the airport for three days until he stowed away on a plane to Europe. In later interviews, Lewis would reveal other encounters he had traveling around Europe. While visiting Aberdeen, Scotland, with no money and nowhere to sleep, he claimed that the locals were very hospitable by offering him somewhere to stay. In Madrid, Spain, he became an accomplished blues player as he hitchhiked and supported himself by busking with his harmonica. He gave his first concerts in Madrid, earning enough money to buy a plane ticket back to the US.
He entered the engineering program at Cornell University upon his return. While there he made friends with Lance and Larry Hoppen who later played with Orleans and Eddie Tuleja of King Harvest. Initially an active student and a member of the fraternity Eta Lambda Nu, Huey Lewis soon lost interest in college. He signed up with a band called Slippery Elm, and in December 1969 during his junior year, he dropped out of Cornell and moved back to the San Francisco Bay Area. His aim was to continue playing music, though along the way he also tried other fields of work including landscaping, carpentry, wedding and event planning, as well as delivering and selling natural foods.
Music career
Huey Lewis joined the Bay Area band Clover in 1971. Around this time he took the stage name “Hughie Louis”, the spelling of which he would tinker with for some years after. Other members of the band (at various points) included John McFee and Alex Call. Lewis played harmonica and sang lead vocals on a few tunes. In 1976, after playing in the Bay Area with limited success, Clover went to Los Angeles. They had their big break in a club there when their act was caught by Nick Lowe, who convinced Clover to travel to Great Britain with him. However, Clover arrived in Britain just as their folk-rock sound, known as pub rock in Britain, was being replaced by punk rock.
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The two Clover albums produced by Robert John “Mutt” Lange for Phonogram were not successful. By this point the spelling of Cregg’s stage name had changed to “Huey Louis”; it is under this spelling that he is billed on both of Clover’s albums for Phonogram, although for songwriting credits he is billed as “H. Cregg”. The band accompanied Elvis Costello on his debut album, My Aim is True, minus Lewis and Alex Call, the singers. As Lewis told Rolling Stone years later, “there isn’t any harmonica. I tell people, ‘All the harmonica that isn’t on the Elvis Costello record was played by me.'” In 1978 the band returned to California, McFee joined the Doobie Brothers, and Clover disbanded. McFee and Lewis, credited as Huey Harp, both appear as guest musicians on the George Hatcher Band’s 1977 sophomore album, Talkin’ Turkey, produced by Tom Allom.
Under the name “Bluesy Huey Lewis”, Lewis played harmonica on Thin Lizzy’s 1978 landmark album Live and Dangerous. That same year, he was playing at Uncle Charlie’s, a club in Corte Madera, California, doing the “Monday Night Live” spot along with future members of the News. At this point, he had adopted the “Huey Lewis” spelling, and the band was billed as Huey Lewis and the American Express. After recording the song “Exodisco” (a disco version of the theme from the film Exodus) simply as American Express, Lewis landed a singles contract from Phonogram, and Bob Brown became his manager.
The band played a few gigs (including an opening for Van Morrison), before adding new guitarist Chris Hayes to the line-up. On Brown’s advice, they changed their name again to Huey Lewis and The News. After a failed self-titled debut in 1980, the band finally broke through to Top 40 success with the gold album Picture This (1982). It rose to No. 13 on the album’s chart thanks to the Mutt Lange-penned “Do You Believe in Love” (No. 7), the band’s first hit. The band’s third LP, Sports (1983), is one of the best-selling pop releases of all time. It became a No. 1 hit in 1984 and had multi-platinum success in 1985. Four singles from the album reached the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100: “Heart and Soul” reached No. 8, while “I Want a New Drug”, “The Heart of Rock & Roll”, and “If This Is It” all reached No. 6.
Huey Lewis knew Nick Lowe and Dave Edmunds from having played harmonica on their 1979 albums (“Labour of Lust” and “Repeat When Necessary”) and produced Lowe’s 1985 version of “I Knew the Bride (When She Used to Rock and Roll)”. He later produced several songs (including one where he sang backup and played harmonica) on Bruce Hornsby & The Range’s debut album, The Way It Is. Hornsby thanked him by writing the song “Jacob’s Ladder”, a No. 1 single from the News’ next album Fore!. His song “The Power of Love” was a No. 1 U.S. hit and was featured in the 1985 film Back to the Future, for which they also recorded the song, “Back in Time”.
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Lewis has a cameo appearance in the film as a faculty member who rejects Marty McFly’s band’s audition for the school’s “Battle of the Bands” contest. As an inside joke, the piece the band plays is an instrumental heavy metal version of “The Power of Love”. (Lewis plays the audition committee leader, who, after glancing at the other, equally unimpressed fellow faculty members, picks up the megaphone and says, “Hold it, fellas … I’m afraid you’re just too darn loud. Next, please”.) A poster for the album Sports is hanging on Marty’s wall when he awakes at the end of the movie. “The Power of Love” was nominated for an Academy Award.
Following the success of “The Power of Love” and Back to the Future, Huey Lewis and the News released their fourth studio album, Fore! in 1986. Fore! followed the success of Sports and reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200. The album spawned the No. 1 singles, “Stuck with You” and “Jacob’s Ladder” as well as the mainstream rock hit “Hip to Be Square”. In all, the album had five top-10 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 and was certified triple platinum.
Huey Lewis and his bandmates performed on USA for Africa’s 1985 fund-raising single “We Are the World”. The remainder of the 1980s and early 1990s were mostly spent touring and recording fourteen top-20 Billboard Hot 100 hits and releasing two more hit albums: Small World (1988), which reached number 11 on the charts, and Hard at Play (1991) which peaked at number 27. Lewis had a planned solo album titled Back in Blue that was canceled in the mid-1990s due to living arrangement issues on their part of Lewis. One of the songs from that canceled project, “100 Years From Now”, was later used for the compilation album Time Flies… The Best Of.
Lewis has sung with Chicago-based progressive jam band Umphrey’s McGee at several shows beginning with the 2005 Jammy Awards and is featured on two tracks of their album Safety in Numbers. On February 13, 2007, Lewis was interviewed on the podcast series Stuck in the 80s. During the interview, he revealed that the band had written several new songs that they planned to record in 2008. He also stated that, given how much the industry has changed since their last album, he was unsure how they would sell the new material. During a show at the California State Fair on August 21, 2007, Lewis was named Sacramento’s Musician of the Year by the fair’s general manager and presented with a gold statue of the California state bear.
He recorded a duet version of “Workin’ for a Livin'” with Garth Brooks, which was included on Brooks’s three-disc set The Ultimate Hits, in late 2007. On July 4, 2008, the eve of his 58th birthday, Huey Lewis and the News were the opening act for the annual A Capitol Fourth celebration on the west lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. More than a half million people attended and was broadcast live on PBS. The band performed “The Heart of Rock & Roll”, “The Power of Love” and “Workin’ for a Livin'”.
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On May 29, 2011, Huey Lewis played the annual Summer Camp Music Festival in Chillicothe, Illinois, along with Umphrey’s McGee. They were billed as Huey Lewis and The Rumors. Together they played covers as well as songs from both their respective catalogs. On April 2, 2013, Lewis appeared on the ABC television series Dancing with the Stars, where he performed “The Heart of Rock & Roll” in celebration of the 30th-anniversary release of Sports and a concert tour with the News. On April 13, 2018, Lewis announced that he had been diagnosed with Ménière’s disease and that he “couldn’t hear well enough to sing”. As a result, the remaining shows scheduled for the 2018 tour were canceled.
Acting career
After Huey Lewis’s cameo appearance as a teacher in Back to the Future, more substantial roles followed, including Vern Miller in Robert Altman’s ensemble feature, Short Cuts, and Ricky Dean in Duets. He has performed in occasional television roles as well, including One Tree Hill, The King of Queens and a recurring character on Hot in Cleveland. Lewis provides the voice of Bulworth the junkyard dog in the animated series Puppy Dog Pals. In 2013, he played himself in a parody of his mention in American Psycho with Weird Al Yankovic. On October 21, 2015, on an episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live, Lewis reprised his role from Back to the Future in a segment where Marty McFly and Doc Brown arrive in the time machine and talk to the host. On February 12, 2021, he played himself on an episode of The Blacklist.
Wife
Huey Lewis was married to his wife Sidney Conroy, they had their wedding in 1983. Their marriage ceremony took place in Hawaii. His then-wife was his manager’s secretary. The couple separated six years later. Lewis and his ex-wife Sidney Conroy have a daughter, Kelly, and a son, Austin. However, in April 2018, Lewis revealed that he had hearing loss as a result of Ménière’s disease, and canceled all upcoming tour dates. Lewis lives on a ranch near Stevensville, Montana. He considers it his permanent residence. As of 2022, Huey Lewis hasn’t remarried after divorcing his wife Sidney Conroy.
Huey Lewis net worth
How much is Huey Lewis worth? Huey Lewis net worth is estimated at around $25 million. His main source of income is from his primary work as a singer, songwriter, and actor. Huey Lewis’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $2 million dollars annually. His remarkable achievements have earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. He is one of the richest and most influential singers in the United States. Huey Lewis stands at an appealing height of 1.82m and has a good body weight which suits his personality.