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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Skitch Henderson, bandleader, dies at 87


Henderson
 (The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Skitch Henderson, the Grammy-winning conductor who lent his musical expertise to Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby before founding the New York Pops and becoming the first “Tonight Show” bandleader, died Tuesday. He was 87.

Henderson died at his home in New Milford of natural causes, said Barbara Burnside, director of marketing and public relations at New Milford Hospital.

Born in England, Lyle Russell Cedric Henderson moved to the United States in the 1930s, eking out a living as a pianist, playing vaudeville and movie music in Minnesota and Montana roadhouses.

He got his big break in 1937, when he filled in for a sick pianist touring with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. When the tour wrapped up in Chicago, he used the original pianist’s ticket and went to Hollywood.

There he joined the music department at MGM and played piano for Bob Hope’s “The Pepsodent Show.” His friendship with Hope put him in touch with other stars of the day, including Crosby, who became a mentor to Henderson.

“I could sketch out a score in different keys, a new way each time,” Henderson said earlier this year.

That quicksilver ability earned him the nickname “the sketch kid,” which Crosby urged him to adapt to “Skitch.” It stuck.

During World War II, Henderson flew for both the Royal Air Force and the United States Army Air Corps. At his estate in New Milford, which he shared with his wife, Ruth, Henderson kept a collection of aviation memorabilia. Even at 87, he had said he hoped to fly the Atlantic once more.

After the war, Henderson toured as Sinatra’s musical director and lived what he called a “gypsy lifestyle,” touring the country with various bands.

In 1954, NBC pegged him as the bandleader for Steve Allen’s “Tonight Show,” which brought Henderson into the nation’s living rooms every night. Even as the hosts changed from Allen to Jack Paar to Johnny Carson, Henderson was a constant.

He founded the New York Pops in 1983, using popular tunes to make orchestral music exciting.

Even in his late 80s, Henderson maintained a tireless work schedule as music director for the Pops, where he regularly served as conductor. He also was a frequent guest conductor at a number of orchestras around the world.