ANNIE Ross, the jazz sensation and sister of the late-Jimmy Logan, has died in New York at the age of 89. 

The Glasgow star rose to fame as a child, was billed as "Scotland's Shirley Temple", and later became part of the acclaimed vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks and Ross.

She also acted in such films as Robert Altman's Short Cuts and Superman III.

Her deep voice was used to replace Britt Ekland's in 1973 horror classic The Wicker Man.

Annie was born in England to Glaswegians parents May and Jack Short and spent time in the city in her youth. Glasgow Times:

She returned to Glasgow many times throughout her career, notably for the premiere of No-One But Me, a moving documentary about her life, at Oran Mor in 2012. 

Annie was accomplished in many areas: as an actor, a lyricist and, of course, as a singer. Had her career ended in the mid-1950s, she would still have earned her place as a jazz pioneer because by the age of 22, she had introduced a new style of singing: vocalese, which involved using her voice to mimic an instrument.

Her big hit, Twisted, a song with music based on a tenor sax solo to which she set droll lyrics, put her, and vocalese, on the map, and ensured her place in jazz history; it was later recorded by Joni Mitchell on her classic 1974 album, Court and Spark. 

At the age of four, Ross’s talent as a singer and mimic inspired her parents to take her to New York where May’s sister, Ella Logan, was already working as a singer.

There, Ross, whose family hoped she would be the next Shirley Temple, won a radio talent show, the prize being a movie contract with MGM.

Glasgow Times: Annie Ross was sister of the legendary Jimmy Logan, far rightAnnie Ross was sister of the legendary Jimmy Logan, far right

After accompanying her to Hollywood, Ross’s mother returned to Scotland, leaving her daughter in her sister’s care.

The early movie career comprised two films – one of the Our Gang series of shorts (in which she sang a swinging version of Loch Lomond) and the Judy Garland movie Presenting Lily Mars (1943).

As she hit her teens, her relationship with her aunt, who described her as “a handful”, became acrimonious and Ross, determined to make a career in music, began to dream of escape. 

Aged 14, she won a songwriting competition with Let’s Fly, which was subsequently recorded by the great American songwriter Johnny Mercer and which demonstrated her witty way with lyrics.

Three years later, she returned to Glasgow for what proved to be an unhappy reunion with a family she no longer knew. She later admitted that she only felt any kind of love for her brothers, Bertie and Jim.

After briefly treading the boards as part of The Logan Family in Scotland, she made her London stage debut in the musical Burlesque. Shortly afterwards, in Paris, she appeared in cabaret and began to hang out with jazz musicians. She made her first recording, Le Vent Vert there, in 1949. A relationship with the African-American bebop drummer, Kenny Clarke, produced a son, Kenny Clarke Jr.

In New York in the 1950s, following the success of Twisted (1952), Ross was a fixture on the jazz scene, performing at the legendary clubs on 52nd Street and even subbing at the famous Apollo Theatre for the great Billie Holiday, the troubled singer who went on to become a close friend.

She made notable recordings with such luminaries as Chet Baker, Zoot Sims and Gerry Mulligan but her most important recording was the1958 album Sing a Song of Basie, on which she joined fellow singers Jon Hendricks and Dave Lambert to perform a collection of Count Basie arrangements to which Hendricks had written words. 

This landmark album featured no instruments; the three singers – collectively known as Lambert, Hendricks & Ross – recorded their voices four times each to simulate the entire Basie band. Over the next four years they recorded a total of seven albums.

Ross, meanwhile, began a double love affair, with the doomed stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce and with drugs. By the early 1960s, after an overdose, she quit New York and came to Scotland where she kicked her habit with the help of her brother, Jimmy, the stage entertainer.

Glasgow Times:

For a very brief period in London in the mid-1960s, she ran a popular Covent Garden nightclub called Annie’s Room with the actor Sean Lynch, whom she had married in 1963. They divorced in 1977 by which time she had declared bankruptcy and lost her home. Lynch died soon afterwards in a car accident.

After appearing in a string of British films and TV series during her marriage, Ross returned to the States, where, in the 1980s and early 1990s, she appeared in a semi-steady stream of films, among them Superman III (1983). Her most important role, however, was in Short Cuts (1993): director Robert Altman created a character of a jazz singer specially for her. She spent the rest of her life in the US, and became an American citizen in 2001. In 2010, she was named a “Jazz Master” when she was honoured by the prestigious National Endowment for the Arts.

She is survived by her son, Kenny Clarke Jr and her sister, Heather Capaldi. 

This obituary was originally in our sister title, The Herald.