
Birthday: July 05, 1950
Huey Lewis (born Hugh Anthony Cregg III, July 5, 1950) is an American singer, songwriter, and actor, best known as the lead vocalist and harmonica player of the rock band Huey Lewis and the News. The band achieved massive success in the 1980s with hits such as “The Power of Love,” “Hip to Be Square,” and “Stuck with You,” and their album Sports (1983) remains one of the best-selling pop releases of all time. Born in New York City and raised in Marin County, California, Lewis attended Strawberry Point Elementary School (where he skipped second grade) and Edna Maguire Junior High School. His mother, Magda Cregg, was a Polish refugee, and his maternal grandfather invented the red wax sealant used on certain cheeses. After his parents divorced when he was 13, he was sent to the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey, graduating in 1967 with a perfect 800 on the math SAT. He enrolled at Cornell University in the engineering program but dropped out in his junior year in December 1969 to pursue music. As a teenager, Lewis hitchhiked across the country, stowed away on a plane to Europe, and spent time busking in Madrid, Spain, where he became an accomplished blues harmonica player. Upon returning to the U.S., he joined the Bay Area band Clover in 1971, adopting the stage name Huey Lewis (inspired by poet Lew Welch, his mother’s longtime partner). Clover recorded two albums in the UK with producer Mutt Lange but struggled as punk rock overshadowed their pub-rock sound. While Lewis was on vacation, the rest of the band backed Elvis Costello on his debut album My Aim Is True. Clover disbanded in 1979. In 1979, Lewis formed Huey Lewis and the American Express, which soon became Huey Lewis and the News. After a unsuccessful self-titled debut in 1980, the band broke through with Picture This (1982) and exploded with Sports (1983), which sold over 10 million copies in the U.S. and produced multiple Top 10 hits. Their follow-up Fore! (1986) also reached No. 1. Lewis wrote or co-wrote many of the band’s songs and contributed harmonica to notable recordings, including Thin Lizzy’s Live and Dangerous (1978). The band’s music featured prominently in popular culture, most notably with “The Power of Love” in Back to the Future (1985), in which Lewis also had a cameo. They contributed to “We Are the World” and scored 14 Top 20 Billboard Hot 100 hits during the 1980s and early 1990s. In 1995, Lewis sued Ray Parker Jr. over similarities between “I Want a New Drug” and the Ghostbusters theme. The case was settled out of court. Lewis has also produced for artists such as Nick Lowe and Bruce Hornsby. In 2018, Lewis was forced into semi-retirement after being diagnosed with Ménière’s disease, which caused severe hearing loss. By 2025, he reported total deafness, though a cochlear implant has partially restored his ability to hear speech. Despite this, the band continues to tour occasionally, and Lewis remains active in other projects. In 2024, the jukebox musical The Heart of Rock and Roll, based on the band’s catalog, premiered on Broadway. In February 2025, he was the inaugural inductee into the People’s Music Hall of Fame.

July 03, 1985

November 18, 1988

December 25, 1997

August 06, 2008

April 13, 2000

October 01, 1993

September 01, 2022

October 29, 2001

September 09, 2000

May 17, 2005

January 03, 1996

April 09, 1998

February 10, 2009

January 19, 2024

January 01, 1987

February 13, 1998

January 01, 1990

January 01, 1984

September 14, 1985

January 01, 1979

September 12, 1987

October 20, 2015

October 25, 1986

June 02, 1978

October 11, 2009

April 03, 2013

December 02, 1998

January 28, 1985

October 03, 2008

October 23, 2020

September 18, 1987

January 01, 2009

October 07, 2020

November 04, 1995

April 24, 2007

February 02, 2017

August 29, 2026

September 23, 2003

September 13, 2004

January 26, 2003

July 22, 1996

September 23, 2013

September 21, 1998

September 13, 1993

June 07, 1999

June 16, 2010

September 14, 1984

July 16, 2009

June 10, 1996

September 26, 1987

July 07, 2022

December 31, 2010

September 12, 2022

January 16, 1982

February 14, 1963

April 27, 2020

January 06, 2022

March 04, 1997

October 04, 1974

April 11, 1980

September 27, 2009

October 18, 1977