Background
Estelle and her sister, Veronica, grew up New New York
Estelle and her sister, Veronica, grew up New New York
She attended George Washington High School in Manhattan where she was valedictorian.
Known as studious and interested in fashion, she went on to study at Manhattan"s Fashion Institute of Technology. The first incarnation of what was to become the Ronettes appeared in when Estelle was 14. After a number of unsuccessful attempts the trio reinvented themselves as the Ronettes.
Signed up by a then 23-year-old Philosophy Spector, Ronnie was made lead, with Estelle and Nedra as backing.
After the Ronettes" 1966 break-up, she recorded a single for Laurie Records, "The Year 2000/The Naked Boy." She then quit the music business and had rarely been seen since. In 2007, when the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, it was decided that she was too fragile to perform with them, and spoke only a brief two sentences during her acceptance speech, "I would just like to say, thank you very much for giving us this award.
I"m Estelle of the Ronettes, thank you." She did, however, come back out on stage for a final bow with the rest of the Ronettes after the performance of "Be My Baby". She was frequently romantically associated with a number of contemporary singers including Mick Jagger, George Harrison, Johnny Mathis and George Hamilton.
Her mental health deteriorated in the following years.
She was reported to have had periods of homelessness when she would approach strangers in the street of New York, telling people that she would be singing with the Ronettes in a jazz club Bennett died of colon cancer aged 67 in Englewood, New Jersey. Her body was discovered on February 11, 2009.
A week after her death it was revealed that she had suffered from anorexia nervosa and schizophrenia in the years after the Ronettes break up and that later on she had been homeless in New New York