Connie Lemos, Ritchie Valens’ sister, is a professional performer named Connie Lemos. Connie’s brother, Valen, is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter.
Her brother was a founding Chicano rock movement member and a rock and roll pioneer. He died in a plane accident after eight months of a musical career.
This all occurred hours after Connie took part in a lively music session with a group of musicians at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, featuring legends Buddy Holly and J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson. Though just a youngster then, Connie was already a smashing talent!
Connie was born in 1947 in America. She will be 72 years old in the year 2023.
“I was too young to know my brother,” Connie acknowledged in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “I was too young to know my brother.”
When he passed away, she was just seven years old. Connie was never made aware of all of the challenges that poor Bob faced, nor of the things my mother had to tolerate from him then.
At the time of the interview, Connie was the mother of two children and worked as a customer service representative for a local insurance firm.
Connie Lemos’ parents are Concepcion Valenzuela and Joseph Steven Valenzuela. They tied the knot on September 15, 1939, in the county of Los Angeles, California.
Connie has three other brothers and sisters in addition to Ritchie Valens. There is also Mario Ramirez, Bob Morales, and Irma Norton.
The year 2018 saw the passing of her brother Bob.
Concepcion, the woman who was her mother, passed away on October 18, 1987, in Santa Cruz, California. She was 72 years old. San Fernando Mission Hills was chosen as the location for her interment.
On January 8, 1952, Joe Lemos, Connie Lemos’s father, passed away at the age of 56. Despite living apart from his beloved wife, Concepcion Lemos, he passed peacefully in the comfort of his own home at 13058 Filmore Street in Los Angeles County, California. Though he’s no longer with us, Joe’s memory lives on.
Holy Cross Cemetery in Inglewood hosted the funeral and burial of her father on January 12—in the county of Los Angeles in California.
Following their concert at Clear Lake, Iowa, on February 2, 1959, Buddy Holly, J.P. Richardson, and Ritchie Valens boarded a tiny plane that Holly had hired.
He took off from the Mason City airport. Because he came out on top in a coin toss competition with Buddy Holly’s backup guitarist Tommy Allsup, her brother Valens was on board the plane.
The four-seater Beechcraft Bonanza (registration number N3794N) that they had rented crashed into an Iowa field only a few minutes after take-off due to technical issues while en route to Fargo, North Dakota.
The crash was fatal, and there were no survivors. Roger Peterson, the pilot, and all three passengers perished. Valens sustained serious head injuries and blunt-force trauma to the chest but succumbed to his injuries.
Valens was the youngest person to lose their life in the collision, having just turned 17.
The biography of Ritchie Valens, La Bamba, was released in 1987 and was a success.
The film grossed $54 million at was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture – Drama, and Los Lobos’ cover of the title song from the album reached number one on the Billboard pop chart.
The biopic about their brother was reportedly acted in by Connie Lemos and her sister Irma Padilla, as the Los Angeles Times reported.
At the film’s beginning, they played characters who worked on a farm.
Their daughters, Gloria and Kristin, play their mothers (Ritchie’s sisters) in other scenes, but they do it in a younger version of themselves.
Connie Valenzuela, the mother of the actress, had an uncredited part as “Elderly Lady at Party.”
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