* En anglais uniquement
Famed as much for their video-ready space age image as for their music, the Los Angeles-based new wave outfit
Missing Persons formed in 1980, a year after the marriage of singer
Dale Bozzio and her husband, drummer
Terry. A one-time member of
Frank Zappa's backing band,
Terry Bozzio met the former
Dale Consalvi (an ex-Playboy Bunny) at a Hollywood recording studio; after founding
Missing Persons -- initially dubbed U.S. Drag -- the couple recruited fellow
Zappa alumnus
Warren Cuccurullo on guitar and
Patrick O'Hearn on bass, and with classically trained keyboardist
Chuck Wild in tow, they began playing area clubs.
In 1981, the band released its self-titled debut EP; after signing to Capitol, the label reissued the record in 1982, and the singles "Words" and "Destination Unknown" both nearly hit the Top 40. Their videos also helped
Missing Persons find success on the fledgling MTV network, where
Dale Bozzio's hiccuping voice and campy look (comprised of shocking-pink hair and sci-fi outfits capped off with Plexiglass bras) combined with the group's synth-driven songs to make them naturals for heavy rotation. Later in 1982, the group issued its first full-length album,
Spring Session M (an anagram of their name), which launched the underground smash "Walking in L.A."
After 1984's
Rhyme and Reason notched only a minor hit with the single "Give,"
Missing Persons enlisted
Chic's
Bernard Edwards to produce 1986's dance-pop effort
Color in Your Life; the album stiffed, however, and both the band and the Bozzios themselves broke up. While
Dale Bozzio issued one solo album on
Prince's Paisley Park label,
Terry Bozzio went on to work with
Jeff Beck;
Cuccurullo, meanwhile, joined
Duran Duran,
O'Hearn recorded several instrumental new age albums, and
Wild composed music for films and television. ~ Jason Ankeny