by Bruce EderFor a group that never made the top 40, and came along almost too late to exploit the sound they produced, Reparata & The Delrons have proved amazingly durable. Their album haunted used record bins for years, and 18 of their songs cut for World Artists (a label most closely associated with Chad & Jeremy, are available on CD. Reparata & The Delrons were one of hundreds of girl groups that flourished in the early 1960s, and actually had a higher profile than many of their rivals, achieved in their own time by their participation in a pair of Dick Clark national tours and, for years after, from the fact that they actually released a complete LP to accompany their one widely recognized hit, Whenever A Teenager Cries. That album, Whenever A Teenager Cries, was a low-level collectable piece that was easily found in record store used bins (especially in the northeast) well into the 1980s and, in contrast to most other original girl group LPs, only cost $15-to-$20. Thus, for 20 years after that albums release, Reparata & The Delrons music, easier to find and less expensive than, say, originals by the Crystals or Darlene Love, was frequently a first-purchase by lots of people getting into the girl group sound. The group started out as a quartet in 1962 at St. Brendans Catholic School in Brooklyn, New York, led by lead singer Mary Aiese—the other originals were Regina Gallagher, Anne Fitzgerald, and Nanette Licari. By 1964, Mary Aiese, working under the name Reparata Aiese (the name came from a nun at the school, Sister Mary Reparata), had a new group consisting of Sheila Reillie, Kathy Romeo, and Carol Drobnicki. The quartet was singing at a high school dance when they were spotted by Bill and Steve Jerome, brothers and producers looking for new talent to record. The Jerome brothers got the group—reduced to a trio when Kathy Romeo exited—a record deal with Laurie Records for one single. Your Big Mistake passed without notice in the summer of 1964. This was already rather late in the girl group era, and the trio found themselves competing with a tidal wave of British invasion sounds for attention from deejays. The Jeromes next brought them to the World Artists label in Pittsburgh, PA in late 1964, and they cut a group of songs at their first session that included Whenever A Teenager Cries. That song, released in early 1965, became a local success although it never ascended as high as the top 50 on the national charts. It was an attractive song in a sort of sub-Angels manner, and got the trio a spot on Dick Clarks Caravan of Star national tour. Meanwhile, World Artists tried a string of Reparata & the Delrons singles, of which Tommy was a modest hit, although their subsequent efforts, including The Boy I Love, were failures. A complete LP, containing Whenever A Teenager Cries and covers of such British invasion fare as If I Fell and Do Wah Diddy Diddy, was also released in 1965. By the second half of the year, the Jerome brothers were label-shopping again, and this time the trio ended up at RCA. By the time their debut single on that label was recorded, the group was down to a duo of Mary Aiese and Nanette Licari, Carol Drobnicki having exited rather than embark on another national tour with Dick Clark. Lorraine Mazzola came in to fill the third slot and the trio ultimately cut five singles for RCA over a two year period, none of which charted, and in early 1967, the group jumped to Mala Records, a division of Bell Records. The Dick Clark tours ensured that Reparata & The Delrons got seen and heard nationally, even when their records didnt chart. At the same time, the fact that they were based in New York gave the group reason to hope that they might recapture some of their early success and build on it. Their fortunes picked up a bit late that year with the release of Captain of Your Ship, the first single to feature Lorraine Mazzola singing lead. It just missed charting in America, but made No. 15 in England in early 1968. After three hitless years in America, Reparata & The Delrons found themselves touring England. It was to be a momentary uptick in their success, however, for the group never had a follow-up hit in England. A year later, they were on the Kapp Records label, where they also went hitless among three single releases. Mary Aiese elected to leave the group shed founded after five years in the business, turning it and the name Reparata over to Lorraine Mazzola. She put together a new group of Delrons and began performing on the oldies circuit, which was becoming a major draw by the dawn of the 1970s. In 1973, Mazzola did an album of oldies tunes in a classic girl-group style that failed to sell, and Reparata & The Delrons were retired as a name late that year. In 1974, Mazzola re-emerged as a member of Lady Flash, the back-up group behind Barry Manilow, and scored a hit a year later with Street Singin. Strangely enough, it was Mary Aiese who had the last word as Reparata, reassuming the name and scoring a minor hit in 1975 with her single Shoes.