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Franklin, the preacher’s daughter who became the long-reigning “Queen of Soul” with such hits as Respect and Chain of Fools, died at her home in Detroit on August 16 at the age of 76, after a battle with pancreatic cancer.
The Grammy-winning vocalist, who was born in Memphis, Tennessee, grew up in Detroit after moving there as a youngster with her family from Buffalo, New York. She got her start as a singer touring in her father’s gospel show when she was a teenager.
A lifelong friend and musical compatriot, Motown great Smokey Robinson, recalled in a Reuters TV interview that he met Franklin when she was just five or six years old, and heard her sing and play the piano “almost like she did as an adult.”
Franklin’s body will be laid to rest at Woodlawn Cemetery in Detroit on August 31 following a funeral that morning at the Greater Grace Temple nearby, but attendance at the service will be limited to family and friends, the announcement said.
Her coffin is to be “entombed” along with the remains of her father, the Reverend C L Franklin, and her brother, Cecil Franklin, and sisters Carolyn and Erma Franklin.
Before the funeral there will be a public viewing of Franklin’s body August 28 and August 29 at the Charles H Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, according to the schedule.
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Gwendolyn Quinn, a spokeswoman for the family, said she believed that the viewing would be open-casket but that those arrangements had not yet been finalised.
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