Art Garfunkel: Biography, Life, And Facts About The Enigmatic Rock Star

By | May 4, 2020

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Art Garfunkel, relaxes on a bench in the Embankment Gardens, London, in 1975. Photo by © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

Art Garfunkel of Simon & Garfunkel is known as the tender voice in hits like "The Boxer," "I Am A Rock," "The Sound Of Silence," and "Mrs. Robinson" -- songs that changed folk music in the 1960s. But he's more than just Paul Simon’s sidekick. He’s a poet and an actor who’s also extremely well educated, although you wouldn’t know it without prodding him. After Simon and Garfunkel broke apart he didn’t fade into the background as quietly as history suggests. Since the demise of the duo he’s sung with a number of artists, written hundreds of poems, appeared in edgy movies, and he’s done quite a bit of walking. Art Garfunkel is a man of many talents, even if fair weathered fans only remember him as a singer.

He Was A Popular Kid

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Even though Garfunkel exudes this kind of uber-nerd pheromone he wasn’t actually the indoor kid that you might think he was. He grew up in Brooklyn with a large Jewish family. He loved sports and he started singing at an early age. An illness in 1955 left him homeward bound so he spent all of his time taking foul shots at his personal basketball hoop and he got pretty good. He told The Guardian:

I was popular and a momma’s boy, easy to like, not weird at all. I was the singer and I played a lot of sports. When you’re the ball player, you’re not weird – you’re quite normal. Later on, in my adolescence, like so many kids, I went introverted and quiet. It’s weird how much homework I did.

In sixth grade he met Paul Simon at PS 164, when they were both cast in the elementary school graduation play, Alice in Wonderland. For the next seven years the two performed as “Tom and Jerry” at school dances before separating and going to college.