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Thomas Forbes Chapin

Also Known As: "Tom Chapin"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, NY, United States
Death:
Immediate Family:

Son of Jim Chapin and Elspeth Hart
Husband of Private
Father of Private and Private
Brother of Harry Chapin; Private; Private; Private and Private

Occupation: musician, entertainer, singer-songwriter, and storyteller.
Managed by: Regina Berglund
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Tom Chapin

Tom Chapin (born March 13, 1945) is an American musician, entertainer, singer-songwriter, and storyteller.

Tom Chapin was born on March 13, 1945 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and composer, known for The Manchurian Candidate (2004), Cotton Patch Gospel (1988) and National Geographic Specials (1965). He has been married to Bonnie Broecker since 1976. They have two children.

Chapin is known for the song "Happy Birthday",[1] release in 1989 in his Moonboat album.[2] It takes its melody from the song "Love Unspoken" in the opera The Merry Widow, by Franz Lehar.

Chapin is the son of Jim Chapin and the brother of the late Harry Chapin. He graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School.[3] He attended State University of New York at Plattsburgh and graduated in 1966.[4]

From 1971 to 1976, Chapin hosted Make a Wish, a Sunday-morning children's TV series broadcast on ABC. He occasionally appears in Harry Chapin tribute concerts (often with brother Steve Chapin). He has appeared in the Broadway production Pump Boys and Dinettes, among others. Chapin has branched in to the storytelling festival circuit and in 2007 was a Featured New Voices Teller at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee.

He is married to Bonnie Chapin (née Broecker), former wife of film director Wes Craven and sister of Wallace Smith Broecker.[5] His daughters and stepdaughter are musicians, as well (the Chapin Sisters).

In April 2008, Chapin appeared at the New York State United Teachers' Convention, where he sang his song "Not on the Test" for delegates in support of the importance of arts and music education in the age of No Child Left Behind. This song debuted on NPR's Morning Edition in January 2007. His album with John Forster titled Broadsides: A Miscellany of Musical Opinion is a collection of socially conscious songs written for Morning Edition; Forster was nominated for a Grammy for his work producing Chapin's 1998 album In My Hometown.

Chapin continues support of WhyHunger (formerly World Hunger Year), a nonprofit organization cofounded by his brother Harry Chapin. He sits on their board of directors.[6]

Life Is Like That (1976, Sundance Music)

In The City of Mercy (1982, Sundance Music)

Let Me Back into Your Life (1986, Flying Fish Records)

Family Tree (1988, A&M)

Moonboat (1989, Sony)

Mother Earth (1990, A&M)

Billy the Squid (1992, Sony)

Zag Zig (1994, Sony)

Around the World and Back Again (1996, Sony Wonder)

This Pretty Planet (1996, Sony)

Join The Jubilee (1996, Gadfly)

Doing Our Job with John McCutcheon (1997, Rounder Select)

In My Hometown (1998, Sony)

Common Ground (2001, Gadfly)

Great Big Fun for the Very Little One (2001, Music Little People)

Making Good Noise (2003, Gadfly)

Bring Back the Joy!, compilation (2004, Organic Arts Ltd)[9]

Some Assembly Required (2005, Razor & Tie)

The Turning Of The Tide (2006, CDBY)

So Nice To Come Home (2008, Sundance Music)

Let The Bad Times Roll (2009, CDBY)

Broadsides with John Forster (2010, CDBY)

Give Peas a Chance (2011, Sundance Music)

The Incredible Flexible You (2013, Sundance Music)

70 (2015, Sundance Music)

Threads (2017, Sundance Music)

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Tom Chapin's Timeline

1945
March 13, 1945
New York, NY, United States
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