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Frankie Valli, 92, Lead Vocalist of the Four Seasons, to Take Remainder of 2026 Off: Health

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Frankie Valli, in an uncredited photo on his Facebook page.

Frankie Valli, the legendary lead singer of the popular vocal group the Four Seasons, who scored dozens of hits in the ’60s and ’70s as the real-life “Jersey Boys,” announced today (May 29, 2026) that he would be taking the remainder of the year off from touring to focus on his health. “I’m looking forward to getting healthy and seeing you all again soon,” he wrote on his Facebook page. Valli turned 92 on May 3 and had numerous dates with the current edition of the Four Seasons on his concert calendar scattered throughout the summer and fall. The brief statement did not specify a specific health or physical issue.

From his biography from when he was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame in 2010: Valli was born Francesco Stephen Castelluccio on May 3, 1934. The son of an Italian immigrant father and a mother with Italian roots, Valli grew up in Newark, NJ’s First Ward. Valli was inspired to pursue a career as a singer at age seven after his mother took him to see Frank Sinatra at the Paramount Theater in New York.

Valli began his singing career as a teenager in Newark with the Variety Trio; the group included future Four Seasons singer/guitarist Tommy DeVito. The two later became part of the house band at the Strand in New Brunswick; Valli played bass and sang. Among Valli’s early mentors was a country singer named “Texas” Jean Valli from whom the young Valli adopted his stage name.

Valli and DeVito continued to perform and occasionally record together with various other bandmates, first as the Variatones and later as the Four Lovers. Finally, in 1960, they settled on a new name, the Four Seasons, and a new lineup, with singer/keyboardist Bob Gaudio and singer/bassist Nick Massi. (The new foursome took its name from a bowling alley in Union Township where it had failed an audition.)

Gaudio became the band’s songwriter in partnership with Bob Crewe, who would produce the Four Seasons’ biggest hits. The first of those successes, the 1962 single “Sherry,” showcased Valli’s distinctive falsetto and went to #1 on the pop chart. The group followed with a series of smash hits, starting with “Big Girls Don’t Cry” and “Walk Like a Man,” both of which also went to #1. From 1963-1967, at the height of the Beatles and the British Invasion, the Four Seasons—powered by Valli’s falsetto–had nine more top 10 hits, including a fourth #1, “Rag Doll,” in 1964, as well as “Dawn (Go Away),” “Let’s Hang On!,” and “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.” In 1965, recording as the Wonder Who, the vocal group scored a hit cover of Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice.”

The Four Seasons went cold in the late 1960s, but Valli sprang back up the charts as a solo artist in 1975 with the #1 single “My Eyes Adored You.” (Valli already had gone to #2 as a solo artist in 1967 with “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You.”) In 1976, a new Four Seasons lineup was back at #1 with the disco-flavored “December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night).”

Their peak occurred when the 45 rpm single was the preferred choice by record buyers so his album sales weren’t as big as pop stars of a later era. Even so, it’s estimated that the Four Seasons sold over 100 million records worldwide.

As a solo artist, Valli had another top 10 hit, “Swearin’ to God,” in 1975, and went to #1 in 1978 with the title song to the movie Grease, written and co-produced by Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees. “Grease”—an international hit—topped the U.S. singles chart almost 17 years after “Sherry,” an incredible feat for a pop singer. Remarkably, Valli had begun to suffer from hearing loss as early as 1967. It took a series of operations to restore his hearing more than a decade later.

Related: Valli and Lionel Richie performed a funkified version of “Grease” on The Midnight Special

Over the years, Valli has continued to record and tour, usually as Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, attracting audiences around the world. In 2005, the Broadway debut of the musical Jersey Boys provided Valli with a late career boost. The musical told the story of the Four Seasons and featured many of the group’s biggest hits. Valli made his own Broadway debut in 2012 with a week-long engagement at the Broadway Theatre. In 2023, he kicked off a farewell tour that continued into 2026.

Valli and the Four Seasons were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. In 2025, Valli was presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, his first and only Grammy.

Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons recordings are available here.

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