Billboard: Debbie Reynolds' History on the Billboard Charts
Quote:
Debbie Reynolds forged a notable run on Billboard's songs and albums charts starting in the early 1950s.
In 1951, her first hit song, "Aba Daba Honeymoon," with Carleton Carpenter, rose to No. 3 on the Best-Selling Pop Singles ranking.
In 1957, Reynolds' highest-charting hit "Tammy" ruled the Top 100 chart for five weeks. (The tally predated the Billboard Hot 100, which would launch the following year.)
In early 1958, Reynolds reached No. 20 on the Most Played by Jockeys chart with "A Very Special Love." She then scored two entries on the Hot 100, both in 1960: "Am I That Easy to Forget" (No. 25) and "City Lights" (No. 55).
Reynolds also achieved two entries on the Billboard 200 albums chart: The Singing Nun (No. 23, 1966) and Do It Debbie's Way (No. 182, 1984)
I was just about to create a thread about this. This forum is primarily about music and the best she gets is two replies of her musical legacy?
The woman is a legend!
A #1 song with a acting career that spanned six decades including Emmy, Tony, & Golden Globe nominations and an Honorary Oscar. Not everyone has that.