Today’s challenge: Only a few people get how many eggs are left
She begged them not to make her sing.
At just 18 years old, Shelley Fabares insisted she had no musical talent at all. She was already famous as sweet, wholesome Mary Stone on The Donna Reed Show, but when producers suggested recording a song for the series, she wanted no part of it.
“I’m not a singer,” she kept telling them.
But television producers moved forward anyway.
What nobody expected was that the reluctant teenager would soon have one of the biggest songs in America.
In 1962, “Johnny Angel” debuted on The Donna Reed Show as part of a simple storyline about teenage crushes. The song itself was soft, innocent, and almost painfully uncomplicated — a girl quietly longing for a boy who barely noticed her.
Yet somehow, audiences fell completely in love with it.
Within weeks, “Johnny Angel” climbed all the way to #1 on the Billboard charts, eventually selling more than a million copies. Behind the scenes, legendary musicians quietly supported the recording, including future superstar Glen Campbell on guitar and powerhouse vocalist Darlene Love providing backing vocals.
Ironically, Fabares herself never fully believed she deserved the success.
She later admitted other singers could easily outperform her vocally. But listeners connected with something more important than technical perfection: sincerity. Her voice sounded genuine, vulnerable, and real in a way polished performances sometimes didn’t.
Shelley Fabares thought she couldn’t sing.
America listened anyway — and turned her hesitation into a timeless hit.