Peter Yarrow, one third of the chart-topping 1960s folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary who co-wrote “Puff the Magic Dragon,” has died. Yarrow passed away Tuesday in New York following a battle with bladder cancer,
P eter Yarrow, the Peter of folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, died on January 7. He was 86. Yarrow died at home in Manhattan from bladder cancer, which he had for the past four year
Peter Yarrow, one-third of the 1960s folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, has died at age 86 after a yearslong battle with bladder cancer, according to The Associated Press. Yarrow, Noel Paul Stookey, and Mary Travers formed a Grammy Award-winning group that produced hits like “Puff,
Folk singer-songwriter Peter Yarrow, most known as a member of the trio Peter, Paul and Mary, has died at 86 years old. The Grammy-winning musician passed away at his home in New York City on Tuesday,
The singer and songwriter who helped popularize folk music in the 1960s died of bladder cancer at his home in New York.
Yarrow died at his home in New York City after a four-year battle with bladder cancer, his publicist Ken ... Alongside Paul Stookey and Mary Travers, Yarrow formed and contributed compositions ...
PUFF The Magic Dragon’s co-writer Peter Yarrow has tragically died aged 86. The legend – best known as one-third of folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary – died on Tuesday in New York,
From the death of folk music star Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary to good news from broadcasting legend Dick Vitale, here is this week’s news.
Peter Yarrow, the singer-songwriter, activist and founding member of the folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, has died at 86 after battling bladder cancer.
Queen Mary of Denmark looked straight out of a fairytale this evening as she hosted the Royal Family's annual New Year's dinner for the first time alongside her husband King Frederik.
Yarrow wrote or co-wrote some of the group's biggest 1960s hits, including "Puff, the Magic Dragon" and "Day Is Done."
Yarrow wrote the music for the group’s best-known composition, “Puff, the Magic Dragon,” with lyrics by his Cornell classmate Leonard Lipton. The song became a standard both at summer camps and in