PEF
author highlights life of ‘The Lost Supreme
By DEBORAH A. MILES
Peter Benjaminson works as a state labor standards investigator in
Manhattan. He’s also one of PEF’s talented members who has penned several
books. One of them, “The Lost Supreme,” has received two thumbs up from
prominent music and book critics across the country.
The story of how Benjaminson came to write about the life of “The Lost
Supreme,” Florence Ballard, is just as fascinating as the book itself.
Back in the 1960s, The Supremes were dominating the music charts with number
one hits. Benjaminson was working as a reporter for the Detroit Free Press.
His editor told him one of The Supremes, Ballard, had tumbled from
super-star status to a welfare recipient. He jumped at the opportunity to
tell her story.
It turned out Ballard had a lot of highs and lows in her life.
Benjaminson’s story about her earned worldwide attention and resulted in an
outpouring of generosity from fans. And Benjaminson earned her trust and
friendship.
Ballard wanted her story told, and Benjaminson was the man for the job. He
spent eight hours with her, taping the interviews. Ballard died in 1976, and
Benjaminson tried to interest publishers in her life story. But the
publishers were more interested in Benjaminson writing about the famed
Motown Record Company. His book, “The Story of Motown” was published in 1979
by Grove Press.
Thirty years later, and prompted by the Dreamgirls movie which was tailored
after Diana Ross and The Supremes, publishers were ready for Ballard’s
biography.
“There was finally a fresh whirlwind of fascination in the life and career
of Flo, whose full story had not yet been told,” Benjaminson said.

The book was published in 2008 by Lawrence Hill Books and a paperback
version came out in 2009. It inspired the television producers of “Unsung”
on TV One to contact Benjaminson and feature him in a program about
Ballard’s life that aired three times last year.
“That was a great experience because Flo didn’t get the credit she deserved
when she was alive,” Benjaminson said
Now, he is working on a third book about Motown, a biography of Mary Wells,
Motown’s first big star who sang “My Guy,”
Benjaminson didn’t have the opportunity to interview Wells, but someone else
did and gave him the tapes to use for his upcoming book.
He said being a writer and getting published requires persistence.
“You have to keep pounding away at things. It took 32 years for “The Lost
Supreme” to get published. I am very pleased it finally worked out.”
Benjaminson also co-authored “Investigative Reporting” in 1976 which was in
print for more than 20 years.
He penned “Secret Police” in 1997 after working as the public relations
official for the New York City Department of Investigation (DOI) during the
administration of Mayor David Dinkins. It’s a breezy review of what he
considers some of the DOI’s most interesting cases.
Benjaminson also wrote “Death in The Afternoon: America’s Newspaper Giants
Struggle For Survival” and “Publish Without Perishing.”
For more information on Benjaminson and his books, visit
www.thelostsupreme.com