Roe originally conceived the song as "Frita", based on a girl from Roe's high school. The song was auditioned to a record producer from Judd Records, and while response was enthusiastic, it was suggested that the name be changed. By coincidence, Roe's Aunt Sheila was visiting, which inspired the final title of "Sheila." The original version of the song was recorded by Roe for Judd in 1960 and backed by another original song, "Pretty Girl". The songs were recorded with his then backing group the Satins and the female vocal group, the Flamingos. The record failed to make an impact on the charts. The song was later featured on the compilation albumWhirling with Tommy Roe in 1961, featuring tracks from Al Tornello. It was also included on the compilation, The Young Lovers in 1962. The ABC recording of the song is done in the style of the Lubbock sound, made popular by Buddy Holly and the Crickets in the late 1950s; the strumming pattern, tempo, and chords bear particularly strong resemblance to the Crickets' “Peggy Sue"; Roe's vocals are similar to Holly's. The song became the title track of Tommy Roe's debut studio album, Sheila in 1962. In 1969, Roe was presented by the Recording Industry Association of America with a gold record for accumulated sales of over one million copies.
Chart positions
Cover versions and parodies
covered the song on stage in 1962. On 25 October 1962, a live recording was made for the BBCradio programmeHere We Go, to be broadcast the next day. The song was never aired and the recording is now lost. An amateur taping was made at the Star Club in Hamburg in December of that same year. This version was ultimately published in 1977, on the bootleg recordingLive! at the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany; 1962. French female singer Annie Chancel recorded the song in 1962, and since then used Sheila as her pseudonym. English band Status Quo covered this song on the U.K. version of their 1968 album Picturesque Matchstickable Messages from the Status Quo, and in the 2003 and 2009 remasterings of the same title. In 1979, Leif Garrett released a version of the song as a single in Australia, which reached #63. It was featured on his album Feel the Need. The song was also covered by the Greg Kihn Band on their 1981 album RocKihnRoll. During the 1980s, radio station KKRZ-FM in Portland, Oregon, recorded a parody of the song called "Shut Up Sheela", which mocked Ma Anand Sheela's habit of using profanity in media interviews. At the time, followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had attempted to hijack the government of rural Wasco County, Oregon, by bussing-in homeless people and encouraging them to vote in county elections. The parody was released on a 45 record, to raise funds to assist in caring for these homeless, many of whom were abandoned after the electoral takeover failed. Several leaders of the Rajneesh movement, including Sheela, were arrested in connection with a bioterror attack perpetrated by members of the group.