- Scored a perfect 800 on his math SATs.
- Huey dropped out of Cornell University to spend a year living in Europe playing the harp.
- Has a small cameo in Back to the Future (1985), a film for which he also contributed two songs.
- In 1967 he graduated from Lawrenceville Prep at the age of 16 in Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
- On the song "Hip to be Square", from the album "Fore!", the backup singers at the end of the song include San Fransisco 49er stars Dwight Clark, Ronnie Lott and Joe Montana.
- The original name of his band was "Huey Lewis and the American Express". It was later changed to Huey Lewis & The News, due to legal reasons.
- Huey Lewis successfully sued Ray Parker Jr. for plagiarizing the medley to his song "I Want A New Drug". They settled out of court and agreed not to talk about the case in public. In 2001, Lewis talked about the case in public when he revealed that Parker paid to settle the suit on an episode of VH1's Behind the Music (1997). Parker then sued Lewis for violating the terms of their agreement.
- According to a Behind the Music (1997) interview, his favorite album he ever recorded was "Small World" (1988), which was a commercial failure.
- Contrary to popular belief, Lewis did not forbid "Hip To Be Square" from being included on the CD soundtrack release of the movie American Psycho (2000) . He licensed the song for use in the film, but the producers failed to secure the appropriate rights to put it on the soundtrack, forcing it to be recalled and the song removed (though early pressings had already been shipped to stores and sold).
- Has two children, son Austin (born 1985) and daughter Kelly (born 1983).
- His parents divorced when he was 13.
- Huey Lewis & The News won the British Phonographic Industry Award for International Group in 1986.
- "The Power of Love" from Back to the Future (1985) earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song. That film takes place in Hill Valley, California. The cover for his sports album was photographed in a bar in Mill Valley, California.
- When the band "Clover" broke up, he formed Huey Lewis & The News, the so-called 80s Band.
- Played as a backing harmonica musician for Thin Lizzy, and for their vocalist, Phil Lynott, on Phil's solo recordings. Lewis is the harmonica player on the now-legendary Thin Lizzy live album, "Live and Dangerous".
- Attended Cornell University, majoring in engineering, but dropped out after his junior year, because he was in a band called Clover and they were preparing for rock stardom. Clover (minus Huey Lewis) provided the instrumentals for Elvis Costello's debut album, "My Aim Is True".
- Tattoo (Givin' It All Up For Love), on the Picture This album (Huey's second album), is a cover of a Phil Lynott song (whom he had played with prior to forming the News).
- During an interview, he said that he learned how to play the harmonica while hitchhiking across Europe.
- He canceled the remainder of the 2018 Huey Lewis and the News tour due to suffering a hearing loss before a show in Dallas, Texas. Doctors told him that he has Meniere's disease, a disorder that causes a fluid build up in the inner ear.
- He is the leader of Huey Lewis & The News.
- Enjoys playing golf.
- His father, Hugh Anthony Cregg Jr., was an American of Irish ancestry, and his mother, Maria Magdalena, was from Warsaw, Poland.
- Attended Monte Vista High School in Danville, CA.
- Played in a band called Clover prior to forming the News.
- The album cover for his "Sports" album was photographed at The 2AM Club located at 380 Miller Avenue in Mill Valley, California.
- He has a brother named Jeff.
- Shares a birthday (July 5) with Back to the Future (1985) star Claudia Wells. He wrote and performed the score for that movie,.
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