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Country Music Hall of Fame Member Porter Wagoner Dies
CMT ^ | 10/29/07 | Ronnie Pugh

Posted on 10/29/2007 10:22:32 AM PDT by raccoonradio

Famous for His Rhinestone Suits, He Was a Grand Ole Opry Star for 50 Years

Porter Wagoner, a Grand Ole Opry institution and member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, died Sunday (Oct. 28) at 8:25 p.m. at Alive Hospice in Nashville.

Known as the Thin Man From West Plains, he was 80 and had been hospitalized since Oct. 15. An Opry spokesperson announced on Oct. 21 that Wagoner had been diagnosed with lung cancer. He was released to hospice care on Friday (Oct. 26).

An Opry star since 1957, the well-loved Wagoner had been the show's goodwill ambassador for many years and was photographed by fans millions of times as he clowned onstage in the flashy rhinestone suits that became one of his trademarks.

After suffering a near-fatal stomach aneurysm in 2006, he later recorded a new album, Wagonmaster, released earlier this year. He promoted the project by traveling to Hollywood in February to open a concert for Neko Case. In July, he opened the White Stripes' concert at New York's Madison Square Garden. Earlier this year, he celebrated his 50th anniversary as a member of the Opry. He last played the Opry on Sept. 29.

Wagoner was twice divorced. His second marriage of 40 years to Ruth Williams produced his three children, Richard, Debra and Denise, who survive him.

Born in the Ozark Mountains region of southwestern Missouri on Aug. 12, 1927, Porter Wayne Wagoner moved to nearby West Plains, Mo., with his farming family. Biographer Steve Eng described Wagoner's first band, the Blue Ridge Boys, as "bluegrass," much in the style of his idol at the time, Bill Monroe. By 1950, still in his early 20s and more into the singing style of Hank Williams, Wagoner was cutting meat for a local butcher when he wangled a remote radio broadcast from the shop over radio station KWPM in West Plains.

The next year, he was hired away by the larger KWTO in Springfield, Mo., where entrepreneur Si Siman would soon launch the famous Ozark Jubilee. It proved to be the right place at the right time. In 1952, RCA Victor Records, scouting local talent, signed the young hopeful on little more than speculation. His early records sold poorly, but he learned his craft on grinding tours of the Springfield listening radius as leader of the Porter Wagoner Trio, which included guitarist "Speedy" Haworth and a high-harmony singer on the steel guitar who would stay with Wagoner for decades, Don Warden.

Even while Wagoner's own earliest records weren't selling, he had the good fortune to co-write a No. 2 hit for Carl Smith titled "Trademark" (1953). As an artist, Wagoner first dented the charts with a mountain ditty called "Company's Comin'" in late 1954, and the next year, he reached No. 1 with RCA's version of the great Red Hayes-Jack Rhodes ballad, "A Satisfied Mind." Having made the rounds of the Ozark Jubilee cast, the song was a hit at the same time for Jean Shepard on Capitol and Red Foley on Decca.

As rock 'n' roll pushed hard country to the fringes over the next few years, Wagoner's repertoire, if anything, moved into an even stronger country sound with his recordings of "Eat, Drink and Be Merry (Tomorrow You'll Cry)" (1955), "What Would You Do (If Jesus Came to Your House)" (1956), Bill Monroe's "Uncle Pen" (1956) and a soulful weeper written by Lee Emerson, "I Thought I Heard You Call My Name" (1957).

Wagoner learned the lesson of valuable TV exposure during those years as an early cast member of ABC's Ozark Jubilee (1955-56), but he left the show in 1956 and moved to Nashville, where he was invited to join the Grand Ole Opry cast the next year. At the Opry, he was stepping back into the radio era, albeit surrounded by bigger stars, and he was still playing all the tour dates he could get. But recalling the value of TV exposure, he jumped at the chance to host in 1960 one of the first ventures into syndicated country music television for the Chattanooga Medicine Company, makers of the popular laxatives and elixirs Cardui and Black Draught.

Hosting The Porter Wagoner Show was a tall, thin, close-cropped young man whose solemn seriousness contrasted markedly with his sometimes silly exuberance of later years, but his voice and demeanor made him the perfect salesman for the company's products. He was believable, popular and eager to showcase a cast that included his talented Wagon Masters band, rube comic Speck Rhodes (brother to the writer of "A Satisfied Mind") and Norma Jean, a female vocalist who also recorded for RCA. The program also presented a weekly parade of special guests who were among the biggest stars in country music. While later and shorter-lived syndicated shows by such better-known stars as Ernest Tubb and Flatt & Scruggs struggled to keep viewers, The Porter Wagoner Show eventually reached 3 million viewers via 100 local stations and stayed in production an incredible 21 years.

TV exposure again meant hit records for Wagoner, and his steady stream of 1960s hits reflect that serious, solemn, no-nonsense on-camera persona: "Misery Loves Company" (1962), "I've Enjoyed as Much of This as I Can Stand" (1962-1963), "Sorrow on the Rocks" (1964), "Green, Green Grass of Home" (1965) and "Skid Row Joe" (1965). His other hits included 1967's "The Cold Hard Facts of Life" (a Bill Anderson song about a cuckolded husband who turns mass murderer) and 1969's "The Carroll County Accident" (songwriter Bob Ferguson's CMA-award winning composition centering around the theme of infidelity and violent death, this time in a car wreck).

When Norma Jean left the TV show in 1967, Wagoner auditioned dozens of "girl singers" to replace her and finally picked a 20-year-old blonde bombshell from the hills of East Tennessee named Dolly Parton. Although Norma Jean's many fans gave her a hard time at first, Parton proved to be Wagoner's finest moment as a talent scout. Beneath Parton's obvious beauty lived a powerful singer-songwriter whose artistic stature grew with the passing years.

Parton also became a perfect duet partner for Wagoner. He got her on the Grand Ole Opry and RCA Records and, of course, featured her on his road shows. The years of their association (1967-1974) produced a stunning 14 Top 10 duet hits as Parton the solo artist matured and prospered under Wagoner's supervision. They parted acrimoniously in 1974, as Parton took Don Warden from the Wagon Masters to manage her career when she moved toward country-pop superstardom. Though he tried, Wagoner found no replacement for Parton, and his TV show, relocated to the friendly informality of outdoor Opryland theme park settings, lost its edge, intensity and eventually much of its audience. The program ended its 21-year run in 1981.

Wagoner's name stayed on the lips of country fans as the years passed but more for stunts like bringing soul star James Brown onto the Opry in March 1979, replacing his Wagon Masters with the all-female Right Combination band (inspired by the title of a 1971 duet hit with Parton) in the '80s. Ever the talented TV host, Wagoner and Bill Anderson shared interview chores on TNN's Opry Backstage in the '90s.

Like Roy Acuff before him, Wagoner settled into a Grand Ole Opry routine in which the fans came to him -- he no longer went to the fans. Saturday after Saturday, he posed for countless snapshots while flashing his rhinestone suits and famous smile, singing woefully truncated medleys of his great hits when he wasn't wisecracking. Wagoner was a favorite not only with fans, but with his fellow artists, who joined him on countless golf and fishing trips, hobbies at which he excelled.

It was ironic that his discovery, Dolly Parton, was voted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1999, three years before Wagoner received the honor.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: countrymusic; porterwagoner

1 posted on 10/29/2007 10:22:34 AM PDT by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio

A superb final album (unless he poss. recorded some
tracks since then), Wagonmaster


2 posted on 10/29/2007 10:24:44 AM PDT by raccoonradio (Boston Red Sox: 2007 World Champions)
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To: wardaddy
One of the greats. Thanks for the memories and music, Porter.

Johnny, Hank, Grandpa, Roy, Red, Patsy, and now Porter

3 posted on 10/29/2007 10:32:55 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: raccoonradio

At last he’ll touch the green green grass of home.

God speed, Porter..... and thanks for the music


4 posted on 10/29/2007 10:33:26 AM PDT by Lexington Green (There ain't no news in the news no more.)
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To: Lexington Green

I wonder if Wagoner and Parton ever reconciled since he was very unhappy when she left the show.

Rest in Peace, Mr. Wagoner.


5 posted on 10/29/2007 10:35:29 AM PDT by fatnotlazy
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To: raccoonradio

6 posted on 10/29/2007 10:35:38 AM PDT by theDentist (Qwerty ergo typo : I type, therefore I misspelll. <br> "What happens if neutrinos have mass?")
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To: raccoonradio

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwoesyxNOew

He-’ahz-ah-gud’un.

May God bless and comfort his loved ones.


7 posted on 10/29/2007 10:40:02 AM PDT by LucyJo
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To: fatnotlazy

Thought I heard they had reconciled in recent years.


8 posted on 10/29/2007 10:41:42 AM PDT by raccoonradio (Boston Red Sox: 2007 World Champions)
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To: fatnotlazy

I used to get a kick out of watching his show back in the 60’s when he’d bring on “pretty l’il Dolly Parton” to sing duets with him.


9 posted on 10/29/2007 10:47:09 AM PDT by Argus
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To: raccoonradio

Thanks. I thought I might have heard that they had, but I don’t see any mention of it. And I don’t see any kind of a statement from her or her publicist.


10 posted on 10/29/2007 10:51:56 AM PDT by fatnotlazy
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To: Argus

Yeah. Parton was very young back then. But man, she did know even years ago what she wanted in life. Not a dumb blond bimbo as some might have expected.


11 posted on 10/29/2007 10:53:58 AM PDT by fatnotlazy
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To: fatnotlazy; All

Dolly sang for Porter in his final hours. See below:

-— Dolly Parton said Monday she feels like a part of her died along with her old duet partner, Porter Wagoner. But she said she was grateful that she was able to spend a few final hours with the man who launched her career before he succumbed to cancer Sunday.

“Part of him will always live through me and my music as he was my first big break,” Parton said.

The 80-year-old Grand Ole Opry star and showman died of lung cancer Sunday in a Nashville hospice, after being transferred there Friday from a hospital.

Parton said she was there with his family, sang for him and prayed with him.

“It felt good that I had the opportunity to say goodbye properly,” Parton said.

Wagoner had a streak of hits in the 1960s and ‘70s, and enjoyed a comeback in recent months with a new album.

To many longtime fans, though, he may be best remembered for his sparkly rhinestone suits and for singing with Parton on his TV show from 1967 to 1974.

Marty Stuart, who produced Wagoner’s last album, the critically acclaimed “Wagonmaster,” said he grew up watching his TV show and they later became close friends.

Stuart was one of the musicians who backed Wagoner this summer when he opened for the influential rock group the White Stripes at Madison Square Garden, a show that underscored the aging singer’s newfound popularity with a fresh wave of young fans.

“He was a masterful showman who understood the art of the final act,” Stuart said. “He left the world on top.”

Stuart said Wagoner had been invited to light the nation’s Christmas tree at the Pageant of Peace celebration in Washington, D.C., next month.

“One of the last things he said to me was, ‘You’re gonna have to call the president and tell him I won’t be able to sing him any Christmas songs this year. Maybe next year,’” Stuart recalled.

Country music singer Patty Loveless said Wagoner was a mentor to her in her early years and became like family to her.

“He encouraged me and helped me to fulfill my dreams and was truly an inspiration,” Loveless said. “I love him and I miss him already.”

The Grand Ole Opry announced Monday that funeral arrangements would be open to the public. Visitation will be Wednesday at a local funeral home, with a funeral on Thursday at the Grand Ole Opry House.


12 posted on 10/29/2007 10:29:12 PM PDT by raccoonradio (Boston Red Sox: 2007 World Champions)
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To: raccoonradio

Thank you very much. I’m glad Ms. Parton was there for him and his family. She’s a class act.


13 posted on 10/30/2007 4:35:58 AM PDT by fatnotlazy
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