Dolly Parton
born Locust Ridge, Tennessee, January 19, 1946
Elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame® 1999
With their strong feminine stances in the
1960s and 1970s, Dolly Rebecca Parton, along with fellow female pioneers
Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette, revolutionized the world of country
music for women performers. Then Parton took her crusade a step farther
by crossing over to the pop world—landing on the cover of Rolling
Stone, achieving pop hits, and starring in a series of Hollywood movies.
Along the way, however, she ultimately lost much of her core country
audience, to the point that in 1997 she dissolved her fan club, which
had been one of the staunchest in country music. But Parton’s
career—and her appeal to fans of hard country—was far from over.
Beginning in 1999 she returned to the music of her youth and began
rebuilding a tradition-minded fan base with a series of critically
acclaimed bluegrass albums.
Parton came from deep in Appalachia, where
music was an integral part of life for those who, like the Partons,
struggled to make a hard living. Her mother was a singer who taught
Dolly church music along with the Elizabethan ballads her ancestors had
brought to America. Dolly’s grandfather was a fiddling preacher who
wrote “Singing His Praise,” which was recorded by Kitty Wells.
Several of Dolly’s eleven siblings have been active in music, and some
worked for a time in her family band.
Parton’s childhood figured very strongly in
her ambition to escape her circumstances, and in the many frank,
unromantic songs she wrote about her experience and about life in
Appalachia. For example, “Coat of Many Colors” (#4, 1971) was a
straight-ahead account of a humiliating experience she had suffered at
school when classmates made fun of her patchwork, homemade coat.
Parton was encouraged in her tentative attempts
at music by her uncle Bill Owens, who bought her a guitar and who, by
the time she was ten years old, managed to land her a stint on a
television variety show in the nearest big town, Knoxville. Nashville
soon took note of her, and she made her first guest appearance on the
Grand Ole Opry at age thirteen in 1959. She also recorded a single for a
small Louisiana label, and one for Mercury Records in Nashville in 1962.
Parton was not daunted by the lack of success
of her early recordings, so in 1964 she packed her bags and left for
Nashville immediately after graduating from high school. Her first day
in town, she met her future husband, contractor Carl Dean, in a
Laundromat. Her musical career progressed apace; people began to take
note of her as a songwriter, especially after a pair of songs she wrote
with Bill Owens became Top Ten hits for Bill Phillips in 1966. Then she
recorded for Fred Foster’s Monument Records from 1965 to 1967, with
“Dumb Blonde”—which attacked traditional female
stereotypes—becoming her first Top Forty hit.
Parton’s pivotal career moment came in 1967,
in the form of a phone call from the syndicated television series, the
Porter Wagoner Show. Wagoner, a flashy-dressing traditional country
singer, was looking to replace his duet partner Norma Jean. As a team,
Wagoner and Parton became immediate audience favorites. Her hourglass
figure and outrageous outfits and angelic voice played off perfectly
against Wagoner’s cornpone humor and old-fashioned country
sensibility. RCA Records signed Parton as both Wagoner’s duet partner
and as a solo recording artist. She became increasingly successful in
both personas, and soon began to eclipse Wagoner’s own star.
Parton’s first solo #1 hit was her
composition “Joshua” (1970–1971), and that led to three more #1
songs in 1974: “Jolene,” “Love Is Like a Butterfly,” and “I
Will Always Love You.” That the latter song was her own personal
farewell to partner Wagoner became painfully evident to him when she
left his TV show that year. Under contractual obligations, he continued
to produce her records until 1976 (including the #1 hit “The Bargain
Store” in 1975), but she was soon on her own.
In retrospect, the early- to mid-1970s was the
most creatively fertile period of Parton’s country music career. She
was voted the CMA’s Female Vocalist of the Year in both 1975 and 1976.
Additionally, 1973 yielded what has come to be regarded by some as her
most nearly perfect album, My Tennessee Mountain Home. It’s a
bittersweet look backward at a life and a tradition she was bound on
leaving. The cover is a picture of the cabin in which she grew up in
Sevierville; the songs, especially the title cut, are a matter-of-fact
tribute to a people and a way of life that are vanishing. “I wanted to
be free,” she told Rolling Stone in 1977. “I had my songs to sing, I
had an ambition and it burned inside me. It was something I knew would
take me out of the mountains. I knew I could see worlds beyond the Smoky
Mountains.”
Parton’s new life looked beyond Nashville and
increasingly upon Hollywood. Her first album after declaring her
independence from Wagoner was 1977’s New Harvest, First Gathering,
which yielded the #11 single “Light of a Clear Blue Morning.” That
same year brought the album Here You Come Again, a glitzy—and
successful—attempt at a country-to-pop crossover. The CMA named her
Entertainer of the Year in 1978, and it seemed as if Parton could
preserve the best of both worlds.
Parton’s country career became erratic after
that, however, even as her name became a household word and she became a
constant presence on network TV, appearing on talk shows, specials, and
a brief self-titled series of her own in 1976. Her movie career bounced
from stellar (9 to 5) to forgettable (Rhinestone, which attempted to
make Sylvester Stallone a believable country singer). Her recording
triumphs included 1987’s Trio album with Emmylou Harris and Linda
Ronstadt and the 1993 Honky Tonk Angels collaboration with Loretta Lynn
and Tammy Wynette. In 1992 the singer Whitney Houston recorded
Parton’s “I Will Always Love You,” which became a #1 smash hit in
the pop market, partly due to its inclusion in the soundtrack for the
movie Bodyguard.
Parton has also demonstrated her business
acumen in several ventures, most notably the theme park Dollywood in
East Tennessee, near Sevierville. In 1985 she and other investors opened
the park, which has become one of the South’s leading tourist
attractions. Through Dollywood and the non-profit Dollywood Foundation,
Parton has contributed in many ways to her home county’s economy, to
scholarship programs for high school students there, and to programs
providing free books for area schoolchildren. She also supports the
Dolly Parton Wellness and Rehabilitation Center of Fort Sanders Sevier
Medical Center, which provides women’s health services and other
programs. There is now a lifesize statue of Parton on the lawn of the
Sevier County courthouse.
In 1996 Parton cut Treasures, an album of
favorites (non-Parton songs), for the new Nashville recording label
Rising Tide Entertainment. The album was a critical success but did not
fare well commercially. In that same year she and Vince Gill won the
CMA’s Vocal Event of the Year Award for their duet recording of “I
Will Always Love You.” Parton, Harris, and Ronstadt joined forces
again for Trio II, and the super-group’s rendition of Neil Young’s
“After the Gold Rush” won a 1999 Grammy for Best Country
Collaboration with Vocals. In 1999 Parton was elected to the Country
Music Hall of Fame.
The year 1999 also marked Parton’s coming
full circle to the music she grew up on. She released her first
bluegrass album for Sugar Hill, The Grass Is Blue. It was named Album of
the Year by the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) and won
a Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album. Two additional bluegrass albums,
Little Sparrow (2001) and Halos and Horns (2002), followed. In
2003 Sugar Hill released Just Because I’m a Woman: Songs of Dolly
Parton, a tribute album, which included tracks from Norah Jones, Sinead
O’Connor, Alison Krauss, and Shania Twain, among others. Parton released a collection of sacred and patriotic tunes, For God
and Country, in November 2003.
—Chet Flippo
adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum’s
Encyclopedia of Country Music, published by Oxford University Press
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