Dolly Parton

Information about Dolly Parton

Dolly Rebecca Parton (born January 19, 1946) is a Grammy-winning and Academy Award-nominated American country singer, songwriter, composer, musician, author, actress, and philanthropist.

Family life

She was born in Sevierville, Tennessee, the fourth of 12 children born to Robert Lee Parton and Avie Lee Owens. Her siblings are Willadeene Parton (a poet), David Parton, Denver Parton, Bobby Parton, Stella Parton (a singer), Cassie Parton, Larry Parton (who died shortly after birth), Randy Parton (a singer), twins Floyd Parton (a songwriter) and Freida Parton (a singer), and Rachel Dennison (an actress).

Her family was, as she described them, "dirt poor", [1] and lived in a rustic, dilapidated one-room cabin in the Great Smoky Mountains, in Locust Ridge, Tennessee. Parton's parents were parishioners in the Assembly of God Church, a Pentecostal denomination, and music was a very large part of her church experience. She once told an interviewer that her grandfather was a Pentecostal "holy roller" preacher [2]. Today, when appearing in live concerts, she frequently performs spiritual songs. (Parton, however, professes no denomination, claiming only to be "Spiritual" while adding that she believes that all the Earth's people are God's children.)

On May 30, 1966, at the age of 20, she married Carl Dean in Ringgold, Georgia. She met Dean on her first day in Nashville, at age 18, at the Wishy-Washy Laundromat. His very first words to her were: "You're gonna get sunburnt out there, little lady." [3] Dean, who runs an asphalt-paving business in Nashville, has always shunned publicity and rarely accompanies her to any events. The couple have raised several of Dolly's younger siblings at their home in Nashville. Dean and Parton have no children together.

Music

Parton began performing as a child, singing on local radio and television programs in East Tennessee. At age 9 she was appearing on "The Cas Walker Show" on WBIR-TV in Knoxville, Tennessee, and at 13, she was recording on a small record label, Goldband, and appearing at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee. When she graduated from high school in 1964 she moved to Nashville, taking many traditional elements of folklore and popular music from East Tennessee with her.

Parton's initial success came as a songwriter, writing hit songs for Hank Williams, Jr. and Skeeter Davis. [4] She signed with Monument Records in late 1965, where she was initially pitched as a bubblegum pop singer, [5] earning only one national chart single, "Happy, Happy Birthday Baby," which did not crack the Billboard Top 100. Additional pop singles also failed to chart.

The label agreed to have Parton sing country music after her composition, "Put It Off Until Tomorrow," as recorded by Bill Phillips (and with Parton, uncredited, on harmony), went to No. 6 on the country charts in 1966. Her first country single, "Dumb Blonde" (one of the few songs during this era that she recorded but didn't write), reached No. 24 on the country charts in 1967, followed the same year with "Something Fishy," which went to Number 17. The two songs anchored her first full-length album, Hello I'm Dolly.

In 1967, Parton was asked to join the weekly syndicated country music TV program hosted by Porter Wagoner, replacing Norma Jean, who had returned to Oklahoma. Parton also signed with RCA Victor, Wagoner's label, during this period, where she would remain for the next two decades. Wagoner and Parton immediately began a hugely successful career as a vocal duet in addition to their solo work and their first single together, a cover of Tom Paxton's "The Last Thing on My Mind," reached the top ten on the U.S. country charts in late 1967, and was the first of over a dozen duet singles to chart for them during the next several years.

Parton is a hugely successful songwriter, having begun by writing country songs with strong elements of folk music in them, based upon her upbringing in humble mountain surroundings. Her songs "Coat of Many Colors" and "Jolene" have become classics in the field, as have a number of others. As a composer, she is also regarded as one of country music's most gifted story tellers, with many of her narrative songs based on persons and events from her childhood. Parton has published almost 600 songs with BMI to date and has earned 37 BMI awards for her material. [6]

She stayed with the Wagoner show and continued to record duets with him for seven years, then made a break to become a solo artist. In 1974, her song, "I Will Always Love You" (written about her break from Wagoner), was released and went to #1 on the country charts. Around the same time, Elvis Presley indicated that he wanted to cover the song. Parton was interested until Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker, told her that she would have to sign over half of the publishing rights if Presley recorded the song (as was the standard procedure for songs he recorded). [7]. Parton refused and that decision is credited with helping make her many millions of dollars in royalties from the song over the years. It was decisions like these, in fact, that caused her to be called "The Iron Butterfly" in showbiz circles. She also claims to have made over $6 million from Whitney Houston's cover version of this song[1].

Branching out

Parton later had commercial success as a pop singer, as well as an actress. Her 1977 album, Here You Come Again, was her first million-seller, and the title track became her first top-ten single on the pop charts; many of her subsequent singles charted on both pop and country charts, simultaneously. Her albums during this period were developed specifically for pop/crossover success. With less time to spend on her songwriting, as she focused on a burgeoning film career, the early 1980s found Parton recording a larger percentage of material from noted pop songwriters, such as Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, Rupert Holmes, Gary Portnoy, and Carole Bayer Sager.

In 1987, along with Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt, she released the decade-in-the-making Trio album, to critical acclaim. The album strongly revitalized Parton's temporarily stalled music career, spending five weeks at #1 on Billboard's Country Albums chart, selling several million copies and producing four Top 10 Country hits including Phil Spector's "To Know Him Is To Love Him," which went to #1. Trio was nominated for a Grammy Award for Album Of The Year and was awarded "Best Country Vocal Performance - Duo or Group." (A second and more contemporary collaboration, "Trio II," would finally see release in 1999 and would be another Grammy-winning success). In 1993, she teamed up with fellow country music queens Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette for a similar project, the Honky Tonk Angels album. After 20 years with RCA Records, Parton had signed with Columbia Records in 1987, where her recording career continued to prosper, but by the mid 1990s, Parton, along with many other performers of her generation, found that her new music was not welcome on country radio playlists. She recorded a series of critically acclaimed bluegrass albums, beginning with "The Grass is Blue" (1999) and "Little Sparrow" (2001), both of which won Grammy Awards. Her 2002 album "Halos & Horns" included a bluegrass version of the Led Zeppelin classic Stairway to Heaven. In 2005, Parton released Those Were The Days, her interpretation of hits from the folk-rock era of the late 1960s through early 1970s. The CD featured such classics as John Lennon's "Imagine," Cat Stevens' "Where Do The Children Play," Tommy James' "Crimson & Clover," and Pete Seeger's folk classic "Where Have All The Flowers Gone."

Image

Standing at 5 feet, 2 inches (154 cm), Parton is well known for her large bust and low-cut, tight-fitting costumes. Her short height and thin waist accentuates her 40-inch bustline. She has turned down several offers to pose for Playboy magazine and similar publications, although she did appear on the cover of Playboy's October, 1978 issue wearing a Playboy bunny outfit, complete with ears. Breast-obsessed filmmaker Russ Meyer wanted to make movies about her.

On a 2003 taping of Oprah, the talk show host asked what kind of cosmetic surgery Parton had ever undergone. Parton stated that she felt that cosmetic surgery was imperative in keeping with her famous image, but jokingly admitted "If I have one more facelift I'll have a beard!". Parton has repeatedly joked about her physical image and surgeries, saying "If I see something sagging, bagging and dragging, I’m going to nip it, tuck it, and suck it!" and "It takes a lot of money to look this cheap."

When she crossed over into pop and became a media superstar in the late 1970s, she was significantly overweight, although her small frame and costuming made her appear average in size everywhere except the breasts, which were very large and quickly became the target of late-night talk show host jokes. At the time, whenever asked if her breasts were real, she said they were real. In the mid-1980s, she lost a considerable amount of weight. Afterward, she avoided in interviews answering whether her breasts had been augmented, referring to any procedure as only a "lift." In 2002, however, she admitted for the first time in separate interviews with The Irish Independent and The Daily Mirror that after the weight loss in the 1980s, she lost a great deal of breast size and subsequently obtained breast implants to bring them back to a similar size as she had prior to the weight loss. Since then, she has made ample jokes in media interviews about their not being natural. She even once joked by saying "Yep they are mine! Bought and paid for!".

Acting

During the mid-1970s, Parton had her eyes set on expanding her audience base. The first step towards meeting this goal was her attempt at a variety show, Dolly!. Even though it had high ratings, the show lasted merely one season, with Parton asking out of her contract due to the stress it was causing her vocal cords. (In 1987 she tried a second TV variety show, also titled Dolly, which lasted only one season.)

In 1980, Jane Fonda decided Parton was a perfect candidate for her upcoming film, 9 to 5. She was looking for a brassy Southern woman for a supporting role and felt the singer was perfect. Parton received acclaim for her performance, receiving Golden Globe nominations for Best Motion Picture Actress — Musical/Comedy and New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture — Female. She also scored the biggest solo hit of her career with the title song, which she wrote; it earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song. She received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Song — Motion Picture. The song won two Grammy Awards, for Best Female Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Song. It reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was also #78 on American Film Institute's 100 years, 100 songs. She was also named the Top Female Box Office Star title by Motion Picture Herald in both 1981 and 1982.

Parton's other films include The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), for which she received another Golden Globe nomination, Rhinestone where she was paired with Sylvester Stallone, and Steel Magnolias. Parton's last lead role in a theatrical film was in 1992's Straight Talk, opposite James Woods. She played the plainspoken host of a radio program that has people phoning in with problems. The film, while not a blockbuster, did respectably well upon its release. She later played an overprotective mother in Frank McKlusky, C.I. with Dave Sheridan, Cameron Richardson, and Randy Quaid. She has also played in the movie Unlikely Angel where she was an angel sent back to earth after a deadly car crash. She has also starred in the movie Blue Valley Songbird where she lives through her music.

Parton has also done voice work for animation, playing herself in the TV series Alvin & the Chipmunks (episode: Urban Chipmunk) (1987) and her voice role as Katrina Eloise "Murph" Murphy in The Magic School Bus (episode: The Family Holiday Special) (1994). She has appeared on many non-musical television shows, usually in cameo roles as herself, for example in a 2006 episode (Good Golly, Miss Dolly) of children's program Hannah Montana, as "Aunt Dolly" visiting Hannah and her family.

Movies, theatre, and music

Aside from 9 to 5, Parton's music has been featured prominently in other films. In 1982, she recorded a second version of "I Will Always Love You" for The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas; the second version proved to be another #1 country hit and also managed to reach the pop charts, going to #53 in the United States.

In 1992, "I Will Always Love You" was performed by Whitney Houston on The Bodyguard soundtrack. Houston's version became the best-selling hit ever written and performed by a female vocalist, with worldwide sales of over 12 million copies. As Parton owned the song, she reaped the benefits of the royalties from Houston's version. The song was also covered by music legends Linda Ronstadt on "Prisoner In Disguise" and Kenny Rogers on his 1997 album "Always and Forever," which sold over 4 million copies worldwide, as well as by LeAnn Rimes.

Parton has twice been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, for "9 to 5" in 1980, and for "Travelin' Thru" from Transamerica, filmed in 2005. She was considered the front-runner in the 2005 Oscar song category, but the song lost to "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp," from the movie Hustle and Flow. Had Parton's song won, she would have become the first country artist to win an Oscar. (Although other country songs have won the Best Song category in the past, all previous winners had actually been written by non-country artists, most often classical or pop composers.) "Travelin' Thru" did win as Best Original Song award at the 2005 Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards. The song was also nominated, though it did not win, for both Best Original Song by the Foreign Press' for the Golden Globes as well as Best Song by the Broadcast Film Critics Association.

Another Parton performance, "The Day I Fall In Love," a duet with James Ingram from the film Beethoven's 2nd was nominated for an Oscar in 1994 and was performed live by the duo on the awards telecast. Oscar nominations, however, are for the songwriter, not performer, and it did not win.

According to a broadcast of the public radio program Studio 360 from 10-29-05,[2] as of October 2005 Parton was in the midst of composing the songs for a planned Broadway musical adaptation of the film 9 to 5. In late June 2007, 9 to 5, the Musical was read for industry presentations. The readings starred Megan Hilty, Allison Janney, Stephanie J. Block, Bebe Neuwirth, and Marc Kudisch. [8]

Business

Parton invested much of her earnings into business ventures in her native East Tennessee, notably Pigeon Forge, which includes a theme park named Dollywood (the former Silver Dollar City) and a dinner show called Dolly Parton's Dixie Stampede, which also has venues in Branson, MO, Orlando, FL, and Myrtle Beach, SC. The area is a thriving tourist attraction, drawing visitors from large parts of the Southeastern and Midwestern United States. This region of the U.S., like most areas of Appalachia, has suffered economically for decades; Parton's business investment has revitalized the area. She also has Dolly's Splash Country in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.

She also owns Sandollar Productions, a film and television production company, which produced the Fox TV Show Babes and Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the features Father of the Bride I & II, Straight Talk, Sabrina (1995 film), and Academy Award-winning (for Best Documentary) , among other shows. Sanddollar is co-owned by Sandy Gallin, Parton's former manager.

Parton also owned her own wig company in the early 1990s.

In concert

Parton toured extensively from the late 1960s until the early 1990s. Since the early 1990s, Parton's concert appearances were primarily limited to one weekend a year at her Dollywood theme park benefiting her Dollywood Foundation. After a decade long absence from touring, Parton decided to hit the road in 2002 with an 18-city, intimate club tour to promote the "Halos & Horns" CD. The House of Blues Entertainment, Inc. produced show sold out all of its U.S. and European dates (her first in two decades). In 2004, she returned to mid-sized stadium venues in 36 cities in the US and Canada with her "Hello I'm Dolly" tour, a glitzier, more elaborate stage show than two years earlier. With nearly 140,000 tickets sold, the "Hello I'm Dolly" tour was the tenth-biggest country tour of the year and grossed more than $6 million. In late 2005 Parton completed a 40-city tour with "The Vintage Tour" promoting her new album, Those Were The Days. In the late months of 2006 Parton scheduled mini concerts throughout the U.S. and Canada, as a gear up to her European tour in early March 2007. This is her first world tour in many years and will be hitting 17 cities in 21 dates and will run from March 6 through April 3, before Parton returns state side in time for summer of 2007. The European Tour Sold Out In every City gaining favourable reviews and taking just over $16 million over 21 shows. The most remarked upon feature of her shows was that very few in attendance, despite Parton being 62, had ever seen her in concert. Something of which would lead to a well received reception when she took to the stage.

Awards and Honors

Parton is the most-honored female country performer of all time. She has achieved 25 RIAA certified gold, platinum and multi-platinum honors She has had 26 songs reach No. 1 on the Billboard country charts, a record for a female artist. She has 41 career top 10 country albums, a record for any artist, and 110 career charted singles over the past 40 years. All inclusive sales of singles, albums, hits collections, paid digital downloads and compilation usage during Parton's career have reportedly topped 100 million records around the world.[3]

She has received 7 Grammy Awards and a total of 42 Grammy nominations. At the American Music Awards, she has won 3 awards, but has received 18 nominations. At the Country Music Association, she has received 10 awards and 42 nominations. At the Academy of Country Music, she has won 7 awards and 39 nominations. She is one of only 5 other female artists (including Reba McEntire, Barbara Mandrell, Shania Twain, and Loretta Lynn), to win the Country Music Association's highest honor, "Entertainer of the Year".

She was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording in 1984, located at 6712 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood a star on the Nashville Star Walk for Grammy winners; and a bronze sculpture on the courthouse lawn in Sevierville, Tennessee. She has called the statue of herself in her hometown "the greatest honor," because it came from the people that knew her.

Parton was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1969 and in 1986, was named one of Ms. Magazine's Women of the Year. In 1986, Parton was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 1999, Parton received country music's highest honor, an induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame. She received an honorary doctorate from Carson-Newman College in 1990. This was followed by induction into the National Academy of Popular Music/Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2001. In 2002, Parton ranked #4 in CMT's 40 Greatest Women of Country Music.

She was honored in 2003 with a tribute album called Just Because I'm a Woman: Songs of Dolly Parton. The artists who recorded versions of Parton's songs included Melissa Etheridge ("I Will Always Love You"), Alison Krauss ("9 to 5"), Shania Twain ("Coat of Many Colors"), Me'Shell NdegéOcello ("Two Doors Down"), Norah Jones ("The Grass is Blue"), and Sinéad O'Connor ("Dagger Through the Heart"); Parton herself contributed a rerecording of the title song, originally the title song for her first RCA album in 1968. Parton was awarded the Living Legend medal by the U.S. Library of Congress on April 14, 2004, for her contributions to the cultural heritage of the United States. This was followed in 2005 with the National Medal of Arts, the highest honor given by the U.S. government for excellence in the arts.

On December 3, 2006 Dolly Parton was honored by the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for her lifetime of contributions to the arts. Other 2006 honorees included Zubin Mehta, Steven Spielberg, Smokey Robinson and Andrew Lloyd Webber. During the show, some of country music's biggest names came to show their admiration. Carrie Underwood performed Dolly's hit "Islands in the Stream" with original duet partner Kenny Rogers. Alison Krauss performed "Jolene" and duetted "Coat of Many Colors" with Shania Twain. Vince Gill performed "I Will Always Love You" which he duetted with Dolly. Jessica Simpson sang "9 to 5" but left the stage mid-way through after messing up the lyrics. The broadcast on national television did not include her performance. Reba McEntire & Reese Witherspoon also came to pay tribute.

Philanthropic efforts

Since the mid-1980s Parton has been praised for her many charitable efforts, particularly in the area of literacy. Her literacy program, Dolly Parton's "Imagination Library", which mails one book per month to children from the time of their birth until they enter kindergarten, began in Sevier County, Tennessee, but has now been replicated in 566 counties across thirty-six U.S. states, as well as Canada. [4] It has resulted in Parton's receiving the Association of American Publishers' AAP Honors in 2000, Good Housekeeping's Seal of Approval in 2001 (the first time the seal had been given to a person), the American Association of School Administrators' Galaxy Award in 2002, the Chasing Rainbows Award from the National State Teachers of the Year in 2002, and the Child and Family Advocacy Award from the Parents As Teachers National Center in 2003. She was honored as a "Living Legend" by the Library of Congress for her work [5]. The program distributes more than 2.5 million free books to children annually.

Her Dollywood theme park has also been noted for bringing jobs and tax revenues to a previously depressed region.

Her efforts to preserve the bald eagle through the American Eagle Foundation's sanctuary at Dollywood earned her the Partnership Award from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2003.

She has also worked to raise money on behalf of several other causes, including the Red Cross and a number of HIV/AIDS-related charities.

In December 2006, Parton pledged $500,000 toward a proposed $90 million hospital and cancer center to be constructed in Sevierville, Tennessee, in the name of Dr. Robert F. Thomas, the physician who delivered her; she also announced plans for a benefit concert to raise additional funds for the project. The concert went ahead playing to about 8,000 people,[6]

Dolly published a cookbook in 2006 entitled Dolly's Dixie Fixin's. The proceeds support the Dollywood Foundation, under which falls the Dolly Parton Imagination Library.

Discography

Selected hit singles

Year Single Album U.S. Country U.S. Hot 100 U.S. AC UK Tracks
1967"Dumb Blonde"Hello, I'm Dolly24---
1967"Something's Fishy"Hello, I'm Dolly17---
1968"The Last Thing on My Mind" (with Porter Wagoner)Just Between You and Me7---
1968"Holdin' On To Nothing" (with Porter Wagoner)Just the Two of Us7---
1968"We'll Get Ahead Someday" (with Porter Wagoner)Just the Two of Us5---
1969"Yours Love" (with Porter Wagoner)Always, Always9---
1969"Just Someone I Used To Know" (with Porter Wagoner)Porter Wayne and Dolly Rebecca5---
1970"Tomorrow Is Forever" (with Porter Wagoner)Porter Wayne and Dolly Rebecca9---
1970"Mule Skinner Blues"The Best of Dolly Parton3---
1970"Daddy Was An Old Time Preacher Man" (with Porter Wagoner)Once More7---
1971"Joshua"Joshua1108--
1971"Better Move It On Home" (with Porter Wagoner)The Best of Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton7---
1971"Coat of Many Colors"Coat of Many Colors4---
1972"Touch Your Woman"Touch Your Woman6---
1972"Lost Forever In Your Kiss" (with Porter Wagoner)Together Always9---
1973"If Teardrops Were Pennies" (with Porter Wagoner)Love And Music3---
1974"Jolene"Jolene160447
1974"I Will Always Love You"Jolene1---
1974"Please Don't Stop Loving Me" (with Porter Wagoner)Porter 'n' Dolly1---
1974"Love Is Like A Butterfly"Love Is Like A Butterfly110538-
1975"The Bargain Store"The Bargain Store1-35-
1975"The Seeker"Dolly: The Seeker/We Used To2105--
1975"Say Forever You'll Be Mine" (with Porter Wagoner)Say Forever You'll Be Mine5---
1975"We Used To"Dolly: The Seeker/We Used To9---
1976"Is Forever Longer Than Always" (with Porter Wagoner)Porter 'n' Dolly8---
1976"All I Can Do"All I Can Do3---
1977"Light Of A Clear Blue Morning"New Harvest - First Gathering1187--
1977"Here You Come Again"Here You Come Again13275
1978"Two Doors Down"/"It's All Wrong (But It's All Right)"Here You Come Again11912-
1978"Heartbreaker"Heartbreaker13712-
1979"Baby I'm Burning"/"I Really Got the Feeling"Heartbreaker12511
1979"You're The Only One"Great Balls Of Fire15914-
1979"Sweet Summer Lovin'"Great Balls Of Fire77741-
1980"Starting Over Again"Dolly, Dolly, Dolly13635-
1980"Making Plans]" (with Porter Wagoner)Porter & Dolly2---
1980"Old Flames Can't Hold a Candle to You"Dolly, Dolly, Dolly1---
1981"9 to 5"9 to 5 and Odd Jobs11147
1981"But You Know I Love You"9 to 5 and Odd Jobs14114-
1982"Single Women"Heartbreak Express8---
1982"Heartbreak Express"Heartbreak Express7---
1982"I Will Always Love You" (1982 recording)The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas15317-
1983"Hard Candy Christmas"The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas8---
1983"Everything's Beautiful (In Its Own Way)" (with Willie Nelson)The Winning Hand (Willie Nelson)710219-
1983"Potential New Boyfriend"Burlap And Satin20---
1983"Islands in the Stream" (with Kenny Rogers)Eyes That See in the Dark (Kenny Rogers)1117
1984"Save The Last Dance For Me"The Great Pretender34512-
1984"Downtown"The Great Pretender3680-
1984"Tennessee Homesick Blues"Rhinestone1---
1984"God Won't Get You"Rhinestone10---
1984"Christmas Without You" (with Kenny Rogers)Once Upon A Christmas---88
1985"Don't Call It Love"Real Love3-12-
1985"Real Love" (with Kenny Rogers)Real Love19113-
1986"Think About Love"Real Love1---
1987"To Know Him Is To Love Him" (with Emmylou Harris & Linda Ronstadt)Trio1---
1987"Telling Me Lies" (with Emmylou Harris & Linda Ronstadt)Trio3-35-
1988"Those Memories Of You" (with Emmylou Harris & Linda Ronstadt)Trio5---
1988"Wildflowers" (with Emmylou Harris & Linda Ronstadt)Trio6---
1989"Why'd You Come In Here Lookin' Like That"White Limozeen1---
1989"Yellow Roses"White Limozeen1---
1991"Rockin' Years" (with Ricky Van Shelton)Eagle When She Flies1---
1991"Silver And Gold"Eagle When She Flies15---
1993"Romeo" (with "Friends")Slow Dancing With The Moon2750--
1993"The Day I Fall In Love" (with James Ingram)Beethoven's 2nd OST--3664
1995"I Will Always Love You" (with Vince Gill)Something Special15---
1999"Your Kisses Are Charity" (with Culture Club)Don't Mind If I Do---25
2001"Shine" (with Nickel Creek)ALittle Sparrow----
2002"If"Halos & Horns---73
2004"Baby It's Cold Outside" (with Rod Stewart)Stardust: the Great American Songbook 3 (Rod Stewart)--2-
2005"When I Get Where I'm Going" (with Brad Paisley)Time Well Wasted (Brad Paisley)139--
2006"Heartbreaker's Alibi" (with Rhonda Vincent)AAll American Bluegrass Girl (Rhonda Vincent)----
2007"Better Get To Livin'"BBackwoods Barbie50---
  • AFailed to chart.
  • BCurrent single.
[7]

Albums

Compilations

  • 1970 "The Best Of Dolly Parton" (RCA) (#12 COUNTRY)
  • 1971 "The Best Of Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton" (RCA) (#7 COUNTRY)
  • 1972 "The World of Dolly Parton" (Monument)
  • 1973 "Mine" (RCA/Camden)
  • 1975 "I Wish I Felt This Way at Home" (RCA/Camden)
  • 1975 "Best Of Dolly Parton (Vol. 2)" (RCA) (#5 COUNTRY)
  • 1978 "In the Beginning" (Monument)
  • 1982 "Dolly Parton's Greatest Hits" (RCA) #77 U.S. (#7 COUNTRY)
  • 1987 "The Best There Is" (RCA)
  • 1993 "The RCA Years" (RCA; boxed set)
  • 1996 "I Will Always Love You and Other Greatest Hits" (RCA) (#47 COUNTRY)
  • 1997 "A Life in Music - Ultimate Collection" #38 UK
  • 1999 "Super Hits"
  • 2001 "Gold - The Hits Collection" #23 UK
  • 2001 "Mission Chapel Memories: 1971 - 1975" (Raven)
  • 2003 "Ultimate Dolly Parton" #130 U.S., #17 UK (#20 COUNTRY)
  • 2005 "The Essential Dolly Parton" (RCA/Legacy)
  • 2006 "The Acousitc Collection: 1999-2002" (Blue Eye/Sugar Hill)
  • 2007 "The Very Best of Dolly Parton" #8 UK
  • 2007 "The Very Best of Dolly Parton, Vol. 2"
  • 2007 "16 Biggest Hits"

Filmography

Television

TV filmography

  • A Smoky Mountain Christmas (1986) ... Lorna Davis
  • Wild Texas Wind (1991) ... Thiola "Big T" Rayfield
  • (1995) ... cameo as herself
  • (1995) ... Herself/Guest Performer
  • (1997) ... Herself/Cameo
  • Unlikely Angel (1996) ... Ruby Diamond
  • Blue Valley Songbird (1999) ... Leanna Taylor
  • Jackie's Back (1999) ... Herself/Cameo

TV series

TV guest appearances

TV music and variety series

TV specials

  • Rowan and Martin Special 1973
  • Mac Davis Special 1977
  • Cher . . . Special 1978
  • Carol and Dolly in Nashville 1979
  • Mac Davis Special 1979
  • Mac Davis Special 1980
  • Best Little Special In Texas 1982
  • Dolly In London 1983
  • Dolly Parton Meets The Kids 1983
  • 1984
  • 1985
  • Bob Hope Christmas Special 1988
  • 1989
  • Home For Christmas 1990
  • Treasures 1996
  • Precious Memories (1999)
  • Graham Goes To Dollywood (2001)
  • Cross Roads, Melissa Etheridge & Dolly Parton (2003)
  • A Capitol Fourth (2003)
  • Stars Over Texas (2003)
  • U.S. Library Of Congress Living Legend Ceremony (2004)

Documentaries

See also

Notes

1. ^ "Dolly Parton talks new album, tour", CNN, 9 July 2002.
2. ^ "Backwoods glam", The Washington Times, 1 December 2006.
3. ^ Parton, Dolly (1994). Dolly: My Life And Other Unfinished Business. Harper Collins, pp. 142. ISBN 0060177209. 
4. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2005). Top Country Songs 1944-2005. Billboard/Record Research Inc., pp. 108, 422. ISBN 0898201659. 
5. ^ Nash, Alana (1978). Dolly. Reed Books, pp. 64-70. ISBN 0891695230. 
6. ^ "Dolly Parton to be Honored as BMI ICON at Country Awards", BMI News, 2 November 2003.
7. ^ "Dolly Parton Reflects on Her Greatest Moments", CMT, 7 July 2006.
8. ^ [8]

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"In God We Trust"   (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum"   ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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Country music, the first half of Billboard's country and western music category, is a blend of popular musical forms originally found in the Southern United States. It has roots in traditional folk music, Celtic music, blues, gospel music, hokum, and old-time music and
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A singer is a musician who uses their voice to produce music. Often the singer is accompanied by musicians and instruments. While many people sing for pleasure, vocal skill is usually a combination of innate talent and professional training.
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A songwriter is someone who writes the lyrics to songs, the musical composition or melody to songs, or both. That is to say, a songwriter is a lyricist, a composer, or both.
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composer is a person who writes music. The term refers particularly to someone who writes music in some type of musical notation, thus allowing others to perform the music. This distinguishes the composer from a musician who improvises or plays a musical instrument.
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musician is a person who plays or composes music. Musicians can be classified by their role in creating or performing music:
  • A musician or instrumentalist plays a musical instrument.

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Please [ improve this article] by rewriting this article or section in an . (, talk)



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actor, actress, or player (see terminology) is a person who acts in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio in that capacity.
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philanthropist is someone who engages in philanthropy; that is, someone who donates his or her time, money, and/or reputation to charitable causes. The term may apply to any volunteer or to anyone who makes a donation, but the label is most often applied to those who donate large
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Sevierville, Tennessee
Sevier County Courthouse
Location in Tennessee
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Tennessee
County Sevier
Founded 1795
Incorporated 1901
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Stella Parton (born May 4, 1949) is an American Country Music singer and songwriter. She is the younger sister of country music icon Dolly Parton. With the help of her sister, Stella Parton became a successful Country singer in her own right during the late 70s.
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Appalachian Mountain system ]]

The Great Smoky Mountains are a major mountain range in the southern part of the Appalachian Mountains, the second ridge line forming a north-south running mountain chain from the Eastern United States and bordering the western side of
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Sevier County (pronounced "severe") is a U.S. county of the state of Tennessee, United States. Its population was 71,170 at the 2000 United States Census. It is included in the Sevierville, Tennessee Micropolitan Statistical Area, which is included in the Knoxville-Sevierville-La
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Assemblies of God

Classification Protestant
Orientation Pentecostal ; Evangelical
Polity Congregationalist
Origin 1914:
Separated from Church of God in Christ
Separations Oneness Pentecostals (separated 1917)

The World Assemblies of God Fellowship
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Christianity

Foundations
Jesus Christ
Church Theology
New Covenant Supersessionism
Dispensationalism
Apostles Kingdom Gospel
History of Christianity Timeline
Bible
Old Testament New Testament
Books Canon Apocrypha
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religious denomination (also simply denomination) is a subgroup within a religion that operates under a common name, tradition, and identity.

The term is frequently used to describe various Christian denominations (for example, Eastern Orthodox, Catholicism, and the
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Holy Roller is a term in American English used to describe Pentecostal Christian churchgoers. The term is commonly used derisively, as if to describe people literally rolling on the floor or speaking in tongues in an uncontrolled manner.
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May 30 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events


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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1930s  1940s  1950s  - 1960s -  1970s  1980s  1990s
1963 1964 1965 - 1966 - 1967 1968 1969

Year 1966 (MCMLXVI
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Ringgold, Georgia
Location in Catoosa County and the state of Georgia
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Georgia
County Catoosa
Area
 - City  3.
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Orton Caswell Walker (1903-1998) better known as Cas Walker was a businessman, politician and television personality. He was born in Sevier County, Tennessee. His television show The Cas Walker Farm and Home Hour [1] ran on WBIR station from 1954 to 1971.
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WBIR-TV channel 10 is the NBC affiliate in Knoxville, Tennessee. The station is owned and operated by Gannett. Its transmitter is located in Knoxville. 10 News WeatherPlus is offered through WBIR's digital feed.
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Knoxville, Tennessee

Seal
Nickname: The Marble City, K-Town,
Big Orange Country, KnoxVegas, 865, Rocky Top

Location within the U.S. State of Tennessee.
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Goldband Records is an American record company based in Lake Charles, Louisiana, founded in 1945 and best known for its Cajun and R&B recordings in the 1950s and 1960s.

The company was established by Eddie Shuler (March 27, 1913 - July 23, 2005).
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Hank Williams, Jr. (born May 26, 1949) is an American country and southern rock artist, son of country music pioneer Hank Williams and father of Hank III and Holly Williams. A multi-instrumentalist, Williams, Jr.
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Skeeter Davis (born Mary Frances Penick December 30, 1931 – September 19, 2004) was an American Country Music Singer, who was best known for crossover Pop music songs of the early 1960s. She started out as part of The Davis Sisters in the early 1950s.
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