PATSY CLINE
Ref: The Country
Music Hall of Fame®
The most popular female country singer in recording history, Patsy Cline
has achieved icon status since her tragic early death at age thirty in
1963. Cline is invariably invoked as a standard for female vocalists, and
she has inspired scores of singers including k. d. lang, Loretta Lynn,
Linda Ronstadt, Trisha Yearwood, and Wynonna Judd. Her brief career produced
the #1 jukebox hit of all time, “Crazy” (written by Willie Nelson) and
her unique, crying style and vocal impeccability have established her reputation
as the quintessential torch singer.
Cline’s short life reads like the heart-torn lyrics of many of the ballads
she recorded. Born Virginia Patterson Hensley in Winchester, Virginia,
in the midst of the Depression, she demonstrated musical proclivity at
an early age—a talent inherited from her father, an accomplished amateur
singer, whom Cline later confessed sexually abused her as a child. The
family moved nineteen times around the state of Virginia before “Ginny,”
as she was known in her youth, reached age fifteen. A perpetual outsider,
Cline dropped out of school at age fifteen to support her family after
her father deserted them. They settled in Winchester, the Shenandoah Valley
town with which she would grow to have a love-hate relationship.
Haunted by her early experiences, the teenaged Cline directed herself
toward a career as a singer with unbending single-mindedness. She sang
in juke joints in the Winchester area and did a nightclub cabaret act a`
la Helen Morgan, the tear-stained pop chanteuse of the 1920s said to be
one of Cline’s primary influences (along with Kay Starr, Kate Smith and
Charline Arthur). She also appeared in amateur musicals, talent shows,
and on local radio station WINC.
By age twenty Cline connected with local country bandleader Bill Peer,
an association that nurtured her desire to become a country music star.
She adopted the name “Patsy” after her middle name, Patterson, possibly
in a nod to singer Patsy Montana, whose feisty cowgirl persona anticipated
both Cline’s spunk and early stage costuming. She married her first husband,
staid Gerald Cline, on March 7, 1953, but she found the relationship unfulfilling
and they divorced four years later.
During this period Cline made inroads into the thriving Washington,
D. C., country music scene masterminded by country music’s “media magician,”
Connie B. Gay. Beginning in the fall of 1954, Gay spotlighted Cline as
a featured soloist on his Town & Country regional TV broadcasts, which
included Jimmy Dean as host, along with Roy Clark, George Hamilton IV,
Billy Grammer, Dale Turner, and Mary Klick. Through her web of Washington
contacts Cline landed her first recording contract in September 1954, with
Bill McCall’s Pasadena, California-based Four Star Records, an association
that lasted six years and was to become the single greatest hindrance to
her career. Cline alleged that McCall swindled her out of record earnings
and gave her substandard material to record.
Cline’s debut single, the country weeper “A Church, a Courtroom and
Then Goodbye,” sold poorly when released in July 1955 on the Decca label’s
Coral subsidiary (by lease arrangement between McCall and Decca A&R
man Paul Cohen). Cohen turned production over to his protégé
and eventual successor, Owen Bradley, who became Cline’s guiding light
for the duration of her recording career.
Cline’s first four singles flopped, but the “hillbilly with oomph” act
she developed on TV and in personal appearances earned her regional fame.
Her recording stalemate ended when she made her national TV debut on Arthur
Godfrey’s Talent Scouts show on January 21, 1957, singing “Walkin’ After
Midnight,” which hit #2 country and #12 pop. Cline rode high on the hit
for the next year, doing personal appearances and performing regularly
on Godfrey’s weekly CBS broadcast Arthur Godfrey and Friends and on ABC’s
Country Music Jubilee, but there were no follow-up hits. Her September
1957 marriage to second husband Charlie Dick resulted in a tumultuous relationship
glamorized in Sweet Dreams, the 1985 film of Cline’s life, starring Jessica
Lange. By the end of 1957 Cline had retreated into semi-retirement.
After giving birth to a daughter (Julia) in August 1958, Cline moved
to Nashville and signed with manager Randy Hughes, who attempted to revive
her stone-cold career by booking one-nighters across the country and helping
her ride out her Four Star contract. Back to working $50 gigs, she was
at the nadir of her career when the Grand Ole Opry belatedly made her a
member on January 9, 1960. That summer she signed with Decca, and Bradley
began to direct her towards becoming a leading exponent of the emergent
Nashville Sound, beginning with her recording of the Harlan Howard-Hank
Cochran tune “I Fall to Pieces.” Cline initially fought Bradley’s lush
arrangements, which featured backings by the Jordanaires.
Cline gave birth to a son (Randy) in January 1961 and survived a near-fatal
car accident in June as “Pieces” slowly started its climb up the charts,
reaching #1 country in August and #12 pop eight months after its release.
Cline maintained her chart momentum with the Top Ten hits “Crazy” and “She’s
Got You” and with albums like Patsy Cline Showcase and Sentimentally Yours.
Other highlights included appearances at Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl,
and Dick Clark’s American Bandstand. Cline joined “The Johnny Cash Show”
as the touring group’s star female vocalist in January 1962, and over the
next fourteen months she played about fifteen or twenty dates with Cash’s
“family,” which then included Don Gibson, George Jones, Carl Perkins, June
Carter, Barbara Mandrell, Gordon Terry, and Johnny Western.
Cline related premonitions of her death to close friends Loretta Lynn,
Dottie West, and June Carter as early as September 1962. Her last public
performance was a benefit in Kansas City, March 3, 1963. Returning home,
she was killed in a plane crash that also took the lives of pilot Randy
Hughes and fellow Opry stars Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins. Released
posthumously, Cline’s singles “Leavin’ on Your Mind” and “Sweet Dreams”
both charted Top Ten. Numerous new recordings have appeared since her death,
and she has remained one of the MCA label’s most consistent sellers. The
subject of both Sweet Dreams and the hit 1990s play Always . . . Patsy
Cline, she was voted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1973. - Margaret
Jones.