Skeeter Davis, the
country and gospel singer who died Sunday at the age of 73, sang one of radio's all-time great heartbreak ballads, "The End
of the World."
She also triggered a semifamous radio minidrama at the Grand Ole Opry in 1973.
A 14-year Opry
veteran, Davis was headed to Ryman Auditorium on Dec. 15, 1973, when she saw Nashville
police arrest 15 long-haired "Jesus people."
Deeply religious herself, Davis told the Ryman crowd and the Opry's national
radio audience that the police had acted wrongly and with unnecessary force.
Since Vietnam War protests were still
a point of national contention, and since the rare whiffs of politics on the Opry stage almost never involved criticizing
institutions like the police, Davis caused quite the Nashville
scandal. She was suspended after the show and didn't return to the Opry for 18 months.
Finally, the Opry quietly admitted
it might have overreacted, and she sang about Jesus there for many more years.
*******************
Remembering Skeeter Davis...
Mary Frances Penick was born on December
30, 1931 in the small Appalachian town of Dry Ridge, Kentucky.
As a child, her grandfather nicknamed her "Skeeter" because she was always active and buzzing around like a mosquito. She
got her start in music as part of the duo, The Davis Sisters,
along with childhood friend, Betty Jack Davis. Thus, Skeeter Davis
was born to the rest of the world.
The Davis Sisters sang in the local Lexington, Kentucky area and appeared on local radio WLAX
in 1949. From there, they earned radio and television appearances in Detroit, Cincinnati
and Wheeling, WV, where they were part of the WWVA Wheeling Jamboree.
In 1952, Skeeter and Betty Jack recorded for
Fortune, but won a recording contract with RCA the following year and achieved their first chart success. "I Forgot More Than
You'll Ever Know" went to number one on the U.S. country chart and number
eighteen on the U.S. pop chart.
Sadly,
on August 23, 1953, Skeeter and Betty Jack were involved in a serious car accident in which Betty Jack died and Skeeter was
critically injured. It took Skeeter more than a year to recover both physically and mentally. With great difficulty and a
lot of persuasion, Skeeter returned to singing with Betty Jack's sister, Georgia Davis, to briefly resume the Davis Sisters' act. But, within a year, the duo broke up and Skeeter pursued a solo career.
She
continued to record on the RCA label where she worked with Eddy Arnold and Elvis Presley. In 1955, she toured for RCA on the
Caravan of the Stars. Davis teamed up with producer, Chet
Atkins and scored her first solo country chart hit in 1958 with "Lost To A Geisha Girl." This was during a time when the female
acts were surging forward with "response" songs to some of the biggest hits by male artists. As Kitty Wells had answered Hank
Thompson's "Honky Tonk Angels," with "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" in 1952, Skeeter Davis put out this answer to Hank Locklin's "Geisha Girl."
A few years later, Davis recorded another answer to a Hank Locklin song and gained another
huge hit. Locklin sang "Please Help Me I'm Falling" and Davis'
response was, "I Can't Help You, I'm Falling Too."
In 1959, Davis achieved one of her
greatest ambitions when she moved to Nashville and became
a regular member of the Grand Ole Opry. In 1960, she married WSM personality, Ralph Emery, but the tumultuous marriage ended
in 1964.
During the 1960's, Davis was one of RCA's
most successful country artists. She harvested 26 U.S. country hits, 12
of which crossed over to the U.S. pop
charts. Among these was what was to become her trademark song, the million-selling record "The End Of The World" which peaked
at number two in both the U.S. country
and pop charts in 1963. She also earned her only UK
chart presence with "The End Of The World" which topped out at number eighteen in only thirteen weeks on the chart.
Davis has also acheived songwriting success. Her co-written song "Set
Him Free" became her first country Top 10 hit in 1959. She also co-wrote "My Last Date" with Boudleaux Bryant and Floyd Cramer.
Cramer, famed pianist and member of the original A-team, recorded it as an instrumental solo and had a million-selling record
on it in 1960.
During the 60's and 70's, Davis toured extensively in the U.S., Canada, Europe and Far
East. Her solo career started to wane in the 70's, but she still had several more hits such as "Bus Fare To Kentucky," "I'm A Lover, Not A Fighter," and "One Tin Soldier." Her
duets with Bobby Bare, George Hamilton IV, and The Bee Gees gave her a few more hits, but by the mid-70's, Davis was reaching the end of her illustrious career. She ended her twenty-two year relationship
with RCA in 1974 and charted her last hit for Mercury in 1976 with "I Love Us."
In 1967, Davis recorded a tribute album to Buddy Holly, which featured Waylon Jennings on the guitar.
Later in 1972, she also did a tribute album to her friend, Dolly Parton. In 1985, she re-recorded an old Davis Sisters' hit, "May You Never Be Alone," with the group NRBQ. She married Joey Spampanito
of NRBQ, but this marriage ultimately ended in divorce as well.
In 1973, Davis
was dropped from the Grand Ole Opry's roster due to her strong criticisms of the Nashville Police Department during one of
her performances. Her membership was later reinstated.
Davis
has also taken to writing about her real life experiences. Her autobiography, "Bus Fare To Kentucky," was published in 1993. Davis
pulls no punches in this brutally honest account of her life. She tells how she endured a family history of alcoholism, incest
and murder. She also tells her side of the story regarding her four year marriage to Ralph Emery, following the heavy criticism
which she received in Emery's autobiography. In 1997, she co-wrote a children's Christmas book, entitled "The Christmas Note,"
based on her own childhood.
Skeeter Davis passed away
September 19th 2004 after a long battle with cancer.
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