Barbara Mandrell

Barbara Ann Mandrell (born December 25, 1948) is an American country music singer, musician, and actress. She is known for a long series of country hits in the 1970s and 1980s as well as her own prime-time variety TV show on NBC that helped her become one of country's most successful female vocalists of that period. She gave her last concert at the Grand Ole Opry House on October 23, 1997, and subsequently retired from performing music. Mandrell was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009. Mandrell was also inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2016. Although retired, Mandrell is still a member of the Grand Ole Opry; an honor she has held since 1972.[1][2]

Barbara Mandrell
Mandrell in 1991
Born
Barbara Ann Mandrell

(1948-12-25) December 25, 1948
Other namesThe Sweetheart of Steel
OccupationSinger, actress
Years active1959–2000
Spouse(s)
Ken Dudney (m. 1967)
Children3
Musical career
OriginNashville, Tennessee
Genres
Instruments
Labels
Associated acts
  • George Jones
  • David Houston
  • Louise Mandrell
  • Irlene Mandrell
  • Lee Greenwood
Websitebarbara-mandrell.com

Mandrell has won two Grammy Awards, seven American Music Awards, four Academy of Country Music Awards and four Country Music Association Awards. She was the first performer to win the Country Music Association Award for Entertainer of the Year twice (1980, 1981), having also won the Academy of Country Music Award for Entertainer of the Year in 1980.

Mandrell's first Billboard number-one hit was 1978's "Sleeping Single in a Double Bed", immediately followed by "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right" in early 1979.[1] In 1980, "Years" also reached number one. She added one more chart topper in each of the next three years. "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool" (her signature song),[3] then "'Till You're Gone" and "One of a Kind Pair of Fools", all hit number one between 1981 and 1983, a period during which Mandrell also received numerous industry awards and accolades.[1][3]

Early life

Childhood

Barbara Ann Mandrell was born on Christmas Day 1948 to Mary Ellen (née McGill; born 1931) and Irby Matthew Mandrell (October 11, 1924 March 5, 2009) in Houston, Texas.[1] Her mother was a homemaker and musician hailing from rural Wayne County, Illinois. Her father Irby was a World War II naval veteran and Texas police officer from Garland County, Arkansas. Irby Mandrell was an accomplished musician and entrepreneur as well. He used his impeccable social skills and knowledge of the music industry to manage all three of his daughters' careers for over 3 decades.

Mandrell was an only child until July 13, 1954, when her sister Thelma Louise Mandrell was born. Baby sister Ellen Irlene Mandrell arrived 18 months after Louise on January 29, 1956.

The eldest daughter of the musical family, Barbara Mandrell was already reading music and playing accordion when her sisters were infants.[1] Six years later, she had become so adept at playing steel guitar that her father took her to a music trade convention in Chicago. While there, her talents caught the attention of RCA Records producer and session musician Chet Atkins and popular musician and bandleader Joe Maphis. Soon after, she became a featured performer in Maphis' Las Vegas nightclub show, followed by tours with Red Foley, Tex Ritter, and Johnny Cash.[1] Her network TV debut came on the NBC-TV series Five Star Jubilee in 1961.

While growing up, Mandrell learned to play the pedal steel and lap steel guitars and many other instruments, including the accordion, saxophone, and banjo. She played steel guitar for Patsy Cline, who once wrote to a friend that Mandrell was, "a 13-year-old blonde doll who plays the steel guitar out of this world! What a show woman!" Mandrell toured at age 13 with Cline, Johnny Cash, and George Jones. She also played guitar for Joe Maphis in Las Vegas[1] and on the Town Hall Party show in Los Angeles. A few years later, Mandrell and her sisters Louise and Irlene, as well as her parents, founded the Mandrell Family Band.[1] They toured across the United States and Asia. Their drummer, Ken Dudney, became Mandrell's husband shortly after she graduated from Oceanside High School.[1]

Career discovery

Dudney received a commission in the Navy, serving as a pilot, and was sent overseas. Mandrell decided that she would become a country singer and moved to Nashville. Her father was then her manager, and with his help, she signed with Columbia Records in 1969. Over the next few years, Mandrell had a few minor hits. Her producer at the time was Billy Sherrill, known for producing other well-known singers in country music such as Tammy Wynette, Charlie Rich, and Tanya Tucker.

Country music career

1969–1974: Country beginnings

Within 48 hours of a nightclub appearance near the Grand Ole Opry, she received offers for recording contracts from six record companies. After signing with Columbia in 1969, she notched her first chart hit, a remake of the Otis Redding classic "I've Been Loving You Too Long". In 1970, Mandrell scored the first of many top-40 hits with "Playin' Around With Love". In the same year, she began performing with singer David Houston, and their partnership also generated considerable chart success.[4] Mandrell's first releases earned respect from her country peers, but her first big breakthrough with fans came in 1973 with the single "The Midnight Oil"; it was the first cheating song sung from the perspective of the woman who is doing the cheating, which at the time was unheard of.

While with Columbia Records, Mandrell worked with legendary country producer Billy Sherrill. Under Sherrill's direction, Mandrell recorded country-soul material, which never gained her widespread success. Her early hits included 1970s "After Closing Time" (a duet with David Houston) and 1971's "Tonight My Baby's Comin' Home", "Treat Him Right", and her version of Joe Tex's "Show Me". Her records did not generate high sales on the Columbia label. Sherrill later said in the book, How Nashville Became Music City, that he was asked every year by the other Columbia executives why he was keeping Mandrell, because she was not selling records. Sherrill kept Mandrell with the label until 1975.

1975–1984: Country-pop

In 1975, Mandrell jumped to the ABC/Dot label, and under the guidance of producer Tom Collins, reached the top five for the first time with the single "Standing Room Only". After a series of successive hits, she scored her first Billboard number one with 1978's "Sleeping Single in a Double Bed", immediately followed by another chart-topper, "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right" in early 1979.[5] "If Loving You Is Wrong" was also a major crossover smash, becoming Mandrell's only single to reach the top 40 on the pop chart, peaking at number 31. The song also peaked in the top 10 on the adult contemporary music charts.

During the 1980s, Mandrell had more hits, including "Crackers" and "Wish You Were Here". All of these singles and more reached the country top 10 and some also hit number one, including "Years". Three more singles hit number one: "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool", "'Till You're Gone", and "One of a Kind Pair of Fools", between 1981 and 1983, a period during which Mandrell also received many industry awards and accolades.[6] "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool" is one of Mandrell's best-known songs. The best-known version is the live version featuring George Jones. In 1983, she won a Grammy Award for "Best Inspirational Performance" for the song, "He Set My Life to Music".

In 1980, Mandrell became the third woman to win the "Entertainer of the Year" award from the Country Music Association. She repeated this in 1981 by winning the award for the second time. This was unprecedented, as prior to her, it was presumed, that it only went to an artist once, but she nabbed it a second year in a row with her non-stop touring, hit records, and popular television show. This began the huge array of awards that she would win: several CMA, ACM, and MCN awards, seven American Music Awards, and nine People's Choice, making her one of the most awarded country acts in history.

Performing 'To Me' duet with DoRite Dan Schafer,
'Moments' tour 1986

A collection of duets with Lee Greenwood, Meant for Each Other, followed in 1984.[7] From this album, Greenwood and Mandrell had two hits on the country chart spanning 1984 and 1985, including the top-five hit, "To Me", and the top-20 "It Should Have Been Love by Now".

Also in 1984, she opened a fan-based attraction across from the old location of the Country Music Hall of Fame in the heart of Music Row in Nashville, called Barbara Mandrell Country, a museum about her life and career.

1984: Car crash

While Mandrell was at the peak of her popularity, she had a major setback when she was involved in a serious automobile crash on September 11, 1984. According to Toni Reinhold in Redbook, the singer "sustained multiple fractures in her right leg, including a broken thigh bone, knee, and ankle. She also suffered lacerations and abrasions and a severe concussion that caused temporary memory loss, confusion, and speech difficulties." After a year and a half of rehabilitation, she recovered and returned to recording and performing. Mandrell told interviewers that the crash made her reassess her priorities. Mandrell is now a confirmed seat belt advocate, especially because prior to the crash, neither she nor her two oldest children Matthew and Jaime (also involved in the crash) were normally seat belt wearers. Mandrell saw a station wagon in front of her with the tailgate down and children not being restrained in the back, and felt the need to tell her children to buckle up just before the crash.[8]

During the recuperation period, Mandrell was unable to work, so she needed to collect on her insurance to pay for medical bills and to keep her touring band paid. On the Ralph Emery on the Record show, Mandrell explained that the only problem was that, under Tennessee law, she had to go through the formality of filing a lawsuit against survivors of the dead driver who had caused the accident, 19-year-old college student Mark White, to collect from her own insurance company.[9]

Mandrell further stated that she instructed her attorneys to phone White's family and tell them that she wanted no money from them and was only taking such action to get her own insurance company to pay for her medical costs, but most of her fans never knew about that or about Tennessee's insurance law. They saw only the headlines about the lawsuit against the family who had lost a son. Before the case went to trial, she adds, her insurance company filed for bankruptcy. Her record and ticket sales fell off "in a big way", Mandrell says.

"I'm not blaming the public", she told Emery, adding that, given the information most of them got through the media, "I would have felt the way they felt."

Mandrell's career recovered in the mid-1980s and, despite the neotraditional country boom and an overall loss in interest in country-pop artists during that period, continued to chart top-40 country hits consistently until 1989. Her last top-10 hit was a cover version of the 1960 song "I Wish I Could Fall in Love Today", which peaked at number 5 on the country charts; her last top-40 country hit, "My Train of Thought", peaked at number 19. Subsequent albums and singles failed to chart as country music largely abandoned many established stars in favor of newer acts in the early 1990s.

In October 1997, she retired from performing and touring (she has sporadically appeared on-stage in the 2010s, and the Grand Ole Opry continues to list her as a standing member; one of only two people, the other being Jeanne Pruett, allowed to maintain membership without either performing regularly or having a medical incapacitation). Mandrell now spends her time gardening, painting, and caring for her family and many pets.[10]

Television and acting

In 1980, the TV program Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters premiered on NBC. In addition to hosts Barbara, Louise, and Irlene, the show featured musical guests and comedy sketches. Each broadcast also closed with a gospel song, which led to Mandrell recording her own inspirational album, He Set My Life to Music (1982). As a result of her busy schedule, she began suffering from vocal strain, and on doctor's orders, pulled the plug on the television program in 1982 (variety shows were also falling out of favor at the time; the series was NBC's last attempt at a variety show for over three decades). She received one award (People's Choice) and two nominations (Golden Globe and TV Land Award) for her work on the show. In 1983, she premiered The Lady Is a Champ, a Las Vegas stage show.[11]

Mandrell had the starring role in Burning Rage alongside Tom Wopat in 1984, just prior to her car accident. Later, she also had guest-star roles on hit shows, including: Touched by an Angel, Empty Nest, Diagnosis: Murder, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, The Commish, Baywatch, Walker, Texas Ranger, and The Rockford Files. She also had a recurring role in the late 1990s on Aaron Spelling's daytime drama, Sunset Beach. Spelling was a big fan of hers and wanted to incorporate her into one of his shows.

Many of these performances can be seen on late-night television or on the DVD box sets of the respective shows. In 1990, she wrote an autobiography called Get to the Heart: My Story, which was a New York Times bestseller for more than three months, and in 1997 became a highly rated CBS TV movie of the week, Get to the Heart (The Barbara Mandrell Story), starring Maureen McCormick as Mandrell. Mandrell promoted her autobiography on shows such as Sally Jessy Raphael, Geraldo, and The Oprah Winfrey Show, with whom she shared the "Woman of the World" honor in 1992. In prime time, she appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, The Lawrence Welk Show[12] and Ralph Emery's Nashville Now, and she even "rapped" during one of her three Arsenio visits.

Personal life

Barbara Mandrell married Ken Dudney on May 28, 1967. Dudney had been the drummer in the Mandrell Family Band. Mandrell and Dudney have three children, Kenneth Matthew Dudney (b. 1970), Jaime Nicole Dudney (b. 1976), and Nathaniel Mandrell Dudney (b. 1985).

Barbara Mandrell's former mansion, Fontanel, located in Whites Creek, Tennessee, near Nashville, has been turned into a tourist attraction with a restaurant, a hotel, an outdoor music venue, and an indoor shooting range.[13][14] Her daughter, Jaime, was the human resources manager of the mansion until February 2017. She then began a new career with a company that works to place people with addiction issues into appropriate rehabilitation facilities.[13][15]

On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed Barbara Mandrell among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal Studios fire.[16]

Awards

Year Award Category
1971 Academy of Country Music Awards Top New Female Vocalist
1976 Music City News Country Most Promising Female Artist of the Year
1978 Academy of Country Music Awards Top Female Vocalist
1979 Music City News Country Female Artist of the Year
1979 Country Music Association Awards Female Vocalist of the Year
1980 Academy of Country Music Awards Entertainer of the Year
1980 Country Music Association Awards Entertainer of the Year
1980 American Music Awards Favorite Country Single – "Sleeping Single In a Double Bed"
1981 Academy of Country Music Awards Top Female Vocalist
1981 Country Music Association Awards Entertainer of the Year
1981 Country Music Association Awards Female Vocalist of the Year
1981 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist
1981 Music City News Country Comedian of the Year
1981 Music City News Country Female Artist of the Year
1981 Music City News Country Instrumentalist of the Year
1981 People magazine 25 Most Intriguing List
1982 People's Choice Awards Favorite All-Around Female Performer
1982 People's Choice Awards Favorite Female Personality
1982 People's Choice Awards Favorite Female Musical Performer
1982 Music City News Country Female Artist of the Year
1982 Music City News Country Instrumentalist of the Year
1983 People's Choice Awards Favorite All-Around Female Performer
1983 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist
1983 Grammy Awards Best Inspirational Performance – "He Set My Life to Music"
1984 People's Choice Awards Favorite All-Around Female Musical Performer
1984 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist
1984 Grammy Awards Best Soul Gospel Duo Performance 
"I'm So Glad We're Standing Here Today" (w/ Bobby Jones)
1985 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist
1985 Music City News Country Living Legend Award
1985 People's Choice Awards Favorite All-Around Female Performer
1985 People's Choice Awards Favorite Female Musical Performer
1986 People's Choice Awards All-Around Female Performer
1987 People's Choice Award All-Around Female Performer
1987 American Music Awards Favorite Female Country Artist
1991 TNN/Music City News Awards Minnie Pearl Award
1992 Woman of the World Woman of the World Award (tied w/Oprah Winfrey)
1999 Country-Gospel Music Hall of Fame Elected to the Country-Gospel Hall of Fame
2001 Academy of Country Music Awards Pioneer Award
2002 CMT's 40 Greatest Women of Country Music Rank No. 38
2005 Academy of Country Music Triple Crown Award
2007 People magazine Ranked in "100 Most Beautiful" list
2008 People magazine Ranked in "100 Most Beautiful at any age" list
2009 Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Inductee
2009 Southern Gospel Music Association James D. Vaughan Impact Award
2012 Artists Music Guild Favorite Retro Artist
2014 Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum Inductee

Discography

References

  1. "CMT.com : Barbara Mandrell : Biography" (bio page), Country Music Television, Inc., 2008, webpage: CMT-BMandrell Archived 2008-01-16 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "Barbara Mandrell Says Goodbye - Today in Country Music History". klaw.com. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  3. "CMT.com News : 20 Questions With Barbara Mandrell" (interview), Country Music Television, Inc., October 2006, webpage: CMT-BMandrell-20Q Archived 2009-02-10 at the Wayback Machine: interview, quoted "That is my signature song ['I Was Country..']... The next thing I knew, they had written for me 'I Was Country when Country Wasn't Cool'. It's literally the story of my life..."
  4. The Barbara Mandrell biography at Allmusic; (retrieved February 15, 2008)
  5. Barbara Mandrell biography at AllMusic
  6. Barbara Mandrell biography at AllMusic
  7. Barbara mandrell biography at AllMusic
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-05-23. Retrieved 2010-05-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. Mandrell, Barbara. "Mandrell Injured in Auto Accident". NY Times. Archived from the original on 19 April 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  10. "Barbara Mandrell: Sweetness Through Suffering". Cbn.com. 2001-09-11. Archived from the original on 2016-09-27. Retrieved 2016-10-15.
  11. "Country Music – Music News, New Songs, Videos, Music Shows and Playlists from CMT". www.cmt.com. Archived from the original on 13 October 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  12. The schedule for OETA's repeats of the Welk show in the 2019-20 season references a repeat of his 1980 "Rhythm is Our Business" show, on which Barbara Mandrell appeared as a guest.
  13. Stivender, Knight (September 16, 2012). "Behind the scenes at Fontanel: Barbara Mandrell's former home finds new groove as entertainment mecca". The Tennessean. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
  14. Duke, Jan. "Fontanel Mansion: Exploring the Fontanel Mansion & Farm". About.com. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
  15. "Let's Catch Up: July 26, 2017". barbara-mandrell.com. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  16. Rosen, Jody (25 June 2019). "Here Are Hundreds More Artists Whose Tapes Were Destroyed in the UMG Fire". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 June 2019.

Further reading

  • Mandrell, Barbara, and George Vecsey. Get to the Heart: My Story. New York: Bantam Books, 1990. ISBN 0-553-05799-5 hardbound
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