AP/ February 11, 2009, 3:58 PM

Country Star Porter Wagoner Dies At 80

Porter Wagoner was known for a string of country hits in the '60s, perennial appearances at the Grand Ole Opry in his trademark rhinestone suits, and for launching the career of Dolly Parton.

Like many older performers, his star had faded in recent years. But his death from lung cancer Sunday, at 80, came only after a remarkable late-career revival that won him a new generation of fans.

The Missouri-born Wagoner signed with RCA Records in 1955 and joined the Opry in 1957, "the greatest place in the world to have a career in country music," he said in 1997. His showmanship, suits and pompadoured hair made him famous.

He had his own syndicated TV show, "The Porter Wagoner Show," for 21 years, beginning in 1960. It was one of the first syndicated shows to come out of Nashville and set a pattern for many others.

"Some shows are mechanical, but ours was not polished and slick," he said in 1982.

Among his hits, many of which he wrote or co-wrote, were "Carroll County Accident," "A Satisfied Mind," "Company's Comin'," "Skid Row Joe," "Misery Loves Company" and "Green Green Grass of Home."

The songs often told stories of tragedy or despair. In "Carroll County Accident," a married man having an affair is killed in a car crash; "Skid Row Joe" deals with a once-famous singer who's lost everything.

In 2002, he was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame.

In May, after years without a recording contract, he signed with ANTI- records, an eclectic Los Angeles label best known for alt-rock acts like Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Neko Case.

Wagoner's final album, "Wagonmaster," was released in June and earned him some of the best reviews of his career. Over the summer, he was the opening act for the influential rock duo White Stripes at a sold-out show at New York's Madison Square Garden.

"The young people I met backstage, some of them were 20 years old. They wanted to get my autograph and tell me they really liked me," Porter said with tears in his eyes the day after the New York show. "If only they knew how that made me feel -- like a new breath of fresh air."

To many music fans, Wagoner was best known as the man who boosted Parton's career. He had hired the 21-year-old singer as his duet partner in 1967, when she was just beginning to gain notice through songs such as "Dumb Blonde."

They were the Country Music Association's duo of the year in 1970 and 1971, recording hit duets including "The Last Thing on My Mind."

Parton's solo country records, such as her autobiographical "Coat of Many Colors," also began climbing the charts in the early 1970s. She wrote the pop standard "I Will Always Love You" in 1973 after Wagoner suggested she shift from story songs to focus on love songs.

The two quit singing duets in 1974 and she went on to wide stardom with pop hits and movies such as "9 to 5," whose theme song was also a hit for her.

Wagoner sued her for $3 million in assets, but they settled out of court in 1980. He said later they were always friendly, "but it's a fact that when you're involved with attorneys and companies that have them on retainer, it makes a different story."

At a charity roast for Wagoner in 1995, she explained the breakup this way: "We split over creative differences. I was creative, and Porter was different."

He said in a 1982 Associated Press interview that his show "was a training ground for her; she learned a great deal and I exposed her to very important people and the country music fans."

She was present at the ceremony in May 2007 honoring Wagoner on his silver anniversary with the Opry. At the time, he called Parton "one of my best friends today." She also visited him in the hospital as he battled cancer.

Wagoner, who had survived an abdominal aneurysm in 2006, was hospitalized again this month and his publicist disclosed he had lung cancer. He died at 8:25 p.m. CDT Sunday in a Nashville hospice, said Darlene Bieber, a spokeswoman for the Opry.

Country singer and Opry member Dierks Bentley visited Wagoner in the hospice over the weekend and said Wagoner led them in prayer, thanking God for his friends, his family and the Grand Ole Opry.

"The loss of Porter is a great loss for the Grand Ole Opry and for country music, and personally it is a great loss of a friend I was really just getting to know," Bentley said. "I feel blessed for the time I had with him."

Pete Fisher, vice president and general manager of the Opry, said the Opry family of musicians and performers was deeply saddened by the news. "His passion for the Opry and all of country music was truly immeasurable," Fisher said.

Wagoner was born in West Plains, Mo., and became known as "The Thin Man From West Plains" because of his lanky frame. He recalled that he spent hours as a child pretending to be an Opry performer, using a tree stump as a stage.

He started in radio, then became a regular on the "Ozark Jubilee," one of the first televised national country music shows. On the Opry since 1957, he joined Roy Acuff and other onetime idols.

At one point his wardrobe included more than 60 handmade rhinestone suits.

"Rhinestone suits are just beautiful under the lights," he said. "They've become a big part of my career. I get more compliments on my outfits than any other entertainer -- except for Liberace."

While he continued with the Opry, and even had a small part in the 1982 movie "Honky Tonk Man" starring Clint Eastwood, his recording career dried up in the 1980s -- until his return this year.

"I stopped making records because I didn't like the way they were wanting me to record," he said. "When RCA dropped me from the label, I didn't really care about making records for another label because I didn't have any say in what they would release and how they would make the records and so forth."
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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mathesphd says:
Porter and I always frequented the same Barber for years on a regular basis in Nashville. He was always a delight to talk with, and listen to his wonderful stories. I thank God that he led that prayer with Dierks, because in his final moments he left a memory I had always hoped for.
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michellem99-2009 says:
His TV show..Hello Sadie..Right up there with Hee Haw...That is when Dolly looked like a lady..
I have not seen that show in ages..That was C and W music..Today .well...It is sad as we are losing the greats...REST IN PEACE..Yer show was the best ye are missed by us that remember yer music which I have not heard in yaers..I am53
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dbstevens says:
I read elsewhere that Dolly sang for him in his final hours. That''s very touching and wonderful. I grew up on this show, and to a little bit of me died with Porter. To see Dolly there at his side in those final hours, overcoming their brief differences, is really wonderful.
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keithle1 says:
Too bad. Old school country. True legend. Not many of them left. Can''t beat his suits. Give the folks a show.

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elkc says:
I remember Porter''s show when The Pretty Miss Norma Jean, sang with Porter, pre-Dolly days. My grandparents had the evening meal put a way and everyone gathered round a black and white RCA TV in the main room. As Porter''s show went on they always had the funny antics of Spec Rhoads, and he always seemed to get a laugh out of Porter. From a small town in Oklahoma this scene played out every Saturday night. To me his show seemed bigger than ever, like Patsy Cline said, "this ain''t New York City, but it''s uptown!" About six years a go I grabbed up some tickets from the Orpheum Theater in Wichita, Kansas and took both my mother and mother-in-law to see Porter Wagoner in concert. I''ve seen a lot of famous people in person. But the stage became his when he walked out in his sparkling suit, and performed a show second to none that I''ve ever seen. Sitting near the stage and as I watched the show I got to return to 1960 somthing and take a moment out to enjoy that feeling of warmth from my memories watching the old RCA black and white TV. Porter would let out a loud hoot and the show it seemed would last forever. Porter was more than just a singer on the Grand Ole Opry. He was the guy that came by just after dinner every Saturday night to visit.
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redbug67 says:
GREAT COUNTRY SINGER THAT WILL BE SADLY MISSED BY ALL. HIS MUSIC WAS AN INSPIRATION TO ALL THAT LOVED HIM. MAY GOD BE WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS AS THEY GO THROUGH THIS TIME OF SADNESS. MY PRAYERS AND THOUGHTS ARE WITH YOU ALL.
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Rontimcoe says:
A great loss to country music.
For sure.
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tacorcoran says:
May he rest in peace.
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