Hi Everyone,
I have three BIG pieces of Dolly Parton news to share with you. First, we have an air date for her movie. It will be on NBC on December 1st at 8pm Eastern Time and Pacific Time, as well as on the Peacock App. If you use Comcast/Xfinity, then you should have free access to the Peacock App, if you didn't already know that. Second, Dolly has formally said that she would not be doing any large-scale tours where she's away from home for long periods of time. And third, I have a great wide-ranging interview to share. She discusses touring, The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Artists she would be interested in working in, new music and more. Read On đ€đ»đ€đ»đ€đ»
If you want to refamiliarize yourself with that movie, that was filmed in August at Dollywood, then check out my blog post here.
Here's what Vulture.com has to say about the movie:
If you wished for Dolly Parton for Christmas, your wish has come true! She will be starring in the two-hour holiday movie musical Dolly Partonâs Mountain Magic Christmas on NBC on Thursday, December 1, at 8 p.m. ET/PT. Joining the Rock Hall inductee are musical guests Jimmy Fallon, Willie Nelson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Jimmie Allen, Zach Williams, and Partonâs goddaughter, Miley Cyrus. The plot centers around Parton as she goes behind the scenes to make a network-TV holiday special. In A Christmas Carol fashion, she gets visited by Three Wise Mountain Men, who remind her that the âreal magic of Christmas lies in the hearts of the children we all once were.â Aw! What else would be expected from the angel that is Dolly Parton? Her hits, obviously. â9 to 5â and âI Will Always Love Youâ are set to make appearances in the special. Written by David Rambo, the special also includes choreography from Emmy Awardâwinning choreographer Kathryn Burns. Itâll be a dolly-good time.
The second piece of news is that Dolly confirmed that she would no longer go on long tours any longer. She hinted really strongly at this at the media event she held at Dollywood back in March. At that time, she explained that she wasn't going to use her tour bus anymore and gave the audience some details about Suite 1986 at DreamMore Resort. Her bus has been outfitted as a suite to accommodate guests, and its $10k/2-night proceeds go to the Dollywood Foundation and the Imagination Library. So, while she didn't come out and say at that time that she was done with touring, seems pretty clear.
However! She did say she was not done performing, so you'll occasionally be able to catch Dolly performing her hits. I've seen her several times at Dollywood and many years ago she would do several shows a weekend at her Celebrity Theater. That seems like a likely scenario I could see happening.
Here's WJW's Report on this news:
(WJW) â To the shock of many fans, one of the most beloved people and musicians on the planet recently said she may not ever go on tour again.
Dolly Parton, now 76, recently told Pollstar magazine she doesnât see herself on the road anymore, saying sheâd like to be closer to her husband and home these days.
âI do not think I will ever tour again, but I do know Iâll do special shows here and there, now and then,â she told Pollstar. âMaybe do a long weekend of shows, or just a few shows at a festival. But I have no intention of going on a full-blown tour anymore.â
However, the artist/philanthropist/actor, whoâs being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in a Los Angeles ceremony Nov. 5, was quite clear she has no plans to leave her fans out in the dark.
âI donât ever feel separated from my fans because in this high-tech world, you can be right with them,â she said.
Parton was recently seen performing in Columbus, touting her Imagination Library program, which sends monthly free books to families with kids up to 5 years old.
Check out my pics of her Backwoods Barbie concert at the Celebrity Theater at Dollywood on August 16th, 2008.
Lastly, you may have noticed the Pollstar link in the above article. It is a great interview with lots of information that is important to Dolly's fans. Let's read it!
Why Dolly Parton Belongs In The Rock Hall
10:56 AM, THURSDAY, 10/27/2022
Drag queens love her. Talk show hosts from Johnny Carson to Jimmy Kimmel adore her. Children raised on the Imagination Library thank her. Feminists know the high-gloss make-up and cotton-candy hair are all part of her insurrection. Carl Dean calls her his wife.
Ultimately, Dolly Parton, now 76 years young, is a force of nature who can straddle being a businesswoman, tackle complicated social issues like funding COVID vaccines in a way that dials down the anger, make her acting debut opposite Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin and hold her own â and create the most sex-positive persona thatâs strung across seven decades.
â9 To 5â became a working personâs anthem, as well as feminist treatise. âJolene,â about the sexier woman who could steal your man. âLove Is Like A Butterflyâ embracing the heartâs redemptive power. âCoat of Many Colorsâ showing her motherâs ingenuity in the face of poverty, as well as societyâs cruel judgements.
A dozen Grammys. Two Oscar nominations, plus an Emmy, Tony, Golden Globe and a pair of stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Her songs felt like they were snatched from dirt in the Appalachians, so pure and true; like Steinbeck, she understood the dignity of poverty, like Helen Gurley Brown, she could twist feminine wiles into a wink and a poke at the status quo.
She showed her inner and outer beauty in full technicolor and sparkle. Her hair and breasts jacked up; bright pastels and gilded looks front and center. She was a fantasy fairy who talked quick, wrote true and never kept it less than incredibly real. Who could resist any of that along with her classic catalog?
Her live performances, too, are legendary. Sure, thereâs plenty of Rymans and Oprys, but she kept up with the times. Amidst her 268 Pollstar Boxoffice reports are concerts played during the pandemic on Twitch, Pandora Live and YouTube. From her biggest earning show â $4.1 million grossed over three nights at Australiaâs Brisbane Entertainment Center in November 2011 â to her first shows in the Pollstar database in August 1982 where she played 10 shows at Clevelandâs Front Row Theater grossing $323,000 â Dolly is a global road warrior whoâs captivated millions.
Already in the Songwriters, Grammy, Country, Gospel and Happiness halls of fame, her fierce embrace of individuality, her ability to turn severing a business relationship into a No. 1 country hit of her own, then a 14-week No. 1 pop sensation for Whitney Houston with âI Will Always Love Youâ is about as rock ânâ roll as it gets.
Pollstar: Youâre working on a rock ânâ roll record?
Dolly Parton: Well, I am. When I got nominated for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I thought âWell, no better time to do it.â I had always wanted to do it. My husband is a big hard rock ânâ roll fan, and for years I thought, âOne of these days Iâd like to do an album mainly just for him, just to kind of do it.â When I got nominated, I thought, âWhy not just go ahead and do it while the ironâs hot? Maybe have some of the greats, the legends of rock ânâ roll sing along with me.
Iâm gathering all that stuff and notifying a few people. When I get leveled out from finishing the movie [âRun, Rose, Runâ], hopefully Iâm going to have a real good album. Iâm looking forward to it.
I remember interviewing you for 1989âs White Limozeen. It had REOâs âTime For Me to Flyâ on it. You said it was a request by your husband.
Yeah ⊠I loved that song! I covered âShineâ by Collective Soul, that was my husbandâs idea, and the Billy Joel song âTravelinâ Prayer,â and also âTrain, Train.â All those things from the rock field were my husbandâs idea. Though he did not like it when I was going to do âStairway to Heaven.â But Iâm going to redo that really on the money. I did it kind of bluegrass-style when I did it; but when I do the rock album, Iâm going to actually re-record it â and do it more true to the regular record. Iâm trying to see if Robert Plant might sing on it. Maybe Jimmy Page might do the pick-up part on it. Iâm looking forward to dragging in some of the great classic people, girls and boys, to sing on some of the songs. Iâm not far enough along to discuss who and what, but I am going to do an album.
There was all that confusion about what you were going to if you were voted in. In some ways, the way you followed your heart in your music and your career is as rock ânâ roll as anything anybodyâs ever done.
I have to honestly say, Iâm very grateful and honored, but Iâm also the kind of person â I had to do a rock album, because if Iâm going to be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Iâm going to by God earn it! (laughs) Thatâs my attitude toward it. Thereâs no way Iâm not going to do an album, so people can see that I could and can do it.
I was like a whole lot of people, I always felt the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame was for rock ânâ roll people, who spent their lives, time, energy and talent in the rock ânâ roll field. I didnât realize all the people who had gotten in who werenât really rock ânâ roll, but I still stand by my thing. When I said I didnât want to do it, I didnât want to take votes from someone whoâd spent their life in that. But I said, if they put me there, I will accept gracefully. And I will. I even wrote a song about the whole situation to sing at the ceremony. A fine, cute little rock ânâ roll song thatâll probably go on the rock ânâ roll album. Itâs called âRockinââ: âYou know Iâve been rockinâ since the day I was bornâŠâ You know, listening to Elvis and Journey and Chuck Berry, all those great people. Itâs a fine little song, and itâs real rock-y, so Iâll have something fun to play off of, to ease some of the tension.
Dolly Parton performing onstage at Day on the Green concert at Oakland Coliseum on May 28, 1978 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Richard McCaffrey/Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images)
Itâs so you. Even when you started out, you really told the truth about whatever the situation was. You did it with great writing, but you also knew how to be funny and poke people in the eye a little bit.
(laughs) I donât mean to do anything â I just do what I do, the way that I do it. I have my personality. Whatever comes along in my life, I deal with it, according to me, what I think, what I feel; I do that in my songs or I do that about a situation, like the whole rock ânâ roll thing. I, of all people, would never want to stir up any kind of controversy, I am not that person. But also I am not the kind of person to avoid the truth of how Iâm feeling about a thing.
Growing up, âDumb Blondeâ was one of my favorites. I had lots of friends who were blonde and smart, and I used to love playing that song for them.
I loved that movie âLegally Blonde.â I think a lot of people think weâre just bimbos or whatever, but that song said ââŠjust because Iâm blonde, donât think Iâm dumb, because this dumb blonde ainât nobodyâs fool!â (laughs). It doesnât matter what color your hair is; if youâve got the goods, youâve got the goods.
In retrospect, we looked at that and went, âWasnât she a cheeky monkey!? Look at her tell the truth with a big smile.â
I still believe that. Thatâs why I think the song â9 to 5â and the movie â9 to 5,â of which I was happy to be a part of, mattered. Iâm not one of those people â I donât have to march in the streets or carry signs or anything â to state my truth. I just try to write it in my songs and live it everyday; in interviews, I say what I think and feel.
But I still think a lot of good was done with the â9 to 5â movie. Still, a lot of stuff needs to be done, but it brought a lot of attention to the fact that a lot of people didnât even realize, men or women, that women werenât actually being paid equally for the same work. Itâs just not a fair thing as a human being: if you do the work, you should get the pay and the credit. Iâm still all about that.
When you left Nashville, you took control, became a movie star, had pop hits, kind of a rock ânâ roll move. But â9 to 5,â even âSteel Magnoliasâ and âBest Little Whorehouse,â those were feminist roles.
Well they were, but I just follow my heart with those things. Iâm not trying to preach sermons, Iâm not trying to do anything other than live by example. Iâm a strong-minded woman; I work hard, I demand that I get credit for what I do, and certainly I make myself known if Iâm working on a thing. I donât think anything should be held back. Just because youâre a girl â I mean, if youâre good at something, you should be credited and paid for that.
Iâve been lucky. I donât do it in a bitter way or in a snide way. Iâve got six brothers; Iâm from a family of 12, six girls and six boys. I know every personality. Every man that Iâve met, I see someone in my family. I was very close to my uncles, to my dad and grandpas, so Iâm used to that good olâ boy stuff. I grew up in the country; I just know the nature of men, and I love men. So I know there are some bad ones out there, but there are some good ones, too. I always take all that into consideration. Thereâs a whole lot of men who are equally as for-women as there are the ones who are not. I donât think we should just bash men because theyâre men anymore than we want them bashing on us because weâre women. We need to balance that all out and recognize the ones who are being supportive and appreciate them for appreciating us as well.
American actresses Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda and Dolly Parton on the set of Nine to Five, written and directed by Colin Higgins. (Photo by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images)
The most feminist move is for everybody to respect everybody.
Thatâs who I am, I donât think it should matter what color you are, what your religion is, whether youâre a woman or a man or transgender; if youâve got something to offer, you should be loved. You should just be accepted for who you are and what youâre doing.
I wrote a song thatâs in my new Christmas movie called âBe That.â It says, âWhatever you are, be that, whatever you do, do that, anything else is just an act, so whoever you are, be thatâŠâ
Donât try to pretend. God is going to love us all either way. And we should be allowed to stand up and speak our minds and our truth â and be able to live our lives according to who we are, where weâre comfortable. So thatâs how I feel about that, it shouldnât matter. Whoever you are, be that.
Thatâs really what feminism should be: letâs all get around this table and figure it out.
Thereâs a lot of things that men do that I donât appreciate, that I donât particularly like, but I try not to think itâs just because theyâre men. The same thing with women, too; thereâs a whole lot of women I donât particularly care for how they do things. I may not respect how they go about things, but thatâs their right: whatever you are, do that! Youâre just a phony if you arenât doing what you think is right⊠Just open your heart, open your mind, and just let life flow.
So youâre back making movies again?
This movie Iâm doing for NBC for Christmas, itâs really a special. Itâs a show within a show. What weâre doing is focused on the dramatic side. Itâs showing all the things that go on while youâre putting together a show. All the arguments you have with the producers, all the problems you have with the artists, all the problems you have with scenery falling down and all the things that go on backstage, people having to cancel and reschedule real quick.
I wouldnât consider me acting, because Iâm just totally myself in this. Iâm just Dolly all the way, Iâm not playing a character. But as far as getting back into the movies, I am going to be doing a leading role in the âRun, Rose, Runâ movie, from the novel I wrote with James Patterson that was a No. 1 bestseller! Weâre doing a movie with that, working with Reese Witherspoon, her companyâs producing it. I am going to be doing that. But if I find good roles, Iâd like to still be in good movies here and there, now and then.
Is that inspiring you as much as writing songs and making music?
Iâm inspired by the fact I wrote all the music that is going in the âRun, Rose, Runâ movie. Iâve written all those songs. Itâs about two singers, an older woman and younger one, but thereâs a lot of music. I did an album that went along with that book, which was the first time I think thatâs been done.
MAKING IT HAPPEN: With longtime manager Danny Nozell, who spearheaded Partonâs return to global touring over the last 15 years. Swapping two identical tour buses, they conquered the continent. Courtesy True Public Relations
Thereâs a song I wrote called âRun.â You know â run from the problems, based on the story. Iâm inspired by that, but I love to write. That of course is my number-one love, less pressure than anything else. Thatâs something I can do just by myself, on my own.
I wouldnât say that Iâm trying to do anything other than what comes along that feels right at the time. I can kind of pick and choose these days, at my age and the years that Iâve been in the business.
Are you writing just to write?
I donât unless I have a project. If Iâve been commissioned to do something or something I feel inspired like when I wrote 19 songs for the âRun, Rose, Runâ book or the Christmas movie that we did. I write all the time. Iâll just scribble something down. Iâm always coming up with an idea. Thatâs something that comes so natural to me. That is my greatest joy, to write songs and then record them and hear what Iâve done.
Over the last five years, youâre somebody who understood culturally we needed a good example. The COVID stuff, people who were hardcore âIâm not getting that shotâ were like, âWait! Dolly Partonâs helping?â People got the shot because of that. Youâve been good with the LGBTQ+ folks; I know people are a lot more accepting because you are.
If thatâs so, that makes me proud. Because I donât believe anybody has a right to judge another person â and they donât have a right to even judge me when I do things that come from my heart.
Just like when I financed the COVID shots, the Moderna: I just knew when the pandemic started, I felt in my heart that it was going to be a bad thing. I try to always put my money where my heart is and where my head is. I felt I should donate some money to that cause, from myself or my family. I never tried to shove it down anyoneâs throat â just the vaccine was there, and if my little dab of money helped get it out to more people that did want it, then fine. But I never judged anyone who didnât get it or thought anybody should be not getting it or should be getting it. Iâm not political on those things. I donât do it for any other reason other than I feel personally led to do certain things. However people use it or look at it, thatâs all fine. I just felt the need to help.
Do you think youâre going to tour in the next five years, will there be a rock tour?
I do not think I will ever tour again, but I do know Iâll do special shows here and there, now and then. Maybe do a long weekend of shows, or just a few shows at a festival. But I have no intention of going on a full-blown tour anymore. Iâve done that my whole life, and it takes so much time and energy. I like to stay a little closer to home with my husband. Weâre getting older now, and I donât want to be gone for four or five weeks at a time. Something could happen. I would not feel right about that, if I were gone and somebody needed me. Or I would feel bad if I had to leave a tour if somebody got sick at home and needed me and then I had to walk out on the fans.
GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND â JUNE 29: Dolly Parton performs on the Pyramid stage during day three of the Glastonbury Festival at Worthy Farm in Pilton on June 29, 2014 in Glastonbury, England. Tickets to the event, which is now in its 44th year, sold out in minutes even before any of the headline acts had been confirmed. The festival, which started in 1970 when several hundred hippies paid ÂŁ1, now attracts more than 175,000 people. (Photo by Jim Dyson/Getty Images)
With all the new technology and ways to reach your fans, youâre also instantly connected.
I donât ever feel separated from my fans because in this high-tech world, you can be right with them. You can do special shows in special ways. I will be doing some of that. But youâve got to work for weeks to work up a great new show, a new tour they havenât seen. It takes months to actually plan a tour, as far as booking dates and all that. Then youâve got to be gone for all that time, too. Itâs more involved than people have any idea. You really need a year, and certainly six months, to plan a great tour, just preparing to get ready to go hit the road. So you canât just go out and do a few shows, you really have to commit to doing enough shows to make all that time and effort pay off.
Do you have a favorite live performance?
The Glastonbury Festival I did two years back really stands out. I was scared to death to do that show! I didnât think that was really my audience because I do a lot of talking, I do a lot of songs that tell stories and I know they love to go to have a big time! I thought they just wanted the music to just go steady with no let-up; but when I did it, I was absolutely amazed. When I was talking and telling the stories and singing the songs that I thought they would not be interested in, they were all standing on their feet. They were so respectful and it was such a huge success. So many people came, that I was really adored and felt honored and emotional about that whole thing. You do remember things that stand out like that. They did know who I was. And I thought, these people are not going to be that familiar with my music because, you know, itâs country and all that. But they were! Thatâs as close as Iâve felt to being a rock star, was at that Glastonbury Festival (laughs).
Dream duet partners? Anybody you havenât sung with yet?
Thereâs a couple people that I love, and Iâm going to be asking them maybe to sing with me on my rock album. Ed Sheeran: Iâve always thought our voices would blend so beautifully together. And I have a particular song Iâm going to ask him to sing with me. And, of course, Iâll ask Miley (Cyrus, her goddaughter). I love the Wilson sisters [of Heart]! Thereâs a lot of people I hadnât thought that much about until I started putting together this rock album. Iâm going to be thinking seriously about that now.
This gives you license to go explore other worlds.
It does, but also, Chris Stapleton is one of my favorite people ever. I have always wanted to do something with him. Even though heâs not considered rock ânâ roll, heâs kind of like me, heâs accepted all the way around. Iâm thinking that certainly out of the country field, when I do my rock album, Iâm going to maybe ask him.
Most left field?
Jimmy Fallon. The first time I ever worked on his show, we just had a connection â and itâs just been magical. I recorded a song with him, Mariah Careyâs âAll I Want For Christmasâ for my Christmas album a few years ago. Heâs on my Christmas special. We sound really good together; Jimmy is a really good singer. He doesnât think so, but I do.
I think Jimmy Fallon is one of the special people in the world. When heâs on the set, when he was doing the movie, heâs just got such an energy about him. And everybody just fell in love with him. He was there for two days, and when he left it was like a light switch flipped off. âOh no! Whereâd that great light go?!â Heâs a magnificent human being.
So now youâre going into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, what does it mean to you?
It means a great deal. More than anything, I tried to really see what they said it was all about. I thought I could accept the belonging there with those people when I heard all the reasons they gave. I was honored about that.
After her performance at the Bottom Line, American Country musician Dolly Parton hugs British rocker Mick Jagger backstage, New York, New York, May 14, 1977. (Photo by Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images)
Iâll do my best to honor this. Iâll continue to love rock ânâ roll, Iâll continue to respect and appreciate what the rock ânâ roll artists put forward. Just like I would have no trouble at all accepting any kind of award or accolade from the country, bluegrass or gospel field, this was a new one on me! I didnât think I deserved it, and Iâm still not certain I do, but Iâm going to accept it gracefully and be proud, and do my best to try to live up to it somehow.
When I do the math on this, youâre a lot like Stevie Nicks.
I love Stevie Nicks, Iâm going to ask her to sing on my rock album, too.
You two are like the two good witches, you know?
Well I love her. Iâll tell her you said we were two good witches. (laughs) With a âW,â right? Not a âB?â(laughs)
Definitely a âW.â She brings that larger-than-life thing, too. Everywhere she goes, people see her, and they light up.
I understand that about her. I love her persona. I love her songs. I love her voice, I just love her. As people do! Somebody else I love like that is Lady Gaga. She is so talented, so gifted, and she knows exactly what sheâs doing at all times! I really think sheâs an incredible person as well. And my Miley! I love women who know who they are, stand their ground and live up to who they are in their own mind, as well as trying to just stand up for what they believe and trying to be there for the people who are moved and inspired by them.
Everybody weâve talked about has really pushed the envelope.
But we did it our way, I guess, is what youâre saying. Thereâs all kind of ways to do it, but when youâre a true individual and youâre true to your own self, your own personality, your own gifts, that makes you kind of stand out a little bit. I always said I donât want to be vanilla. I want to be rocky road.
A much more delicious flavor.
Well much more interesting.
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