Monday, October 31, 2022

Dolly News!: Movie Premiere Date! | Touring News! | New Music News! | New Interview!

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 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 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻



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 Parton’s 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 Parton’s 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 “real magic of Christmas lies in the hearts of the children we all once were.” Aw! What else would be expected from the angel that is Dolly Parton? Her hits, obviously. “9 to 5” and “I Will Always Love You” are set to make appearances in the special. Written by David Rambo, the special also includes choreography from Emmy Award–winning choreographer Kathryn Burns. It’ll 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) — 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 doesn’t see herself on the road anymore, saying she’d like to be closer to her husband and home these days.


“I do not think I will ever tour again, but I do know I’ll do special shows here and there, now and then,” she told Pollstar. “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.”


However, the artist/philanthropist/actor, who’s 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.


“I don’t ever feel separated from my fans because in this high-tech world, you can be right with them,” 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

 

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 – and create the most sex-positive persona that’s strung across seven decades.

“9 To 5” became a working person’s anthem, as well as feminist treatise. “Jolene,” about the sexier woman who could steal your man. “Love Is Like A Butterfly” embracing the heart’s redemptive power. “Coat of Many Colors” showing her mother’s ingenuity in the face of poverty, as well as society’s 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.

Dolly Parton Rocker

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, there’s 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 – $4.1 million grossed over three nights at Australia’s Brisbane Entertainment Center in November 2011 – to her first shows in the Pollstar database in August 1982 where she played 10 shows at Cleveland’s Front Row Theater grossing $323,000 — Dolly is a global road warrior who’s 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 “I Will Always Love You” is about as rock ‘n’ roll as it gets.


Pollstar: You’re working on a rock ‘n’ roll record?


Dolly Parton: Well, I am. When I got nominated for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I thought “Well, no better time to do it.” I had always wanted to do it. My husband is a big hard rock ’n’ roll fan, and for years I thought, “One of these days I’d like to do an album mainly just for him, just to kind of do it.” When I got nominated, I thought, “Why not just go ahead and do it while the iron’s hot?  Maybe have some of the greats, the legends of rock ‘n’ roll sing along with me.

I’m gathering all that stuff and notifying a few people. When I get leveled out from finishing the movie [“Run, Rose, Run”], hopefully I’m going to have a real good album. I’m looking forward to it.


I remember interviewing you for 1989’s White Limozeen. It had REO’s “Time For Me to Fly” on it. You said it was a request by your husband. 


Yeah … I loved that song! I covered “Shine” by Collective Soul, that was my husband’s idea, and the Billy Joel song “Travelin’ Prayer,” and also “Train, Train.” All those things from the rock field were my husband’s idea. Though he did not like it when I was going to do “Stairway to Heaven.” But I’m 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, I’m going to actually re-record it – and do it more true to the regular record. I’m trying to see if Robert Plant might sing on it. Maybe Jimmy Page might do the pick-up part on it.  I’m looking forward to dragging in some of the great classic people, girls and boys, to sing on some of the songs. I’m 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 ‘n’ roll as anything anybody’s ever done. 


I have to honestly say, I’m very grateful and honored, but I’m also the kind of person – I had to do a rock album, because if I’m going to be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I’m going to by God earn it! (laughs) That’s my attitude toward it. There’s no way I’m 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 ‘n’ roll people, who spent their lives, time, energy and talent in the rock ‘n’ roll field. I didn’t realize all the people who had gotten in who weren’t really rock ‘n’ roll, but I still stand by my thing. When I said I didn’t want to do it, I didn’t want to take votes from someone who’d 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 ‘n’ roll song that’ll probably go on the rock ‘n’ roll album. It’s called “Rockin’’:  “You know I’ve been rockin’ since the day I was born…” You know, listening to Elvis and Journey and Chuck Berry, all those great people. It’s a fine little song, and it’s real rock-y, so I’ll have something fun to play off of, to ease some of the tension.

Oakland ColiseumDolly 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)


It’s 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 don’t mean to do anything – 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 ‘n’ 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 I’m feeling about a thing.

 

Growing up, “Dumb Blonde” 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 “Legally Blonde.” I think a lot of people think we’re just bimbos or whatever, but that song said “…just because I’m blonde, don’t think I’m dumb, because this dumb blonde ain’t nobody’s fool!” (laughs).  It doesn’t matter what color your hair is; if you’ve got the goods, you’ve got the goods.


In retrospect, we looked at that and went, “Wasn’t she a cheeky monkey!? Look at her tell the truth with a big smile.” 


I still believe that. That’s why I think the song “9 to 5” and the movie “9 to 5,” of which I was happy to be a part of, mattered. I’m not one of those people – I don’t have to march in the streets or carry signs or anything – 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 “9 to 5” 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 didn’t even realize, men or women, that women weren’t actually being paid equally for the same work. It’s just not a fair thing as a human being: if you do the work, you should get the pay and the credit. I’m still all about that.


When you left Nashville, you took control, became a movie star, had pop hits, kind of a rock ’n’ roll move.  But “9 to 5,” even “Steel Magnolias” and “Best Little Whorehouse,” those were feminist roles. 


Well they were, but I just follow my heart with those things. I’m not trying to preach sermons, I’m not trying to do anything other than live by example. I’m a strong-minded woman; I work hard, I demand that I get credit for what I do, and certainly I make myself known if I’m working on a thing. I don’t think anything should be held back. Just because you’re a girl – I mean, if you’re good at something, you should be credited and paid for that. 


I’ve been lucky. I don’t do it in a bitter way or in a snide way. I’ve got six brothers; I’m from a family of 12, six girls and six boys. I know every personality. Every man that I’ve met, I see someone in my family. I was very close to my uncles, to my dad and grandpas, so I’m used to that good ol’ 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. There’s a whole lot of men who are equally as for-women as there are the ones who are not. I don’t think we should just bash men because they’re men anymore than we want them bashing on us because we’re women. We need to balance that all out and recognize the ones who are being supportive and appreciate them for appreciating us as well.

9 to 5American 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.


That’s who I am, I don’t think it should matter what color you are, what your religion is, whether you’re a woman or a man or transgender; if you’ve got something to offer, you should be loved. You should just be accepted for who you are and what you’re doing. 

I wrote a song that’s in my new Christmas movie called “Be That.” It says, “Whatever you are, be that, whatever you do, do that, anything else is just an act, so whoever you are, be that…” 

Don’t 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 – and be able to live our lives according to who we are, where we’re comfortable. So that’s how I feel about that, it shouldn’t matter. Whoever you are, be that.


That’s really what feminism should be: let’s all get around this table and figure it out. 

There’s a lot of things that men do that I don’t appreciate, that I don’t particularly like, but I try not to think it’s just because they’re men. The same thing with women, too; there’s a whole lot of women I don’t particularly care for how they do things. I may not respect how they go about things, but that’s their right: whatever you are, do that! You’re just a phony if you aren’t doing what you think is right… Just open your heart, open your mind, and just let life flow.


So you’re back making movies again? 


This movie I’m doing for NBC for Christmas, it’s really a special. It’s a show within a show.  What we’re doing is focused on the dramatic side. It’s showing all the things that go on while you’re 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 wouldn’t consider me acting, because I’m just totally myself in this. I’m just Dolly all the way, I’m not playing a character. But as far as getting back into the movies, I am going to be doing a leading role in the “Run, Rose, Run” movie, from the novel I wrote with James Patterson that was a No. 1 bestseller! We’re doing a movie with that, working with Reese Witherspoon, her company’s producing it. I am going to be doing that. But if I find good roles, I’d 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?


I’m inspired by the fact I wrote all the music that is going in the “Run, Rose, Run” movie. I’ve written all those songs. It’s about two singers, an older woman and younger one, but there’s a lot of music. I did an album that went along with that book, which was the first time I think that’s been done. 

Danny Nozell and DollyMAKING IT HAPPEN: With longtime manager Danny Nozell, who spearheaded Parton’s return to global touring over the last 15 years. Swapping two identical tour buses, they conquered the continent. Courtesy True Public Relations


There’s a song I wrote called “Run.” You know – run from the problems, based on the story. I’m inspired by that, but I love to write. That of course is my number-one love, less pressure than anything else. That’s something I can do just by myself, on my own. 


I wouldn’t say that I’m 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 I’ve been in the business. 


Are you writing just to write?


I don’t unless I have a project. If I’ve been commissioned to do something or something I feel inspired like when I wrote 19 songs for the “Run, Rose, Run” book or the Christmas movie that we did. I write all the time. I’ll just scribble something down. I’m always coming up with an idea. That’s something that comes so natural to me. That is my greatest joy, to write songs and then record them and hear what I’ve done. 


Over the last five years, you’re somebody who understood culturally we needed a good example. The COVID stuff, people who were hardcore “I’m not getting that shot” were like, “Wait! Dolly Parton’s helping?” People got the shot because of that. You’ve been good with the LGBTQ+ folks; I know people are a lot more accepting because you are.

If that’s so, that makes me proud. Because I don’t believe anybody has a right to judge another person – and they don’t 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 anyone’s throat – 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 didn’t get it or thought anybody should be not getting it or should be getting it. I’m not political on those things. I don’t do it for any other reason other than I feel personally led to do certain things. However people use it or look at it, that’s all fine. I just felt the need to help.


Do you think you’re 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 I’ll 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.  I’ve 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. We’re getting older now, and I don’t 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. 

GlastonburyGLASTONBURY, ENGLAND – 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 £1, now attracts more than 175,000 people. (Photo by Jim Dyson/Getty Images)


With all the new technology and ways to reach your fans, you’re also instantly connected. 


I don’t 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 you’ve got to work for weeks to work up a great new show, a new tour they haven’t seen. It takes months to actually plan a tour, as far as booking dates and all that. Then you’ve got to be gone for all that time, too. It’s 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 can’t 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 didn’t 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, it’s country and all that. But they were! That’s as close as I’ve felt to being a rock star, was at that Glastonbury Festival (laughs).  


Dream duet partners? Anybody you haven’t sung with yet?


There’s a couple people that I love, and I’m going to be asking them maybe to sing with me on my rock album. Ed Sheeran: I’ve always thought our voices would blend so beautifully together. And I have a particular song I’m going to ask him to sing with me. And, of course, I’ll ask Miley (Cyrus, her goddaughter). I love the Wilson sisters [of Heart]! There’s a lot of people I hadn’t thought that much about until I started putting together this rock album. I’m 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 he’s not considered rock ‘n’ roll, he’s kind of like me, he’s accepted all the way around. I’m thinking that certainly out of the country field, when I do my rock album, I’m going to maybe ask him. 


Most left field?

 

Jimmy Fallon. The first time I ever worked on his show, we just had a connection – and it’s just been magical. I recorded a song with him, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas” for my Christmas album a few years ago. He’s on my Christmas special. We sound really good together; Jimmy is a really good singer. He doesn’t think so, but I do.

 

I think Jimmy Fallon is one of the special people in the world. When he’s on the set, when he was doing the movie, he’s 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. “Oh no! Where’d that great light go?!” He’s a magnificent human being.


So now you’re 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.

Mick JaggerAfter 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)


I’ll do my best to honor this. I’ll continue to love rock ‘n’ roll, I’ll continue to respect and appreciate what the rock ‘n’ 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 didn’t think I deserved it, and I’m still not certain I do, but I’m 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, you’re a lot like Stevie Nicks.


I love Stevie Nicks, I’m 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. I’ll tell her you said we were two good witches. (laughs) With a “W,” right? Not a “B?”(laughs)


Definitely a “W.” 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 she’s doing at all times! I really think she’s 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 we’ve talked about has really pushed the envelope.


But we did it our way, I guess, is what you’re saying. There’s all kind of ways to do it, but when you’re a true individual and you’re 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 don’t want to be vanilla. I want to be rocky road. 


A much more delicious flavor.

Well much more interesting.


Article by Pollstar - Source:


Friday, October 28, 2022

Dollywood's Light The Way 5k - Friday November 11th, 2022 at 11pm

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Official Website Here.

Article Source:  WATE

PIGEON FORGE, Tenn. (WATE) — The Light the Way 5K is celebrating a decade of holiday tradition and a new race administrator during this year’s race.


On Friday, Nov. 11 at 11 p.m., the race will make its way through Dollywood with the course illuminated by millions of Christmas lights. The Knoxville Track Club helped make the race a reality by becoming the new race administration partner for the event.


The race begins at Dollywood’s Front Gate and runners will go through the park twice. Race organizers hope that this course will give runners time to take in the décor and lights of the Smoky Mountain Christmas festival. They add that walkers will be able to follow the route for one loop. This is the second time runners will take this course as it was changed for the 2021 race.


The money made from the race will benefit Keep Sevier Beautiful (KSB) and the Share It Forward (SIF) program at Dollywood. KSB’s goal is to protect the natural beauty found within Sevier County. They provide education and programs focused on waste reduction/recycling, litter prevention and beautifying public spaces. SIF serves Dollywood employees and their families through a variety of programs including scholarships and childcare assistance.


“It’s so exciting to be hosting runners at the Light the Way 5K for a 10th year and for us to have a new partnership with the Knoxville Track Club to make this event even brighter. The beauty of Dollywood’s Smoky Mountain Christmas festival combined with the challenge of a course that only a theme park can provide makes Light the Way a one-of-a-kind event for runners and walkers,” said Aaron Newberry, Director of Operations for Share It Forward.



“But just as importantly, this event helps provide our non-profit organizations with financial assistance just before the holidays,” added Lisa Bryant, Executive Director of Keep Sevier Beautiful.


The race is limited to 1,500 participants and pre-registration is encouraged. It costs $50 to participate and registration can be completed online at www.lighttheway5k.net. Race day registration will take place from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Dollywood’s Splash Country. Runners will also receive a red blinking nose for the race. Awards will be given to the top three finishers for both men and women.


Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Kids' Costume Day - This Sunday - October 30th 2022

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Hi Everyone,

Dollywood has added an event and a bonus day on to their operations schedule.  And it's for the kiddos!  It's this Sunday, October 30th.  The park is open from 10a to 9p and this event ends around 3pm it looks like.  In the past the park has been closed on this Sunday, which is rare for them to be closed on Sundays, except at Easter and Christmas, I know from firsthand experience of going and pulling into the empty parking lot.  That was a lesson learned!  

🎃🎃🎃

This event sounds like a lot of fun.  Here are the details from Dollywood:

To celebrate the final day of Dollywood's Harvest Festival presented by Humana, we are inviting our youngest guests (ages 12 & younger) to visit on Sunday, Oct. 30 in their costumed best!


The first 500 children wearing a costume who enter the park will receive a Harvest sweet treat as well as a festive cup good for free fountain drink refills all day. These complimentary gifts will be distributed while supplies last at the main front gate entrance from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.


At 2 p.m. that afternoon, all costumed kids and their families are invited to participate in a costume parade in the Wilderness Pass Plaza led by beloved Dollywood characters including the one-and-only Miss Lillian!


🦋 𝐆𝐔𝐄𝐒𝐓 𝐂𝐎𝐒𝐓𝐔𝐌𝐄 𝐆𝐔𝐈𝐃𝐄𝐋𝐈𝐍𝐄𝐒 🦋

During the Great Pumpkin LumiNights experience, Guests may wear costumes with the following criteria:

🔶 Costume masks may not be worn. Wigs, hats or other headwear and accessories may be worn as long as they do not cover the entire face.

🔶 Costume accessories may not look like or replicate a weapon of any kind, and no accessory may be sharp or have any component that could injure the Guest or others.

🔶 Costumes may not drag the ground or have the ability to trip the Guest or others.

🔶 Guests may be asked to remove portions of their costume when boarding attractions or experiences as per each location’s loose article requirements.

🔶 Guests may not dress as Dolly Parton or Santa Claus.

🔶 Costumes that are gruesome, bloody or distracting are not permitted.

🎃🎃🎃

I know it's a little unusual to see Dolly and Santa costumes as not permitted, but that has been a long-standing rule for a while now.  I'm not privy to the reasoning behind it - I know lots of kids love to dress up as Dolly because I see them all over social media, usually wearing a coat of many colors.  

It sounds like it will be a fun day at Dollywood and one last opportunity to enjoy the Harvest Festival and Great PumpkinLumiNights.

Although this ticket deal won't work for the kid's costumes event, as it ends around 3pm'ish after Miss Lillians Costume Parade, you can still take advantage of the $55 ticket if you arrive after 5pm, and just want to see the park dressed up and eat, ride some rides or see some entertainment.  Here's a link to Dollywood's Tickets page here.

Until next time!

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

🚨NEW VIDEO🚨 - MOUNTAIN LAUREL HOME GOODS STORE - FALL EDITION 💰🎃🍂

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 Hi Everyone,

I have a new video, this one is from the Mountain Laurel Home Goods Store in Rivertown Junction.  It's across from Dolly's Tennessee Mountain Home and it is decked out with Fall decor!  Check it out below!




Until next time!





Friday, October 21, 2022

Dollywood's Future Plans - One Point Revisited

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 Hi Everyone,




I wrote a blog article not long ago about Dollywood's Future Plans.  One of the many items on the list was Year-Round Operations.  Dollywood included it in their 10-year plan, see below, by Ed Naughton, President of Dollywood.

Could Dollywood open 365?

Making sure there are plenty of things to do in every season will position the company to entertain year-round, Naughton said, adding it's possible the park could open theaters and restaurants near the entrance during winter.

Continuous improvement seems to be the new constant at Dollywood. Much of that change happens during a frenzied January and February.

Source:  click here. 


Oddly enough, or coincidentally, this week, two 'neighboring' amusement parks in the Cedar Fair chain, Carowinds and King's Dominion, both announced year-round operations.   Carowinds is southeast of Dollywood near Charlotte, and King's Dominion is near coastal Virginia, in Doswell, so its winters are pretty mild for the most part.

That's great news for those who work at those parks and can now be employed year-round, and it's great for the guests who are looking for entertainment in January and February.    I see lots of potential in winter operations doing things that are challenging in the summer, like snow tubing & ice skating as a couple examples.

My understanding is that these two parks will be open for weekends-only during the two coldest months of winter, which obviously is weather dependent.  Other parks that stay open year-round cycle the operations of the rides in and out of service, so that routine maintenance can be performed.  It would not be reasonable to expect every single ride to be in operation during the winter months.  That's what happens in other year-round parks such as Six Flags Magic Mountain, Knott's Berry Farm, Disney-World-Land-Epcot, Universal, Sea Worlds, & Busch Tampa.  

It's interesting to me that these two parks have chosen to operate year-round.  Was it a way to beat Dollywood to the punch?  Done so in their own interest?  It's impossible to say.  Will Six Flags over Georgia follow suit?  At this point I doubt it.  Six Flags seems somewhat in operational disarray.  Six Flags Magic Mountain has, for several years, been open year-round and recently announced that they were scaling that back, which is unfortunate for those who bought season passes who were promised year-round operations.

What would year-round operations look like at Dollywood?  I don't have any insider info to know what they're thinking about doing, but based off of Ed Naughtons' comments, he said they would consider using the entrance as a sort of hub, making use of the theaters and restaurants.  Chasing Rainbows Museum is not far away from the entrance, and it was closed in 2022 for a major re-thinking of the experience.  Will it move closer to the entrance to align with the 10-year plan?

Drop Line can operate in temps down to 5-degrees F and Thunderhead has, I think, four trains.  I believe they have the two trains from Celebration City's shuttered GCI coaster, so that means two trains could be in rehab at any given time and potentially would never have seasonal downtime, or at least not very long.  Mystery Mine seems to struggle with cold temperatures, so Im not sure it would open on the coldest of days.  So, Dollywood could open The Entrance area/Showstreet, Timber Canyon and maybe Wildwood Grove for winter, which would allow for seasonal maintenance in the rest of the park.  As years went on, they could introduce Wilderness Pass, then Craftsman's Valley the year after that.  They love to incrementally grow things, so that would seem to make sense.

Another possibility is that Dollywood adds an entire Snow Themed Area in the park that features cold-weather activities like snow tubing, ice skating, bonfire areas, stuff like that.  Before it was cancelled, the Nashville combo Water Park/Snow Park was a real idea they had.  They were set to partner with Gaylord, but it fell through.  So, they're well aware of the types of things they could do to make a snow park work.

Like I mentioned, I have no idea what they'll end up doing.  They hold their secrets pretty well.  I will certainly keep my eyes peeled for any developments.

Until next time.  



Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Dolly Parton's Philanthropy

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Hi Everyone,

Dolly has been in the news recently for her Philanthropic Work and was honored with The Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy, which awards those whose sense of obligation to the public good is significant and sustained, as well as those who have created remarkable impact in their giving.  That sounds spot on for Dolly Parton.  She’s a generous giver and it’s well-known in some cases and in some cases less known.  For example, in researching this article I’ve discovered she’s paid for many funerals of those in her wide circle, who could not afford them.  In 2016 the wildfires in Gatlinburg caused major damage and loss of life.  Dolly took charge, produced the Smoky Mountain Rise telethon, and raised millions of dollars to assist those who were impacted by the wildfires.  Dolly has paid for bands’ instruments and uniforms in majority african-american schools.  Dollywood pays for education for its employees.  The Imagination Library, that Dolly created, mails books for free to children until their 5th birthday.  She said in the 1980's that Dollywood itself, was a way to offer jobs and opportunities for those in her hometown - a way for her to give back. The articles below will go into more details.  She really is an angel among us, an East Tennessee Treasure, for sure.

Fan Art - unknown


Below are two pieces of related press that I came across and wanted to share with you.


Resources for this article:


By The Associated Press

Published: Oct. 14, 2022 at 8:36 AM EDT


NEW YORK (AP) — Dolly Parton laughs at the idea that she is some sort of secret philanthropist.


Sure, social media sleuths did piece together this week that the country superstar had been quietly paying for the band uniforms of many Tennessee high schools for years. And yes, it did take decades for her to reveal that she used the songwriting royalties she earned from Whitney Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You” to purchase a strip mall in Nashville in her honor and to support the surrounding Black neighborhood. Oh, and it did eventually come out that Parton had donated $1 million for research that helped create the Moderna vaccine for COVID-19.


“I don’t do it for attention,” she told The Associated Press in an interview, shortly before she received the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy at Gotham Hall in New York City Thursday night. “But look! I’m getting a lot of attention by doing it.”


In fact, Parton believes she gets too much attention for her philanthropic work – which ranges from promoting childhood literacy to supporting those affected by natural disasters and providing numerous college scholarships through her Dollywood Foundation.


“I get paid more attention than maybe some others that are doing more than me,” Parton said, adding that she hopes that attention inspires more people to help others.


In her Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy speech, Parton said she doesn’t really have a strategy for her donations.


“I just give from my heart,” she said. “I never know what I’m going to do or why I’m gonna do it. I just see a need and if I can fill it, then I will.”


One need Parton does focus on filling is fostering a love of reading in children. Her Imagination Library initiative sends a free book every month to children under five whose parents request them. Currently, Parton sends out about 2 million free books each month.


“This actually started because my father could not read and write and I saw how crippling that could be,” she said. “My dad was a very smart man. And I often wondered what he could have done had he been able to read and write. So that is the inspiration.”


That program continues to expand. And last month, the state of California partnered with Imagination Library to make the program available to the millions of children under five in the state.


“That is a big deal,” she said. “That’s a lot of children. And we’re so honored and proud to have all the communities that make that happen because I get a lot of glory for the work a whole lot of people are doing.”


Parton said she’ll accept that attention because it furthers the cause. “I’m proud to be the voice out there doing what I can to get more books into the hands of more children,” she said.

 

Eric Isaacs, president of the Carnegie Institution for Science and a member of the medal selection committee, said Parton is a “tremendous example” of someone who understands the importance of philanthropy.


“Everyone knows her music,” he said. “They might know Dollywood for entertainment, more broadly. But now they’re going to know her for her philanthropy, which I’m not sure they have before.”


If Parton didn’t make philanthropy a priority in her life, it could be difficult to balance it with all her other pursuits.


She released “Run, Rose, Run,” a best-selling novel co-written with James Patterson, in March. She filmed the holiday movie “Dolly Parton’s Mountain Magic Christmas” with Willie Nelson, Miley Cyrus and Jimmy Fallon for NBC. And she will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on Nov. 5, alongside Eminem, Lionel Richie and Pat Benatar – an honor she initially declined, but then graciously accepted.


“I’m ready to rock,” she said, adding that she has already written a new song, especially for that ceremony in Los Angeles.


But Parton is also ready to expand her philanthropic work. This year, she launched the Care More initiative at her Dollywood Parks and Resorts, which gives employees a day off to volunteer at a nonprofit of their choice.


“I think it’s important for everyone to do their share to help their fellow man,” she said. “This world is so crazy. I don’t think we even know what we’re doing to each other and to this world.”

Parton says she hopes the day of service will let people realize that “when you help somebody, it helps them, but it can help you more.”


“That’s what we should do as human beings,” she said. “I never quite understood why we have to let religion and politics and things like that stand in the way of just being good human beings. I think it’s important from that standpoint just to feel like you’re doing your part, doing something decent and good and right.”


Copyright 2022 WVLT. All rights reserved.



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VOGUE:  ‘I’m Not One to Hide Under the Covers’: Dolly Parton Talks Doing Good During Difficult Times

BY CHRISTIAN ALLAIRE

October 17, 2022


On Thursday night, the 2022 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy was awarded to six people and organizations making the world a better place. At a special ceremony in New York City, recipients Dolly Parton, Manu Chandaria, Lyda Hill, Lynn Schusterman, Stacy Schusterman, and the World Central Kitchen were all acknowledged for their outstanding philanthropic efforts, targeting everything from poverty relief in Africa to health care infrastructure. In Parton’s case, the award reflected the good works of her Dollywood Foundation and Imagination Library, through which the superstar has distributed free books to children worldwide, increased college access, and even advanced medical research—famously playing a pivotal role in funding the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine (she donated $1 million to its development).


Here, Parton speaks exclusively to Vogue about her philanthropy work, what accomplishments she’s the most proud of to date, and how she remains so positive.


Vogue: Congratulations on being a Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy honoree. How does it feel to receive that acknowledgment?


Dolly Parton: I feel very special being among those folks. I’m proud for what I’m being honored for—especially with the Imagination Library. It’s always nice to be recognized for what you do, although that’s not why you do it. Some people do, but that’s not why I do it! You take pride in it, but I take more pride in why I’m getting the award. We’ve done so many wonderful things through the Imagination Library; we’ve done great things for children in their young, impressionable years, so that they can learn to read and write.


Image may contain Manu Chandaria Human Person Tie Accessories Accessory Dolly Parton Fashion Clothing and Apparel

Rob Wilder, Manu Chandaria, Lyda Hill, Lynn Schusterman, Dolly Parton, and Stacy Schusterman.

 Photo: Filip Wolak/Courtesy of Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy


You’ve done great work supporting youth education through the Imagination Library, sending free books to children around the world. Why is that cause so close to your heart?


I started [that work] because of my own father, who was not able to read or write. He had had a family of 12, and he still managed to provide for us. My dad was really smart—I used to imagine what his life would have been like if he [had been literate]. So, I got the idea that it would be a good thing to do something in his honor. He’d always get a good kick out of hearing the kids call me the “book lady.” Whenever things like [this Carnegie Medal] happen in my career, I’m always thinking that my parents would be proud of me.


You’ve always used your platform for good, and it’s not something you have to do. Where do you think your focus on philanthropy work stems from?


I grew up in a very open-hearted, faith-based family. You’re taught to love and be accepting, and to give more than you receive. Both sides of my family are funny, tender-hearted, good people. Whether you believe in God or not, you need to be grounded; you need to believe in something greater than yourself. We grew up thinking that other people are just as important as we are. I wrote a song that’s going to be in my Christmas movie special in December. And it goes, “Whoever you are, be that. Whatever you do, do that. Anything else is just an act.”


When I got into a position to be able to do it on a larger scale, I did. It means a lot to me. How hard can it be for me to take pride in the Imagination Library, knowing that I’m helping put books in the hands of children all over the world? It’s more about children learning to read—it’s the fact they get recognized. They get this little book with their little name on it in the mail, and they feel special. They start taking pride in themselves, and they know that somebody out there is thinking of [them].


You’ve done some great work through your Dollywood Foundation as well. What are some of your proudest achievments through that organization?


I started it before I even had the Dollywood [amusement] park. I started giving out scholarships at the Sevier County High School, back when I had my first job with The Porter Wagoner Show. We’ve done things like help people when Gatlinburg burned [in 2016]; there were so many people who lost their homes and businesses. We’ve bought instruments and uniforms for schools.


You helped spearhead Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine research at a time when it was so easy to hide under the covers. Why did you feel the need to step up?


Well, I’m not one to hide under the covers when something that scary is going on! That was just the freakiest thing—a plague that was going to wipe us all off the face of the earth. I try to keep my heart in tune with what’s going on, as well as my eyes and ears, so when I started hearing and seeing all these things, I felt I needed to do something. I didn’t know exactly what to do, but I thought one one thing we could do is to find a vaccine—to try to stop it in its tracks, or keep it from spreading further. My heart and my head said to donate money to try and get a vaccine.


Over the years, I’ve admired how you’ve also been outspoken on LGBTQ+ rights and the need for acceptance. Have you felt the love back from that community?


Absolutely! You get back what you give. Myself, I’ve always been odd; I was very flamboyant and out there, and I got criticized a lot for that. I got bullied a lot as a child too, so I know how it feels to not be accepted. [A lot of people] who work with me are gay, lesbian, transgender—and they’re some of my best friends as well. I’ve always been open. People are who they are. I try to find the God light in everybody. The world is hard enough as it is, so we should at least help other people to be themselves. No matter what your parents say, or what other people say, you are who you are. And that’s the way you should be.


It’s still a strange time in this country, especially in the political landscape. What’s your secret to remaining positive, as you so often are?


I just wrote a song about this. It talks about how you can’t fall under that pressure. It hurts me too—I’m not one for freaking out much, but that don’t mean I don’t stay in touch! It’s like the world’s on fire, and what are we gonna do when it all burns down? How do we heal this great divide? And do we even care enough to try? Can’t we rise above and show some love? I really think we’re on dangerous ground, because people are not even paying attention, and they don’t even seem to care. That's the scary part—they’re just so locked into their own little world. That’s not a good way to live. So I just try to stay positive. I try to put more good stuff out there, to write songs that will make people think, and pay attention.


Monday, October 17, 2022

2023 Season Pass info released by Dollywood

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Hi Everyone,

Dollywood has released the details about their Season Pass structure for 2023.  It appears that there are several changes from how things have been in the past, so let's dig in to it.

Updates to this article are at the bottom of the article.



Types of Passes

There are three passes to choose from, Silver, Gold and DiamondSilver, the basic season pass, is $149.  Gold is $214 and Diamond is $314.  The prices do not include taxes (~12%) and it should be noted that there will be a discounted price for children and seniors, which has not been announced at this time.  Furthermore, there is a discount for military folks and that includes active duty, veterans, military reservists, spouses and dependents.  That discount has not been announced at this time either.

There is one additional pass for children born in 2018 or 2019.  The Pre-K Imagination Season Pass is available for free with registration.  Link here.

Dollywood Blog has provided a nice piece that discussed the benefits of each tier.  Its called Diamond Vs. Gold Vs Silver and you can read that here.

Splash Country

You can turn Silver and Gold passes into a two-park pass by adding Splash Country for $65+tax.  Since Diamond includes Splash Country, you can add a Dining option for $50 +tax.

Payments

For all of their passes you can chose to pay in full or opt into their payment plan.  If you choose to use the payment plan, then the monthly payments are spread over 10 months.  For Silver it's $16.93/mo.  For Gold it's $24.31/mo.  For Diamond it's $35.67/mo.

Blackout Dates

Dollywood has added blackout dates to the 2023 Calendar.  The Silver pass has the most blackout dates.  Gold and Diamond do not have any blackout dates.  I have confirmed, that if you renew a 2022 Silver Pass, you will be able to enjoy the Smoky Mountain Christmas Festival THIS YEAR, but in 2023 you will need to plan for the blackout dates of November 24 to the end of the season on January 6, 2024.  You will have 3 or 4 weeks in November to enjoy the 2023 Christmas Festival.  If you purchase a 2023 Silver Pass, you will have blackout dates this November & December 2022.   

Here's a Pro-Tip: These blackout dates are there for a reason.  Dollywood WILL BE extremely busy during the listed blackout dates.  If you're wanting to visit when it's not bananas crazy, then avoid the listed blackout dates all together.

Let's look at the comparison table below of the three passes.

source: here

It's all the usual stuff they offer, parking, discounts, etc.  The quantities have changed this year.  For example, my Gold pass in 2022 gave me one Christmas Bring-A-Friend pass in 2021 and then 4 more Bring-A-Friend passes for 2022, and now it's 2 BAF passes for 2023.  But, they took away the BAF blackout dates, so my guests can go anytime - that's a plus.  So, just carefully look everything over so that you'll have a good understanding of what you have to work with.  My Gold pass for 2022 was $184 and for 2023 its' $214, so if I did the math right, that's a 16% increase.   That's the year-to-year difference for me.

Purchase Passes

If you pre-registered OR if you already have a 2022 season pass, then 2023 passes are on sale beginning today, Monday, October 17th.  For everyone else, you will have to wait until October 31st when they go on sale for you.   If you're on the fence about it, I suggest buying sooner than later because they remove entitlements as time passes, so for the maximum number of benefits, buy now. I will add that Dollywood has done a Black Friday offer in the past.  They obviously don't announce in advance what that offer is, but I think last year they offered an upgraded version of the two-park pass and threw in a dining plan that you would receive one meal at every visit.  And they had a refillable mug special too.  If you want to read more about last year's Black Friday deal, you can look at this article from Amusement Today, here.

Helpful Links and Resources

For a link to Dollywood's Season Pass info page, Click Here.  You can purchase passes at this link as well.  There's also a "Passholder Hub'' web page for current passholders and that is billed as a one-stop shop for everything pertaining to your Season Pass....find that here.

The Dollywood Blog has a post explaining why the Gold Pass is the best choice.  Read that here.  One note, I see that the blog post mentions in point #4 that with the Gold Pass, you can upgrade parking to the Preferred Parking for $10 and conversely, the Comparison Chart says $5.  I'm not sure which is correct.


My Advice

Well, there are so many different scenarios, I'm not sure where to begin.  If you go to Dollywood more than two times, then one person in your party should have the Gold Pass, and the rest could have Silver.  That way the Gold Pass would get you free parking and the meal discount.  And that worked great in years past, but now with so many variables, I need a bulletin board with red twine and stickies to figure and sort it out.  That said, I recommend studying all of this and put your plan to paper before you pull the trigger.

I also suggest reading the FAQ Blog Post that Dollywood has published.  To read that, click this link.


Wrap Up

That's a lot of info and I hope I did it justice.  Season Passes have gotten very detailed and specific, and I would suggest you double check all of this because it is complicated.  I see lots of questions about passes on social media, and I get how its challenging.   In the olden days you just had a season pass, and that was that.  NOT ANYMORE! 🤣  

2023 Will be a big year for Dollywood.  Their 38th season will introduce us to Big Bear Mountain, their longest roller coaster yet, new festivals and much more that hasn't been revealed yet.

If you have any questions, you can ask them in the comments, and I will do my best to find an answer for you!

Thanks for reading!  

🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋

UPDATES TO THIS ARTICLE, BELOW:

10/31/22 - Update from Dollywood Bloggers - Read Here.  2023 Season Pass Resources, FAQ, etc.

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10/20/22 infographic from Dollywood:

source - Dollywood's Facebook Page: Link

🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋

10/19/22 - Update from Dollywood Bloggers - Season Passes Most Asked Questions - Answered

Click Here To Read It 

Friday, October 14, 2022

Dollywood Insiders: The Ultimate Guide to Dollywood’s Roller Coasters

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 Hi Everyone, 

I came across this fantastic article that offers lots of important information about all of Dollywood’s award-winning roller coasters.  This is the type of info about roller coasters that gives me the warm fuzzies.  The more I’ve learned about how roller coasters work, and how safe they really are, then for me, my anxiety melted away and I could enjoy all the other sensations you get to experience (Speed, Big Drops, Inversions, etc) when you’re not worried about flying off into a painful death!


Anyhoo, I wanted to share this with all y’all!


Source: The Ultimate Guide to Dollywood’s Roller Coasters - Dollywood Insiders


🍁🍂Dollywood's Harvest Festival 2024 Video Extravaganza 🍂🍁

Hi Everyone,  As I write this we are in peak-Christmas season, just a few days out from the big day and I am wrapping up my videos from Doll...