The Prince George Citizen

HEE HAW STAR DIES AT 85

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Country star Roy Clark, the guitar virtuoso and singer who headlined the cornpone TV show Hee Haw for nearly a quarter century and was known for such hits as Yesterday When I was Young and Honeymoon Feeling, has died. He was 85.

Publicist Jeremy Westby said Clark died Thursday due to complicati­ons from pneumonia at home in Tulsa, Okla.

Clark was Hee Haw host or co-host for its entire 24-year run, with Buck Owens his best known co-host. Started in 1969, the show featured the top stars in country music, including Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, Charley Pride, Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton, as well as other musical greats including Ray Charles, Chet Atkins and Boots Randolph. The country music and comedy show’s last episode aired in 1993, though reruns continued for a few years thereafter.

“Hee Haw won’t go away. It brings a smile to too many faces,” he said in 2004, when the show was distribute­d on VHS and DVD for the first time.

“I’ve known him for 60 years and he was a fine musician and entertaine­r,” Charlie Daniels tweeted on Thursday. “Rest In peace Buddy, you will be remembered.”

Keith Urban, who won entertaine­r of the year Wednesday night from the Country Music Associatio­n, also honoured Clark on Thursday.

“My first CMA memory is sitting on my living room floor watching Roy Clark tear it up,” Urban tweeted. “Sending all my love and respect to him and his family for all he did.”

Clark played the guitar, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, harmonica and other instrument­s. His skills brought him gigs as guest performer with many top orchestras, including the Boston Pops. In 1976 he headlined a tour of the Soviet Union, breaking boundaries that were usually closed to Americans.

And of course, he also was a member of the Grand Ole Opry.

His hits included The Tips of My Fingers (1963), Yesterday When I Was Young (1969), Come Live With Me (1973) and Honeymoon Feeling (1974). He was also known for his instrument­al versions of Malaguena, on 12-string guitar, and Ghost Riders in the Sky.

He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009, and emotionall­y told the crowd how moving it was “just to be associated yourself with the members of the Country Music Hall of Fame and imagine that your name will be said right along with all the list.”

Clark won a Grammy Award for best country instrument­al performanc­e for the song Alabama Jubilee and earned seven Country Music Associatio­n awards including entertaine­r of the year and comedian of the year.

In his 1994 autobiogra­phy, My Life in Spite of Myself, he said Yesterday, When I Was Young had “opened a lot of people’s eyes not only to what I could do but to the whole fertile and still largely untapped field of country music, from the Glen Campbells and the Kenny Rogerses, right on through to the Garth Brookses and Vince Gills.”

Clark was guest host on The Tonight Show several times in the 1960s and 1970s when it was rare for a country performer to land such a role.

His fans included not just musicians, but baseball great Mickey Mantle. The Yankees outfielder was moved to tears by Yesterday When I Was Young and for years made Clark promise to sing it at his memorial – a request granted after Mantle died in 1995.

 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO ?? In this April 13, 2012 photo, Roy Clark smirks after joking around during his 79th birthday show at The Joint in the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Catoosa, Okla.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO In this April 13, 2012 photo, Roy Clark smirks after joking around during his 79th birthday show at The Joint in the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Catoosa, Okla.

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