The Daily Telegraph

Ronnie Hawkins

Rock’n’roll showman who spawned the Band, hosted John and Yoko and made a film with Bob Dylan

- Ronnie Hawkins, born January 10 1935, died May 29 2022

RONNIE HAWKINS, who has died aged 87, was a rock’n’roller with a wild stage act who hosted John and Yoko at his farm, made a movie with Bob Dylan and put together the group that would become the Band; in 1992 he played at the presidenti­al inaugurati­on of Bill Clinton.

Hawkins liked to put on a show on stage, and one of his many nicknames was “Mr Dynamo”. Black performers in the South showed him many of his moves, including his “Camel Walk” – a precursor of Michael Jackson’s “Moonwalk” – which he copied from a black musician named Half Pint who worked shining shoes in Hawkins’s father’s barber shop. He was, said Robbie Robertson, later of the Band, “explosive” on stage.

“The Hawk”, as he was also known, lived fast on the road, and was the inspiratio­n for the heartless cad in Gordon Lightfoot’s song Go-go Round, about “a go-go girl in love with someone who didn’t care” – but in private he was married to the same woman for 60 years.

Ronald Cornett Hawkins was born on January 10 1935 in Huntsville, Arkansas; a few years later the family moved to Fayettevil­le. His mother Flora (née Cornett) was a churchgoin­g teacher, while his father Jasper was, by his son’s admission, an old-fashioned, hard-drinking redneck. But he spawned a son who loved black music.

As a teenager Hawkins made spare cash using a souped-up old Ford to run bootleg liquor and bought a part-interest in a bar when he started the first of many groups to be called the Hawks.

At the same time, not only did he finish high school, something most rockabilly stars never achieved, but he went on to study physical education at the University of Arkansas where he was a champion swimmer and diver. During his studies his band played at fraterniti­es and sororities.

He enlisted in the US Army, but having already trained in the Reserve he served only six months. He formed a group with some black soldiers, the Black Hawks, then back in Arkansas he formed a new Hawks outfit, who were joined by a teenage drummer, Levon Helm.

In 1959 they had two hit singles, Forty Days reaching the Top 50 and Mary Lou the Top 30. There was an appearance on American Bandstand, and talk of Hawkins as the new Elvis.

He had great success in Canada and moved to Ontario. The Hawks broke up, though Helm stayed on board, and they were joined in time by Robbie Robertson, along with Richard Manuel, Garth Hudson and Rick Danko – new Hawks in what would become the classic Band line-up.

Hawkins rehearsed long hours and demanded the highest standards. His bandmates stayed with him until 1964, when they began working for Bob Dylan, and in 1967 they became the Band.

“He built us up to the point where we outgrew his music and had to leave,” said Robertson. “He shot himself in the foot, really, bless his heart.”

Hawkins became a wealthy man, buying a 200-acre farm at Stoney Lake in Ontario. In 1969 John Lennon and Yoko Ono stayed there – and left him with a lot of memories and an unpaid telephone bill for $9,000.

One of those memories involved them falling asleep with the bath running: “Our new ceilings came in on us.”

In 1976 he was reunited with the Band in The Last Waltz, their final gig (filmed by Martin Scorsese and released in 1978), and the same year he played Bob Dylan in the singer’s film Renaldo and Clara. Four years before that he had appeared in Heaven’s Gate alongside his friend Kris Kristoffer­son.

Always more at home on stage than in the studio, Hawkins carried on touring into this century. Becoming a permanent resident in Canada, though he never took citizenshi­p, he would winter in Arkansas, spending time with his friends Jerry Lee Lewis, and Alice Walton of the Walmart family.

In 2002, October 4 was declared Ronnie Hawkins Day in Toronto, partly in recognitio­n of his support for research into schizophre­nia and for other charitable work. In 2013 he was appointed as an Honorary Officer of the Order of Canada.

Ronnie Hawkins is survived by his wife Wanda, and by their daughter and two sons.

 ?? ?? Hawkins: he was ‘explosive’ on stage and played at Bill Clinton’s presidenti­al inaugurati­on
Hawkins: he was ‘explosive’ on stage and played at Bill Clinton’s presidenti­al inaugurati­on

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