Las Vegas Review-Journal

’Grand lady of the Grand Ole Opry’ Shepard dies

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jean Shepard, “the grand lady of the Grand Ole Opry” who had a long recording career as an influentia­l female in country music, died Sunday, according to an Opry spokeswoma­n. Shepard was 82.

Spokeswoma­n Jessie Schmidt said in a news release that Shepard had entered hospice care last week and died in Nashville.

“The Opry family is truly saddened by the news of Jean’s passing,” Opry vice president and general manager Pete Fisher said in the statement. “Although we will miss Jean’s presence on the Opry stage, she has left us the wonder- ful gift of her music which will be remembered for generation­s to come.”

Shepard joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry in 1955 and helped set the standard for women in country music, choosing to tour as a solo act rather than as part of a group. She presented a strong female point of view on songs like “Twice the Lovin’ in Half the Time” and “The Root of All Evil (Is a Man),” influencin­g such key figures in country music as Loretta Lynn, who came along a decade later.

Shepard also was credited with releasing country music’s first concept album, “Songs From a Love Affair,” in 1956.

Shepard was born in Pauls Val- ley, Oklahoma, and was one of 10 children. She was raised near Bakersfiel­d, California, where she listened to the Grand Ole Opry, the show she later performed on.

Her career began in the 1940s. According to the Grand Ole Opry website, Western swing musician Hank Thompson saw her at age 14, singing and playing bass in the Melody Ranch Girls, an all-girl band, and helped her begin recording.

She paired with fellow Hall of Fame member Ferlin Husky in 1953 on “A Dear John Letter,” her first No. 1 country hit.

In 1963, her husband at the time, country singer Hawkshaw Hawkins, was killed in a plane crash with Patsy Cline and Cowboy Copas.

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