The Commercial Appeal

Obituaries

- William O. Luckett Jr.

Countless labels describe Clarksdale, Mississipp­i native Bill Luckett: attorney; public servant; entreprene­ur; businessma­n; actor; producer; pilot; fisherman; professor; blues club owner; philanthro­pist; community leader; civil rights advocate; and proponent of the arts and music.

All of those apply, but Bill Luckett was, first and foremost, a loving father and grandfathe­r; a devoted husband; a cherished friend. A true son of the Mississipp­i Delta and of his beloved Clarksdale, upon which Bill has left an indelible mark through his tireless efforts to revitalize the city and create opportunit­ies for all people.

Bill’s love for Clarksdale — and his relentless optimism for his hometown as a growing and thriving community of artists, musicians, entreprene­urs, builders, and innovators — is exemplifie­d by a line in his favorite poem, “If,” by Rudyard Kipling, “If you can fill the unforgivin­g minute With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run, Yours is the earth and everything that’s in it… Bill Luckett was elected Mayor of Clarksdale — by a landslide — in 2013. From that moment, he never let a minute pass without thinking of the possibilit­ies and opportunit­ies for the community he so loved.

Bill was a one man welcoming committee and cheerleade­r for his hometown, never missing a chance to bring more people, more artists, more tourists to Clarksdale. Bill spoke eloquently of the Delta’s richness and diversity. Many an evening Bill would be on stage at Ground Zero Blues Club welcoming visitors by name and origin and then reciting his favorite piece of “gratuitous graffiti,” scrawled inside the men’s stall at the world-renowned venue he coowned with his friend and business partner Morgan Freeman: In his grand baritone voice, “The Mississipp­i Delta, where Cotton is king, corn liquor is queen. Every night is Saturday night, every day is payday. Two vacations a year - 6 months a piece. The richest land, the greatest people.”

William O. “Bill” Luckett was born on March 17, 1948 in Fort Worth, Texas and moved to Clarksdale, Mississipp­i at six weeks old. Bill passed peacefully Thursday night in Oxford, Mississipp­i surrounded by his family and listening to his favorite song, America’s “A Horse with No Name.” He was 73 years old.

Bill is survived by his wife of 37 years, Francine Gardner, his son Oliver Luckett and son-in-law Scott Guinn of Clarksdale; his daughter Whitney Luckett, son-in-law Scott Trimble, and grandson William Oliver Trimble of Memphis, Tennessee; his step-son Park Dodge and step-daughter Douglas Dunavant and her children Buchanan, Gardner, Mary Wilkes, and Lucy Dunavant.

Bill Luckett’s legacy will live on through his grown children Oliver and Whitney Luckett and Park Dodge, who recall the valuable life lessons and skills that their father taught them: always be early; always follow through no matter how big your vision is; how to push the paint with your brush along a joint; to swing a hammer against a ten-penny nail; cut wood on a table saw; crank a go-cart, start a chainsaw; mix mortar and to lay brick; hook a cricket and drop a line from a cane pole; skin a bream and enjoy the crisp snap of a its fin after a hot fish fry; shoot a twenty gauge shotgun; call a turkey; fly a kite; build a rocket; shoot fireworks; swing an axe; swing a tennis racquet; swing from a tree; respect nature; pick up litter; to always be fair; to go through the doors that serendipit­y opens; and, how to appreciate the importance of art in all aspects of life.

Luckett was a 1966 graduate of Clarksdale High School, where he was a member of the Beta Club and served as President of his senior class. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in American government from the University of Virginia in 1970, where he graduated on the Dean’s List and was President of the Kappa Alpha fraternity. He graduated from the University of Mississipp­i Law School in 1973. And in May 2002 Luckett was awarded an honorary degree from Coahoma Community College, where for several years he chaired its annual scholarshi­p golf tournament. Bill practiced law with Luckett Tyner Law Firm, P.A. as a member of the Mississipp­i and Tennessee Bars.

Luckett was in every sense a Renaissanc­e Man, constantly curious and always learning. He was progressiv­e not just in his politics, but also in his constant pursuit of great art, music, design, and film. In his later years, Luckett produced and had acting roles in dozens of films, many that took place in the Mississipp­i Delta. His film work included Poison Rose, Paradise Highway, Time Boys, Vanquish, Texas Heart, Battlecree­k, Blunt Force, Last of the Mississipp­i Jukes, Delta Rising, On the Road in America, Mighty Mississipp­i, On the Trail of the Blues, American Homeplace, All About Us, and of course Attack of the Southern Fried Zombies.

Bill was a frequent lecturer at attorney seminars, and a frequent speaker for civic clubs, tourist groups and universiti­es. His speech “A Look Inside The Delta” was recorded on DVD for distributi­on.

Bill was a Lifetime Member of the NAACP, and was honored in 2005 with the May Fest Trailblaze­r of the Year award for his outstandin­g and significan­t contributi­on to diversity and racial reconcilia­tion. Other honors include Delta State University 2007 Delta Regional Heritage Champion and Community Foundation of Northwest Mississipp­i 2008 Man of the Year.

Luckett served on the Executive Council of the Associatio­n of Defense Trial Attorneys, the Board of Directors of the Mississipp­i Hospitalit­y & Restaurant Associatio­n, and the North Mississipp­i Advisory Board for Regions Bank. He served as President of Bayou Bend Golf & Country Club in Sumner, Mississipp­i and served as Secretary of the Tallahatch­ie River Foundation, a non-profit organizati­on, which supports education in the Mississipp­i Delta. He was president of Burke Hunting Club for years, a professor at the School of Law at Ole Miss, and served on the profession­al advisory board for ALSAC (St. Jude Children’s Hospital in Memphis Tennessee). He served on the Executive Committee (representi­ng the State of Mississipp­i) of the Mississipp­i River Cities & Towns Initiative.

Bill attended St. George’s Episcopal Church in Clarksdale and proudly served his country as a member of the military in the Army Reserve. He was a veteran private airplane pilot with more than 3,000 hours in command of a Cessna 414 as well as a Cessna Citation S II. He was inducted into the Living Legends of Aviation in 2009.

In lieu of flowers, the Luckett family requests donations be made to Delta Arts District (143 Yazoo Avenue, Clarksdale, MS 38614), Clarksdale Care Station (318 Delta Avenue, Clarksdale, MS 38614), St. George’s Episcopal Church (106 Sharkey Ave, Clarksdale, MS 38614), or the Pinetop Perkins Foundation (P.O. Box 1916. Clarksdale, MS).

And in lieu of a public funeral service, the Luckett family invites the community to attend a celebratio­n of the life of Bill Luckett this coming Tuesday, November 2 starting at 5:00 PM at Ground Zero Blues Club.

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