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Tammy Wynette: Tragic Country Queen

Tammy Wynette: Tragic Country QueenAuthor: Jimmy McDonough
Publisher: Viking Adult
Category: Book

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 212040

Media: Hardcover
Edition: First Edition
Pages: 448
Number Of Items: 1
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Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.7

ISBN: 0670021539
Dewey Decimal Number: 782.421642092
EAN: 9780670021536
ASIN: 0670021539

Publication Date: March 4, 2010
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Amazon.com Review
A Conversation with Author Jimmy McDonough
Jimmy McDonough
Can we get a hamburger?

No, Jimmy, we have to discuss your new book.

Oh, right, this is where the author toots his own horn for a few pages. Well, I already tooted the horn for close to 400 pages. The horn is tired. The horn is flaccid.

Thank you for that lovely image, Jimmy, but let’s get to business: why Tammy Wynette?

Why Tammy? I’ll tell you why. Wynette’s one of the greatest singers this country has ever produced, yet you never hear about her. Tammy’s taken for granted. And if you do her about her, it’s because of her anthem, “Stand By Your Man.” Some people never got past that one. They assume Tammy is just some sort of one-dimensional anti-feminist mouthpiece. She’s much more complex than people give her credit for. Until illness and drug addiction sidelined her, Tammy was very, very independent. She sold millions of records and changed the game for female country singers. Madonna? Lady Gaga? Wynette created that kind of frenzy back in the sixties/seventies, only with a steel guitar. She sang for five presidents, and was known to smooch both Ronald Reagan and George Wallace on lips after belting one out for their benefit. Among her fans you’ll find diverse artists as Loretta Lynn, Elton John, Tanya Tucker, Sting, Faith Hill and James Taylor. “One of the greatest voices of all time,” says Dolly Parton.

This is a woman who overcame many obstacles. Nashville potentates told Tammy she’d never make it; door after door was slammed in her face. Her mother Mildred fought her every step of the way—only to wind up running her daughter’s fan club once Wynette became a star. Tammy came from out of nowhere, a divorcee with three kids, and absolutely conquered Music City. “She went from bein’ a beautician to the queen of country music,” notes Emmylou Harris.

I must admit, I have been a fan of Tammy’s most of my life. I always thought I’d write about her someday. I give all to my books—this isn’t just a gig for me—and I can only write about people I deeply admire. I like Tammy even more now than before I started the book—which isn’t always the case, heh heh. So this book was a labor of love.

Give us five words to describe Tammy Wynette.

Regal, single-minded, conflicted, elusive, haunted.

What did you come to admire about Wynette the most?

She was definitely a larger-than-life character, just as extreme as any of her male counterparts. As was her music. “I believe you have to live the songs,” insisted Wynette. Tammy took the romantic country ballad and just drove it into the ground. One sad song after another—after another! She was unrelenting. Even at the end of her life when she practically had to crawl onstage to sing, Tammy refused to give up. I love that.

Of course, there have been two books on Wynette already.

Yes, there have, but neither offer the complete story. The first was her autobiography, Stand By Your Man, in which author Joan Dew captures Tammy’s voice brilliantly. That book was one of the reasons I became a writer. But it’s only Tammy’s side of the story, and it ends in the seventies, before her life got truly weird. The other book was written directly after Tammy’s death by her daughter Jackie (with Tom Carter), and is basically an indictment of Wynette’s final husband, George Richey.

So Tammy’s never gotten a proper biography. Many of the people I interviewed—her friends, band members, hairdressers, childhood playmates—have never spoken publicly before. And some of them were so unsettled by her death it took until now for them to talk.

Tammy was much more eccentric than people think. She had a passion for clip-on earrings and a strong dislike for feminine hygiene commercials. She could be extremely generous and very vindictive. She had a wry, observant sense of humor and admitted to smoking the occasional joint. Tammy got to people—I’m talking as a person, not as a singer—on a very deep level, yet she wasn’t one to expose her feelings in any sort of direct way. There is many a riddle to this lady and, despite four years of intense research, still so much I can’t explain.

What’s the most surprising thing you learned researching her life?

Well, Tammy liked to embellish. Not maliciously, for the most part—she’d just get excited and add details to spice things up. She was a teller of tall tales. So much so that when her autobiography came out, co-author Joan Dew, to pass the time, would quiz her on the contents while out on the road. “She didn’t know the answers,” admitted Dew. “I don’t think she’d ever read the book.”

The other thing that was surprised me was how reticent Wynette was to spill the beans to friends and family. In interviews and performances Tammy seemed so open and forthcoming, but in private she wasn’t exactly an open book. That’s why this biography is important—you get a much fuller picture from those closest to her than she would ever revealed herself.

Read the full interview


Product Description
The first full-scale biography of the enduring first lady of country music

The twentieth century had three great female singers who plumbed the darkest corners of their hearts and transformed private grief into public dramas. In opera, there was the unsurpassed Maria Callas. In jazz, the tormented Billie Holiday. And in country music, there was Tammy Wynette.

"Stand by Your Man," "D-I-V-O-R-C-E," "Take Me to Your World" are but a few highlights of Tammy's staggering musical legacy, all sung with a voice that became the touchtone for women's vulnerability, disillusionment, strength, and endurance.

In Tammy Wynette, bestselling biographer Jimmy McDonough tells the story of the small-town girl who grew up to be the woman behind the microphone, whose meteoric rise led to a decades-long career full of tragedy and triumph. Through a high-profile marriage and divorce, her dreadful battle with addiction and illness, and the struggle to compete in a rapidly evolving Nashville, Tammy turned a brave smile toward the world and churned out masterful hit songs though her life resembled the most heartbreaking among them.

Tammy Wynette is an intimate portrait of a music icon, the Queen of Heartbreak, whose powerful voice simultaneously evoked universal pain and longing even as it belied her own.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19



5 out of 5 stars "A Well-Written Account Of An Amazing Life"   March 4, 2010
Terry Richard (Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada)
19 out of 19 found this review helpful

"Tammy Wynette: Tragic Country Queen" is an exceptional biography on one of music's most beloved singers and one of the most popular female country acts Nashville has ever produced. Jimmy McDonough documents Tammy's humble beginnings in Mississippi where her dream was to be as big a star as one of her idols, Patsy Cline. She was married five times in her life, often in tumultuous relationships, the most popular to George Jones in which the marriage produced a daughter. The marriage ended in 1975 due to Jone's severe bout with alcoholism. Tammy also had three other children. In this book McDonough details in articulate account how Tammy made it in Nashville, a man's world in the 1960's, and her ultimate encounter with record executive Billy Sherril who got her to record her first hit "Apartment #9". After that record Tammy suddenly became a household name, winning three consecutive Female Vocalist of the Year Awards starting in 1968 and winning two Grammy's. The highs and lows of Tammy's life are here, from the times she would perform for Presidents to her severe health problems to her untimely death in 1998 when the world was shattered by losing her. A better than average country music biography, Tammy's close friend and fellow artist Dolly Parton is interviewed and she offers personal insights into Tammy's life and career.


5 out of 5 stars An awful life behind an awesome voice   March 4, 2010
Theodore A. Rushton (PHOENIX, Arizona United States)
20 out of 21 found this review helpful

With a voice that cut through the noise of modern life as clearly as a champagne glass tapped with a silver knife at a wedding reception, Tammy Wynette touched the hearts of millions of Americans and left them better for having heard.

It's doubtful any American during the past half-century was not stirred by 'Stand By Your Man' which, like 'D-I-V-O-R-C-E' became her defining signature. These songs are an opera within themselves, a "sound bite" that defines the hopes and fears of millions. Wynette's crystal voice soared above the noisy chatter of everyday life with a clarity that could only be envied by everyone who wants to speak to the public.

Her voice was awesome. What then of the woman around that voice? This book says the answer was a ceaseless relentless merciless obsession for perfection, relevance and acceptance that eventually destroyed the mind and body that housed it all. If heartbreak and tragedy are the price of fame; then, Lord God, Wynette paid the price in full.

She sought too much from life. In so doing, she trusted too many erratic husbands and too many selfish advisors who placed their own interests first instead of Wynette's best interests. As Wynette said after one divorce, "If ever a home was broken up by outsiders, it was ours."

McDonough points out, "Contrary to the legend, Wynette did not crawl out of abject poverty . . ." As she said on one occasion, "I have always gotten everything I ever wanted, but I didn't get what I needed."

The "poverty" legend became poart of the glitter of her life. Dolly Parton once summed it up her own background nicely by telling an interviewer, "Well, you didn't live in the country and nearly starve to death." For Parton poverty was very real, and she included Wynette with humour ". . . me and Tammy, we got our clothes from Fifth and Park -- that was, the fifth trailer in the park."

All in all, this is a fateful plunge into the world and mind of an ambitious, brilliantly talented and relentlessly striving woman from the Mississippi/Alabama border region who was never able to handle the success she sought and won. Her fame was such that gave her no rest, and she never learned to hide the worry and fear that left dark circles below her tired eyes.
Wynette was one of the great voices of American music; her personal life was one of the great self-inflicted tragedies of the half-century. As Wynette once said, "I believe you have to live the songs."

She did. In full. This book offers an intense but understanding and sympathetic story of Wynette who lived a life far beyond the triumph of her songs, and yet a life that was a tragedy and an integral part of her music.




5 out of 5 stars Well written bio   March 16, 2010
H. Rossing (Amsterdam Netherlands)
10 out of 10 found this review helpful

Absolutely fantastic, marvellously written bio on larger than life but much overlooked country queen. Even if you have just a passing interest in C&W or Wynette this book will carry you away simply because it's so well written. Clearly a fan, the author is not afraid to pass some just critisism on some of her recordings or pass judgement on some of the stuff she pulled in life. Even better the book gives some great insight into how the Nashville industry worked in the 70's,growing up in the South and the way women were viewed (there was a whole lot more to Wynette than just a doormat who would stand by her man.)Even better the book will have you run to the nearest record store to buy and listen to what McDonough writes about.You'll be in for a surprise though because apart from the obligatory greatest hits selections there's very little there. Sony/Legacy has criminally overlooked Wynette's 70's albums.Check the second hand record stores instead or check Ebay.You won't be dissapointed there's tons and tons of fantastic songs to be found. And ofcourse those album covers. Read, listen and enjoy!


5 out of 5 stars GREAT, OBJECTIVE, DISTURBING AND SAD   March 24, 2010
a viewer (antioch, tn United States)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Those four words above describe the new book. The author has done his research extensively and backs up his claims with his resources.

Tammy Wynette was a very complicated woman, looking for the idealistic life. She did not find it in this life. Up to her death she was constantly looking for that "Elusive Dream"....that ideal "love".

The author is incredibly fair in his assessment of Wynette's character. He pulls no punches. She was not a perfect human being and he does not portray her as one. She says she embellished the truth to make it more exciting.

He has also conducted an extensive array of interviews with Don Chapel (Tammy's second husband), Tammy's close friend and pal growing up, Linda Cayson, Chapel's daughter, Donna, George and Nancy Jones, Wynette Biographer Joan Dew, Loretta Lynn (Tammy's best girlfriend in the music business), Jan Howard and many, many others. He also gave George Richey a chance to tell his story but he declined to be interviewed.

This book also contains a great career retrospective and a great chapter on Billy Sherrill, Tammy's long-time producer.

True, this book does not portray George Richey in a good light....but the author is fair as he gets quotes here from RIchey's defenders. Unfortunately, RIchey's defenders are in the minority. When all is said and done, the final analysis here is that Wynette was, like Judy Garland, an addictive personality who had to be under the control of a man....well she got what she wanted.....there was no one more controlling than George Richey. There are several testaments here to the fact that Tammy loved her daughters and her daughters loved her. No, their relationship wasn't ideal (what is???), and after she married Richey, he made sure he eliminated all of Wynette's friends from her life and kept her daughters from her at arm's length.

I firmly believe after reading this account that George Richey was responsible for Wynette's decline. She was already in bad shape, he saw this, saw his meal ticket and ultimately, made sure that she could not function without drugs or without him. Sad, sad, sad.

Read this wonderful account and make up your mind for yourselves. I thoroughly want to commend Jimmy McDonough, the author, for his wonderful research, his remarkable telling of every side of the story and what was ultimately a labor of love for him.



5 out of 5 stars The Real Thing -- When Country Music Was Truly Country   March 31, 2010
Ken Byerly (Jericho, Vermont)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I grew up on a farm in North Carolina, before eventually landing on Wall Street, and for me this book approached a religious experience. It's not just the story of Tammy Wynette, it's the story of a time and a place that, as McDonough says, will never come again, a time when we listened to WCKY in Cincinnati and WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia, and country singers SPOKE to us in cheating songs, drinking songs, tales of love gone astray. At first the country charts amounted to "twenty-nine guys and Kitty Wells." Then Tammy Wynette came out of Tremont High School in Red Hook, Alabama and started singing and, said a friend, "it was like a great wind came through. Nothing was ever the same."
George Jones became Wynette's third and most significant husband. "When it comes to singing," she said, "no one can touch him. They have never been able to and they never will." His drinking led to their divorce. He finally straightened himself out, meanwhile Wynette became addicted to painkillers. She died in her 50s, and in pain.
There's a lot of great music described in this book, and a lot of sadness. But then isn't that what country music is all about?




Showing reviews 1-5 of 19