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Loretta  Receives Kennedy Center Honor

On December 26, 2003 Loretta Lynn received the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors award. Loretta is only the fourth country artist to receive this honor and the FIRST woman in the country field so honored. Congratulations Loretta! The December 20-26 issue of TV Guide ran a full page ad for this event plus a small article both with Loretta's photo on them.


 

Record Collector Magazine Does Loretta Lynn Feature

The December 2003 issue of Record Collector magazine features a four page spread article on Loretta titled YOU AIN'T WOMAN ENOUGH TO TAKE HER MAN.

This very well written piece by Peter Doggett includes four color pictures of Loretta plus four album covers. Record Collector magazine is an imported publication from England.


 

The Washington Post Features Loretta

Washington Post -- Loretta Lynn, Mining a Vein Of Modesty & Heartache & Five Star Salute


  Kennedy Center Honors Articles Featuring Loretta

USA Today Dec 8, 2003. - Kennedy Center throws a salute & President salutes Kennedy Center honorees

President Bush and his wife, Laura, sat with the honorees in the VIP box. Bush's father, former president George Bush, lauded [Loretta Lynn] as "an American original" who "would have made one heck of a politician." His son, he joked, is "a couple of quarts low on musical talent."

New York Times December 8, 2003, - Five Eminences of the Arts Are Honored, and They Don't Even Have to Perform

State Sec Colin L Powell hosts dinner for Carol Burnett, Mike Nichols, Itzhak Perlman, James Brown and Loretta Lynn, winners of Kennedy Center Honors for lifetime achievement in arts; Pres Bush lauds artists at White House reception before awards are presented at Kennedy Center gala.

The Tennessean - 'National treasure' Loretta Lynn receives Kennedy Center Honor
By PETER COOPER
Staff Writer


WASHINGTON — Loretta Lynn walked in from a night as crisp and cold as a frozen tuxedo, moved across plush red carpet and entered a building filled with chandeliers and famous people, with warmth, applause and adoration.

Yesterday evening was a night of tribute to Lynn, a woman whom former President Bush called ''a national treasure,'' who was being cheered for receiving a Kennedy Center Honor, an award akin to British knighthood or the French Legion of Honor.

The scene was nothing at all like the hillside cabin of Lynn's Kentucky childhood, the place she wrote of in her autobiography in song — Coal Miner's Daughter. Yet by her very presence, Lynn seemed to bring the Butcher Holler house — the center of an upbringing that has been her burden and her muse — with her. The home was there last night, as real as the coal miner's daughter sitting in the president's box.

For her part, Lynn smiled and cried a few tears as a stream of esteemed friends and admirers approached the gleaming white stage at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts' Opera House to speak glowing words or to sing her songs.

One of those people was Bush, the first president to so honor an inductee, who said, ''What Norman Rockwell did with paint, Loretta still does with her voice and guitar.''

Lynn — the fourth country artist to receive a Kennedy honor since the award show's 1978 inception — was the first of five honorees at yesterday's show, sharing the night with ''Godfather of Soul'' James Brown, actress Carol Burnett, director Mike Nichols and violinist Itzhak Perlman.

Sissy Spacek — the actress who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Lynn in the movie Coal Miner's Daughter — was the first to speak about Lynn.

''I loved being you,'' she said, directing her comments to the box that held Lynn, President Bush and other honorees. ''I would have gone on being you for the rest of my life, but everybody knows there's only one Loretta Lynn.''

The actress introduced a video that depicted Lynn's rise from a mountain childhood to a place among American music's superstars.

Then former President Bush spoke, joking that his lack of musical talent precluded him from delivering ''a special rendition of Who Was That Stranger?''

After that, it was on to the music. Reba McEntire was the first to sing, knocking out a feisty version of You're Lookin' At Country.

Next, Garth Brooks stepped out of his retirement to join Trisha Yearwood for a take on Lynn's duet with Conway Twitty, Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man.

Lyle Lovett offered a wry-but-right version of Lynn's Rated X, even going so far as to repeat Lynn's spoken aside near song's end, ''Why, us women don't have a chance.''

And then Patty Loveless, herself a cousin of Lynn and the daughter of a miner, delivered Lynn's signature Coal Miner's Daughter, singing of the Van Lear coal mine, of a mother who read the Bible by a coal oil light, and of the sheer exhaustion that accompanies such an existence.

The song was a reminder of the humble beginning that has given way to one of music's most remarkable and important careers, and of the way that, as former President Bush said, ''her timeless body of work helps us celebrate what this country and her people are all about.''
 


  November 21, 2003
Loretta's album All Time Greatest Hits is included at #485 in Rolling Stone's new Special Collectors Issue 500 Greatest Albums of All Time currently on-stands.

  An article about Loretta recording her new album with Jack White at Eric McConnell's East Nashville studio appears in the November 20 issue of Nashville Scene currently on-stands.

  November 1, 2003
CMT "40 Greatest Drinking Songs"

Loretta's "Don't Come Home A Drinkin'" will be included in the Top 10 of CMT's two-hour special titled "40 Greatest Drinking Songs" premiering
Saturday, November 1.

  October 26, 2003
SECRETS OF HURRICANE MILLS RE-AIRS:


If you missed the first few airing of Loretta's special Secrets Of Hurricane Mills your in luck. This hour long special devoted to the history of
haunted happenings in Loretta's century old mansion located at her ranch in Hurricane Mills, TN. Loretta, her family and many ranch employees we're interviewed for this special that also includes information about Loretta's legendary career over the years. The Travel Channel will be re-airing this
show on October 27th at 12:00 AM, October 30th at 9:00 PM and again on Halloween, October 31st at 12:00 AM. All times are ET.

September 26, 2003

AIR DATES SET FOR SECRETS OF HURRICANE MILLS:
Air dates have finally been released for the Travel Channel's special "Secrets Of Hurricane Mills." For years it has been rumored that Loretta's
old mansion in Tennessee is haunted and now we will find out. Loretta, her family and employees at her ranch we're interviewed for this hour long
special. The show will debut September 29th at 8:00 PM and again at 11:00 PM. It will re-air October 5th at 5:00 PM, October 31st at 7:00 PM and 10:00 PM. and again on November 1st at 1:00 PM. Check local listings to verify time zone airings.


  October 15, 2003

Loretta in Rolling Stone Magazine

Loretta will be in the "In The Studio" section of Rolling Stone's November 6 issue, on-stands October 24.

  September 6, 2003

LORETTA IN COUNTRY WEEKLY
The September 16,2003 issue of Country Weekly features a beautiful color photo of our #1 lady.
The photo is from the ribbon cutting of Loretta's new fan & doll museum located at her ranch in Tennessee. The photo is in the scene & heard column of Country Weekly.

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   
 
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