LOS ANGELES – Julie Fudge can guess the Top Five questions people will ask about her mother, singer Patsy Cline.
Since Cline’s death in 1963, Fudge has been the authority on all things Patsy, even though she was only 4 when her mother died.
“The advantage I’ve had is the blessing of audio/visual and the stories I’ve gathered over the years that correspond to those memories,” Fudge says. “I feel like I got a lot of her without her being here.”
While Fudge doesn’t sing (another standard question) – “there’s a difference between ‘do’ and ‘can’ … and I don’t” – she does have an appreciation for the songs Cline made famous. While some might lean toward “Crazy” or “I Fall to Pieces,” she embraces “You Belong to Me” and other standards.
Cline, who will be celebrated in a Great Performances special, “Walkin’ After Midnight,” Friday night, was actually more pop than country during her later years. In essence, she was Taylor Swift before Taylor Swift, and took great pride in singing at Carnegie Hall and the Hollywood Bowl. “Nobody liked Nashville to be the hay bale capital, right?” Fudge says. “She was the first female country singer to headline her own show in Las Vegas, so you had a different appeal.”
Before the plane crash that took her life, Cline was on track to be a huge star. But she wasn’t there yet, Fudge cautions. “There’s a common misconception that Patsy had all these things when, in reality, 10 months before she died she was finally able to put a down payment on a house. During the 10 months that she lived in that house, we picked out furniture but we brought old furniture that she had always had. They had the stereo they had bought when they got married. They had one window air conditioner unit from another house and they bought one more for this four-bedroom house. But it was just a normal house.”
Because Cline was performing 35 dates in Las Vegas over the holidays, “there were no holidays in that home, no Christmas trees. We were with our grandmother during that time and visited Las Vegas. By the time March rolls around and she’s gone, she’s a deceased singer who had a couple of good records.”
Fudge and her brother went back to that house when their father went back to work because he had a house note to pay. “There was nothing to fall back on. The only coat that you would call a fur was a black swing coat with a fur collar. During the convention time in Nashville it had been stolen and she was irate about it. Insurance covered it but the new coat did not come until after she had passed.”
Jewelry was limited, too. Cline had a wedding ring and a Black Hills gold ring from a fan. “That’s as expensive as it gets,” Fudge says, showing the ring that she now wears.
When friends suggested Fudge and her family open a Patsy Cline museum, they were hard pressed to find items that could go in it. They held off until the folks behind the Johnny Cash museum insisted.
Fudge, her brother and her half-brother gathered what they could and now have a place in Nashville where fans can see what remains from her 30 years of life. Notes she wrote to friends and family, awards, props from “Sweet Dreams,” the movie about her life, her wedding album and Fudge’s baby book are all there.
Looking at the keepsakes helps Fudge recall what she can about her mother.
“She was a little more forward than maybe I was,” she says with a smile. “She was just the kind of person who was a doer. They didn’t have a great life growing up but she and her mom were doers.”
Example? Patsy asked to be a member of the Grand Ole Opry. “She’s the only person to ever get membership simply by asking,” Fudge says. “You’re usually invited but she said, ‘I want to be a member’ and they said, ‘OK.’”
Because Fudge was part of that Lorrie Morgan/Pam Tillis generation, she had ample access to performers who knew her mom. Dottie West was a good friend; Loretta Lynn was, too. “They’re all little pieces of a puzzle…and you get an overall picture.”
Fudge’s father, Charlie Dick, was a record promoter, who often hosted performers when they came to Nashville. Fudge, however, wasn’t into country music like her friends – she liked rock. “Dad would travel and meet people, and he would call me and say, ‘We’re sitting her interviewing this guy’ and he wouldn’t know his name, ‘but he’s with the Rolling Rocks or something’ and he’d be talking to one of the Rolling Stones. Thanks dad.”
While Cline’s albums continue to sell (and got a big boost when “Coal Miner’s Daughter” and “Sweet Dreams” were in theaters), they didn’t make Fudge and her brother wealthy.
“My father and my brother and I were the beneficiaries of her legacy. There’s no yacht, no condo in Hawaii. My husband worked 34 years for a freight line (company) and I was able to stay home with my kids and send them to a little neighborhood Christian school. She made life easier for us.”
Today, Fudge says, she has no doubt her mother would be thrilled and honored to see the attention that’s still paid her. “This would all be so amazing to her,” she says. “A lot of her peers are still working. I’d like to think she would be, too.”
“Patsy Cline: Walkin’ After Midnight” airs Nov. 22 on PBS. It features a host of stars singing songs from Cline’s catalog.
Country music history from the year you were born
Country music history from the year you were born
1921: Webb Pierce is born
1922: Eck Robertson makes one of the first commercial country recordings
1923: Ralph Peer makes the first ‘hillbilly’ record
1924: “The Prisoner’s Song” becomes the first country record to sell 1 million copies
1925: The Grand Ole Opry begins
1926: DeFord Bailey becomes a regular on the Grand Ole Opry
1927: Country music has its “Big Bang”
1928: The Carters meet Lesley Riddle
1929: Gene Autry records his first records
1930: Ken Maynard becomes the first singing cowboy in the film ‘Sons of the Saddle’
1931: Ed Crain records “Bandit Cole Younger”
1932: Patsy Cline is born
1933: Willie Nelson is born
1934: Gene Autry stars in his first movie, ‘In Old Santa Fe’
1935: Bob Wills makes his first recordings
1936: ‘Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round’ begins
1937: The ‘Renfro Valley Barn Dance’ begins
1938: “Wabash Cannonball” becomes the top country record
1939: Billboard begins publishing its ‘Hillbilly Hits’ chart
1940: Minnie Pearl joins the Grand Ole Opry
1941: ‘Walking the Floor Over You’ launches honky tonk music into the mainstream
1942: Fred Rose and Roy Acuff found the first Nashville music publisher
1943: The Carter Family disbands
1944: Billboard acknowledges ‘folk’ music
1945: “Bluegrass” becomes a genre
1946: Nashville’s first independent label, Bullet Records, is launched
1947: Hank Williams earns his first national hit
1948: Eddy Arnold releases 5 of the year’s new #1 songs
1949: Hank Williams has his first #1 single with ‘Lovesick Blues’
1950: Hank Snow’s ‘I’m Movin’ On’ sits at #1 for 21 weeks
1951: Carl Smith makes his chart debut
1952: Kitty Wells’ ‘It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels’ becomes a hit
1953: Hank Williams dies at 29
1954: Elvis makes his recording debut
1955: Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley tour together
1956: Carl Perkins’ ‘Blue Suede Shoes’ becomes a hit
1957: Jerry Lee Lewis records ‘Great Balls of Fire’
1958: The Country Music Association is formed
1959: The first Best Country and Western Performance Grammy Award is presented
1960: Patsy Cline joins the Grand Ole Opry
1961: The Country Music Hall of Fame is established
1962: Ray Charles records ‘Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music’
1963: Patsy Cline dies
1964: Willie Nelson first appears on the Grand Ole Opry
1965: Loretta Lynn records ‘You Ain’t Woman Enough (To Take My Man)’
1966: Dolly Parton releases her first record
1967: Merle Haggard records ‘Sing Me Back Home’
1968: Johnny Cash makes a live album at Folsom Prison
1969: The ‘Johnny Cash Show’ debuts on ABC
1970: Dolly Parton records her first Top 10 single
1971: Southern Rock begins in Nashville
1972: Loretta Lynn becomes the first woman to win Entertainer of the Year at the CMA Awards
1973: Willie Nelson hosts his first Fourth of July picnic
1974: Dolly Parton’s ‘I Will Always Love You’ is released
1975: Willie Nelson releases ‘Red Headed Stranger’
1976: ‘Wanted! The Outlaws’ is released
1977: Elvis Presley dies
1978: Barbara Mandrell has her first #1 hit with ‘Sleeping Single in a Double Bed’
1979: Kenny Rogers cements his reputation as a crossover country star with ‘Coward of the County’
1980: ‘Urban Cowboy’ is released
1981: Rosanne Cash releases her song ‘Seven Year Ache’
1982: Amy Kurland opens The Bluebird Cafe
1983: Two major country TV networks launch
1984: The Judds release their debut album, ‘Why Not Me’
1985: The New York Times’ Robert Palmer claims that country music is dying
1986: Columbia Records drops Johnny Cash
1987: Reba McEntire is named the CMA’s ‘Female Vocalist of the Year’ for the fourth year in a row
1988: Garth Brooks is discovered at the Bluebird Cafe
1989: Garth Brooks releases ‘If Tomorrow Never Comes’
1990: Uncle Tupelo releases ‘No Depression’
1991: Trisha Yearwood releases her debut single, ‘She’s in Love with the Boy’
1992: Line dancing surges in popularity
1993: Toby Keith makes his debut
1994: Johnny Cash has his comeback
1995: Vince Gill releases ‘Go Rest High on That Mountain’
1996: The first Country Stampede Music Festival takes place
1997: Shania Twain releases ‘Come on Over’
1998: The Chicks make their major-label debut
1999: The Americana Music Association is formed
2000: ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’ is released
2001: The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum opens
2002: Shania Twain makes her comeback
2003: The Chicks are canceled
2004: ‘The Grand Ole Opry’ star Skeeter Davis dies
2005: ‘Walk the Line’ is released
2006: Taylor Swift releases her first album
2007: Country music sweeps the Grammy Awards
2008: Reba leaves her label
2009: Kanye West interrupts Taylor Swift at the MTV Video Music Awards
2010: CMT hosts its first CMT Artists of the Year event
2011: Lady A’s ‘Need You Now’ wins five Grammy Awards
2012: Billboard changes its Hot Country Songs chart criteria
2013: Jody Rosen coins the term ‘bro-country’
2014: Ty Herndon and Billy Gilman come out as gay
2015: Kelsea Ballerini’s ‘Love Me Like You Mean It’ reaches #1
2016: ‘Forever Country’ is released
2017: Luke Bryan makes history with his album ‘Crash My Party’
2018: Lil Nas X releases ‘Old Town Road’
2019: Kacey Musgraves wins Album of the Year at the Grammys
2020: Charley Pride dies due to COVID-19 in a year marked by the pandemic
A Great Performances celebration of Patsy Cline will include remembrances from Barbara Hall, daughter Julie Fudge and actress Beverly D'Angelo, who played Cline in "Coal Miner's Daughter."
Singer Patsy Cline died in 1963 in a plane crash along with fellow country musicians Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins; she was only 30. A decade later, Cline became the first solo female artist inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.