Cast The
Ozark Jubilee cast was originally headlined by Wanda Jackson, Norma Jean, Bobby Lord, Webb Pierce,
Marvin Rainwater, Porter Wagoner and
Slim Wilson, who was also front man for both the Tall Timber Trio, made up of
"Speedy" Haworth (guitar), Bob White (bass guitar) and "Doc" Martin (
steel guitar); and the Jubilee Band, composed of Haworth, Martin, White, Johnny Gailey (drums), Paul Mitchell (piano) and Zed Tennis (
fiddle). Featured vocalists included Leroy Van Dyke, Suzi Arden, Chuck Bowers, Sonny James, Tommy Sosebee and Tabby West. Singers
Hawkshaw Hawkins and Jean Shepard, who met on the show, later married. The versatile Wilson was also half of the show's Flash and Whistler (with Floyd "Goo Goo" Rutledge); and Rutledge was half of Lennie and Goo Goo (with
Lennie Aleshire), both country music comedy duos. Other comedians were Pete Stamper,
Shug Fisher, KWTO's Bill Ring,
Uncle Cyp and Aunt Sap Brasfield, and Luke Warmwater. composed of Grady Martin, Billy Burke, Bud Isaacs, Tommy Jackson, Paul Mitchell, Jimmy Selph, Bob Moore and Mel Bly; but the name was soon changed to Bill Wimberly and His Country Rhythm Boys, a seven-piece group that alternated weekly during 1955 with Grady Martin and His Winging Strings, featuring Moore, Jackson, Isaacs and Hank Garland. Wagoner and James joined him in monthly rotation from January through at least July 1956. Substitute hosts included Wilson, Eddy Arnold, and
Jim Reeves (May–July 1958). The on-camera announcer was Joe Slattery, a former
Pan Am and
US Army Air Forces pilot who later became president of
AFTRA. The
Jubilee featured two square dance groups: the Promenaders (with
caller Lowell "L. D." Keller), a competitive team originally from
Southwest Missouri State College; and a children's group from
Camdenton, Missouri, the (Lake of the Ozarks) Tadpoles (with caller Buford Foster). Several other groups, including the Ozark Sashayers (with caller Rex Kreider) and the teenage Wagon Wheelers (with caller Gary Ellison), made guest appearances. Many of the regular cast were natives or residents of the Ozarks. Over the years they included: •
Lennie Aleshire • Suzi Arden • Chuck Bowers •
Uncle Cyp and Aunt Sap Brasfield •
Cecil Brower •
The Browns •
Smiley Burnette •
Shirley Caddell •
Bill Carlisle •
Thumbs Carllile •
Curly Chalker • Arlie Duff • Patsy Elshire • James "Rusty" Estes • Buster Fellows •
Shug Fisher •
The Foggy River Boys • Johnny Gailey • Alfred "Red" Gale • Jimmy Gately •
Charlie Haden •
Hawkshaw Hawkins •
"Speedy" Haworth • Libby Horne • Bud Isaacs •
Tommy Jackson •
Wanda Jackson •
Sonny James •
Norma Jean •
Brenda Lee •
Merl Lindsay •
Bobby Lord • Johnny Manson • Bryan "Doc" Martin •
Grady Martin • Paul Mitchell •
Bob Moore •
Harold Morrison • Penny Nichols •
The Philharmonics •
Webb Pierce •
Marvin Rainwater • Bill Ring • Floyd "Goo Goo" Rutledge •
Jimmie Selph •
Jean Shepard • Tommy Sosebee •
Carl Smith • Pete Stamper • Zed Tennis •
Leroy Van Dyke •
Porter Wagoner •
Billy Walker •
Don Warden • Luke Warmwater • Tabby West • Bob White • [ The Willis Brothers] •
Slim Wilson • Bill Wimberly
Guest stars Virtually every country music star of the day appeared on the
Jubilee with the notable exception of
Hank Snow, who maintained an allegiance to Nashville's Opry. Among them were: •
Roy Acuff •
Rex Allen •
Bill Anderson •
Chet Atkins •
Eddy Arnold •
Gene Autry •
Johnny Bond •
Margie Bowes •
The Carter Sisters •
Johnny Cash •
Don Cherry •
Sanford Clark •
Patsy Cline •
The Collins Kids •
Wilma Lee and
Stoney Cooper •
Cowboy Copas •
Jimmie Davis •
Jimmy Dean •
Little Johnny Edwards •
Little Jimmy Dickens •
Jimmy Driftwood •
Tommy Duncan •
Lefty Frizzell •
George Hamilton IV •
Homer and Jethro •
Johnny Horton •
Jan Howard •
Ferlin Husky •
Stonewall Jackson •
Betty Johnson •
George Jones •
Grandpa Jones •
Pee Wee King •
Hank Locklin •
The Louvin Brothers •
Leon McAuliffe •
The Maddox Brothers and
Rose •
Patsy Montana •
George Morgan •
Bashful Brother Oswald •
Buck Owens •
The Duke of Paducah •
Minnie Pearl •
Carl Perkins •
Ray Price •
Jim Reeves •
Tex Ritter •
Marty Robbins •
Margie Singleton •
Stringbean •
Hank Thompson •
Mel Tillis •
Merle Travis •
Ernest Tubb •
Conway Twitty •
T. Texas Tyler •
Gene Vincent •
Jimmy Wakely •
Kitty Wells •
Slim Whitman •
The Wilburn Brothers •
Tex Williams •
Bob Wills •
Del Wood •
Faron Young Other guests included
Fran Allison in a recurring role as Aunt Fanny; actors
Betty Ann Grove,
Jim Brown and
Duncan Renaldo; and
nationally syndicated columnist
Earl Wilson. A young
Wayne Newton performed with his brother as the Rascals in Rhythm. On January 14, 1956, the program's first anniversary, Tennessee Gov.
Frank Clement, Missouri's U.S. senators
Tom Hennings and
Stuart Symington, and Missouri Lt. Gov.
Jim Blair appeared, as did St. Louis Cardinals baseball star
Stan Musial.
The Jubilee and Brenda Lee On February 23, 1956, 11-year-old
Brenda Lee, living in
Augusta, Georgia, turned down $30 to sing on a
Swainsboro radio station to see Foley and a visiting
Jubilee promotional unit at Bell Auditorium. A local
disc jockey convinced Foley to hear her sing before the show. He was stunned and agreed to let Lee perform
"Jambalaya" that night. Foley later recalled his reaction:
Jubilee producer-director Bryan Bisney contacted her stepfather, Buell "Jay" Rainwater, who mailed him a
tape recording of Lee singing "Jambalaya" on an Augusta radio show with a
snapshot of Lee in Cincinnati, Ohio with
Jimmie Skinner (who had appeared on the show in 1955). He booked her network debut for March 31, 1956 to sing "Jambalaya" on the second "Junior Jubilee" edition of the show. The
New York Journal American's Jack O'Brien began his April 1 column with, "Didn't catch the name of the 9-year-old singer on last night's
Ozark Jubilee but she belts a song like a star." The show received three times the usual
fan mail with nearly every letter asking to see her again, and Lee's family soon moved to Springfield. Although her five-year contract with Top Talent was broken by a 1957 lawsuit brought by her mother and her manager, she made regular appearances on the program throughout its run.
Carl Perkins, "Blue Suede Shoes", and Elvis Carl Perkins and the Perkins Brothers Band made their television debut on
Ozark Jubilee on March 17, 1956, performing Perkins' No. 1 hit, "Blue Suede Shoes" and the B side, "
Honey Don't". The group included Perkins (lead guitar and vocalist), Jay Perkins (rhythm guitar), Clayton Perkins (bass guitar) and
W.S. Holland (drums). Coincidentally,
Elvis Presley performed the song that same Saturday night on CBS-TV's
Stage Show, which overlapped the
Jubilee from 8–8:30 p.m. ET (Presley first performed the song February 11 on
Stage Show). An automobile accident en route to New York prevented the group from next appearing on
The Perry Como Show on March 24. Perkins returned to the
Jubilee on February 2, 1957 to again sing "Blue Suede Shoes" and his then-current hit, "
Matchbox". Both Perkins and Presley were fans of the
Jubilee. In 1955, Presley saw
Charlie Hodge, his eventual friend and stage assistant, perform on the program. He first met Hodge when a
Jubilee promotional unit later visited
Memphis, Tennessee. That same year, Presley asked Bobby Lord to get him an appearance on the show, but Lord told Presley the producers viewed him as "a flash in the pan."
Patsy Cline Patsy Cline made sixteen appearances on the
Jubilee, which gave her the opportunity to choose her own material for a national audience. She first appeared in January 1956, returning on April 21. In 1957, she appeared on February 9; and on June 22 (the
Oklahoma State Fair remote) she performed "
Walkin' After Midnight" and "Try Again". On August 10, 1957 she sang her new single, "Three Cigarettes (In an Ashtray)" and "Try Again". Her December 5 appearance included "Make Believe", a duet with Foley; "I Don't Wanna Know"; and "Then You'll Know". During the program, Foley presented Cline with
The Billboard's Most Promising County & Western Female Artist award, and
Music Vendor magazine's award for Greatest Achievement in Records in 1957 (for "Walkin' After Midnight"). In 1958, Cline appeared on February 21 and April 26. On November 7, 1959, she sang "Walkin' After Midnight" and "Come on In", then "Let's Go to Church" as a duet with Slim Wilson. On December 7, she sang her "Got a Lot of Rhythm in My Soul" and "
Lovesick Blues", released in January 1960; and sang duets with Ferlin Husky (
"Let it Snow") and Foley ("
Winter Wonderland"). On June 4, 1960, Cline soloed with "Lovesick Blues" and "How Can I Face Tomorrow", released in July; and sang "I'm Hogtied Over You" with Cowboy Copas and "Rueben, Reuben" with
June Valli and Eddy Arnold. == Junior Jubilee ==