The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Thursday, June 20, 2013
Patsy Cline's Restored House Opening in Winchester, Virginia
Items on display at the childhood home of country singer singer Patsy Cline in Winchester, Va. The Patsy Cline Historic House is expected to open Aug. 2 as a memorial to the singer who recorded such classics as “Crazy” and “I Fall to Pieces” before dying in a plane crash in 1963. AP Photo/Steve Helber.

By: Larry O'Dell, Associated Press

WINCHESTER, VA (AP).- Patsy Cline fans curious about the early days of her brief but highly acclaimed country music career will finally be able to do more than just drive by her old house in Winchester and snap a picture. The Patsy Cline Historic House will open Aug. 2 as a memorial to the singer who recorded such classics as "Crazy" and "I Fall to Pieces" before dying in a plane crash in 1963. Visitors will be able to step through the door of 608 S. Kent St. and back in time some six decades for a glimpse of how Virginia "Ginny" Patterson Hensley lived from her mid-teens to mid-20s, as she emerged from small-town obscurity to become one of music's most enduring and influential superstars.

"The fact that her music seems timeless brings a whole new group in every generation that keeps her alive," said Cline's daughter, Julie Fudge of Nashville. "Her career was a small amount of years, and she had lots of accolades, but I don't think she imagined the things that would come after she died."

Cline's husband, Charlie Dick of Nashville, said Patsy's premature death at age 30 and the question of how much more she might have accomplished is "part of the mystique" that continues to fuel interest in her life and career. But Cline's sophisticated, genre-defying voice also explains her iconic status, he said.

"Her voice was the first of that type in country music," Dick said, noting its appeal to a broader audience than hardcore country fans.

In fact, Cline biographer Douglas Gomery said many of Cline's hit records made both the country and pop charts.

"It's really complex music," said Gomery, a retired University of Maryland media studies professor, resident scholar at the Library of American Broadcasting and author of "Patsy Cline: The Making of an Icon."

For decades, Cline's fans have had to satisfy their curiosity about her early years in Winchester by cruising past her once-dilapidated former home on Kent Street, dropping by the drugstore where she worked as a teenage soda jerk, and paying homage at her gravesite just outside the Shenandoah Valley city of 26,000 that is known for apples and Civil War sites.

The public's ongoing fascination with the first female solo artist inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame prompted a group of Winchester residents to establish a nonprofit corporation, Celebrating Patsy Cline Inc., which purchased and renovated the home. Cline moved to the house with her mother and two siblings in November 1948, the year after her parents split up. She lived there until June 1957, except for a few years during her first marriage to Gerald Cline. Her mother, Hilda Hensley, rented at first but later bought the home.

Cline was living in the tiny two-story frame house when she signed her first record deal, made her Grand Ole Opry debut and won Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts television competition — a sort of '50s version of American Idol — by singing "Walkin' After Midnight," which became her first hit record.

"There's no museum for her, so this is the actual place that she lived the longest in her short life," said Gomery, who also is Celebrating Patsy Cline's historian. "She really made the transition from amateur singer to professional singer when she lived there."

Said Fudge: "I think when you go into the house, you will kind of feel like this is a snapshot of what it would have been like to visit when Mom lived there."

What visitors will see is a home that was typical for families of modest means during that era: small rooms, low ceilings, scaled-down furniture and very little storage space. Celebrating Patsy Cline spent about $100,000 renovating the house and equipping it with appliances and furniture intended to replicate the way the home looked when the singer lived there. Only a few items are original.

The first stop is the living room — a compact space with gleaming, refinished pine floors that Ron Hottle, president of Celebrating Patsy Cline, said predate the Civil War. The house originally was an early-1800s log cabin, and some of the original logs are exposed under Plexiglas next to the front door.

Visitors may notice one of the few nods to modern building codes: a wheelchair ramp into the living area. Central heating and air also was added, Hottle said.

Decor was kept to a minimum to allow room for visitors: a floral-print sofa with lace doilies, an end table holding a turquoise lamp and black rotary-dial telephone and ashtray, a small chair flanked by a rack of vintage magazines, a 1951 television, family photos and an 8-by-10 of Cline in one of her cowgirl outfits on the fireplace mantel.

In the dining room, visitors will see an old Singer sewing machine like the one her mother used to make a living as a seamstress, and to make costumes similar to one displayed on a mannequin a few feet away. Hottle said some of Cline's original costumes, still faintly smelling of the cigarette smoke that hung in the 1950s honky-tonk air, are in climate-controlled storage for display in a museum that Celebrating Patsy Cline hopes to eventually open elsewhere in Winchester.

Adjacent to the dining room is a galley-style kitchen that was added when Cline lived there. Originally a porch, the room is equipped with '50s appliances and basic white cabinets packed with souvenirs that will be available for purchase — coffee mugs, assorted trinkets, videos and Gomery's book.

Upstairs is the lone bedroom that was shared by all four family members. Pat Brannon, Cline's cousin, remembers the sleeping arrangements: Patsy in the twin bed closest to the door, her mother and younger sister in a double bed on the other side of an apple-crate nightstand, and her little brother in another single bed tucked into the corner. Two tiny closets and a four-drawer dresser — one drawer for each family member — provided all the storage space the family needed.

"People just didn't have a lot of clothes back then like they do now," Brannon said.

Brannon, who spent considerable time in the house as a child, said the restoration accurately portrays 608 S. Kent St. as she remembers it. She also said it brings back personal memories of helping out around the house, bringing in firewood and watching her Aunt Hilda on the Singer, working the treadle as the bobbin spun out thread for one of Patsy's fringed cowgirl outfits.

Hottle said many of the 20 docents who will conduct tours of the house have personal memories of Cline to share. Although those tours will begin Aug. 2, the official ribbon-cutting will not be until Labor Day weekend, when the Patsy Cline Fan Club has its annual get-together.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

July 26, 2011

Rare Gold Bell Discovered by Archaeologists from Israel in Excavations in Jerusalem

Sotheby's at Chatsworth: A Selling Exhibition of Monumental Sculpture Announced

In Focus: The Sky, Thematically-Installed Exhibition at the J. Paul Getty Museum

Film Archives Showcase Their Collections: The European Film Gateway is Online

The Städel Museum to Present the Exhibition "Beckmann & America" in October

A Collection of Chinese Rhinoceros Horn Cups Sets Antiques Roadshow Record

Western Art Stampede! Coeur d' Alene Art Auction Sale in Nevada Tops $16.7 Million

Catholic Diocese Offers to Buy Financially Struggling Crystal Cathedral

Hollywood Engineer's Kissed, Autographed Marilyn Monroe 1952 Yankees Baseball Surfaces at Sale

As Curator Paula Rego Sees the Sadness in "Naked Girl with Egg" Painting by Lucian Freud

1914 Doll Created by French Sculptor Albert Marque a $168,000 Thriller at Frasher's July 9 Auction

Bank of America Merrill Lynch to Loan Sixty Works of Art for Exhibition in Paris

Werewolf of London Insert Poster Brings $47,800 to Lead $1.3 Million+ Heritage Auction Movie Poster Sale

Rare Seven Foot Stone Horse from the Chinese Ming Dynasty Expected to Fetch in Excess of £100,000

Racine Art Museum Showcases Ornamented Vessels by Wisconsin Metalsmith

Bonhams to Sell Maharaja's Tiger Hunting Rolls Royce Complete with Cannon, Machine Gun and Rifle Stand

The Studio Museum in Harlem Summer 2011 Exhibitions and Projects

In Exhibition, Ludwig Museum in Budapest Looks at Itself in the Mirror Held by the Artists

Titanosaur Nest on View in Exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History

New Christopher Le Brun Exhibition on View at Canary Wharf

Metropolitan Museum Highlights Frans Hals Paintings from Collection in Exhibition

PowerHouse Books Publishes Age of Silver by American Photographer John Loengard

dOCUMENTA (13) Partners with (CPPC) to Offer a Curatorial Fellowship for Curators and Scholars from Latin America

Mexico 200-Year Monument: Late, Costly, Un-Mexican

July 25, 2011

MoMA Exhibition Investigates Communication Between People and Objects through Design

World Renowned Hat Designer Philip Treacy Co-Curates Tate Collection Display

Philadelphia Museum Announces the Acquisition of Major Work by Daniel Garber

Striking New "Road to 2012" Exhibition Opens at the National Portrait Gallery in London

Contemporary Art Museum in Raleigh Designed by LA-Based Brooks + Scarpa Opens

Paris Photo 2011 Takes African Photography as Its Special Theme for This Year's Edition

Gérard Seghers: Between Mannerism and Caravagism at Musée des Beaux-Arts de Valenciennes

High Altitude: A Festival of Contemporary Mountain Photography in Switzerland

Mallick Williams & Co. Presents First Photography Exhibition with Artists Filippo Chia and Michael M Koehler

World Monuments Fund Presents 24th Annual Hadrian Award to Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder

Nasser D Khalili's Sons Open a New Concept Gallery on Mayfair's Mount Street

21st Edition of Braga Photo Festival to Offer New Visions on Social Documentary Photography

New Gallery to Bring Global Art to New York's Most Distinguished Gallery Street

Sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld Awarded an Honorary OBE

David Lynch Designs Interior of Club at Abandoned Landmark in Paris

Robot Nation: An Outdoor Installation for the 21st Century at the Norman Rockwell Museum

David Askevold: The Disorientation Scientist at Camden Arts Centre

Mesolithic "Rest Stop" Found at United Kingdom Supermarket Site

July 24, 2011

Cross-Shaped Steel Beam Found Amid Trade Center Wreckage Moved to Permanent Home

The Royal Wedding Dress at the Summer Opening of Buckingham Palace

Another Alleged Marilyn Monroe Sex Film Surfaces; Spanish Collector to Auction It

Major Collection of Frederick Kiesler Drawings and Sculptures Donated to Philadelphia Museum

Bonhams Announces Sale of One of the World's Finest Collections of Victorian Books

World's Largest Photograph on View at University of California, Riverside's Sweeney Art Gallery

Princeton University Art Museum Presents The Life and Death of Buildings

Concrete Section of 'Hitler's Wall' Sent to National World War II Museum in New Orleans

Peter Fischli and David Weiss Arrange Sculpture Exhibition at Gallery Eva Presenhuber

Photographs of Musicians by Laura Levine in Her First Exhibition at Steven Kasher Gallery

Ten Ways to Look at the Past at the National Gallery of Victoria's Ian Potter Centre

Museum Acquires Major Private Collection of Works by Self-Taught Artists

National Park Service's Chief Historian Says Three Possible Japanese Airmen for Skull

Masterpieces of Chinese Lacquer from the Mike Healy Collection at Heather James Fine Art

Modern Masters: New Paintings by Sean Scully and John Walker at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Camden Arts Centre Presents Mathilde Rosier: Necklace of Fake Teeth

Time/Bank: A platform for the Cultural Sector through which Goods and Services can Be Exchanged

July 23, 2011

Great Olmeca Treasures on View at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City

Archaeologists Uncover Biblical Ruin Inside a Palestinian City in the West Bank

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Uses Computer Models to Study Exoplanet Auroras

Aldourie Castle in Scotland Announced as Winner of The Historic Houses Restoration Award 2011

Metropolitan Museum Announces Highest Attendance in 40 Years: 5.68 Million

First Dorothea Rockburne Retrospective on View at Parrish Art Museum

Five International Buildings Shortlisted for the Prestigious RIBA 2011 Lubetkin Prize

Group Exhibition of Artists Explores the Influence and Effects of Control Mechanisms on the Human Body

Philadelphia Museum Acquires Major Works by Monet, Pissarro, Sisley, and Cassatt

Art Gallery of Ontario to Present Major Pablo Picasso Survey Exhibition in 2012

Connecticut Auction House, Alexander Autographs, Says It Sold Josef Mengele Journals

1952 Chrysler D'Elegance Leads Sensational Concepts at RM Auctions' Sale in Monterey

Tel Aviv Museum of Art Presents Retrospective Exhibition Yakov Agor: A Photographer

Two New Exhibitions Open at the Gibbes Museum of Art

Sangha: An Installation by Kathryn Walker Opens at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Archivists Check Collections in Wake of Md. Theft

Arkansas Natural Sandstone Bridge Sells at Auction

1888 Edison Recording may Be First Talking Doll Try

High Museum of Art Appoints Louise Sams New Board Chairwoman

July 22, 2011

British Realist Painter Lucian Freud, Famed for His Nudes, has Died Aged 88

Archaeologists Uncover Biblical Ruin Inside a Palestinian City in the West Bank

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Uses Computer Models to Study Exoplanet Auroras

Aldourie Castle in Scotland Announced as Winner of The Historic Houses Restoration Award 2011

Metropolitan Museum Announces Highest Attendance in 40 Years: 5.68 Million

First Dorothea Rockburne Retrospective on View at Parrish Art Museum

Five International Buildings Shortlisted for the Prestigious RIBA 2011 Lubetkin Prize

Group Exhibition of Artists Explores the Influence and Effects of Control Mechanisms on the Human Body

Philadelphia Museum Acquires Major Works by Monet, Pissarro, Sisley, and Cassatt

Art Gallery of Ontario to Present Major Pablo Picasso Survey Exhibition in 2012

Harry Ransom Center Says Iconic 'Gone With the Wind' Dress Faded Forever

Archaeologists Unearth Skull of Japanese Pilot Who Fought in Historic Attack of Pearl Harbor

Wende Museum's Cold War Visual Archive to be Subject of Major Taschen Book

Rhode Island Art Dealer Gets 16 Years in Invention Scam

Experts to Catalog South Indian Temple Treasures

New York City Fire Truck Lowered Into 9/11 Display

Smithsonian's National Postal Museum Receives Donation for the William H. Gross Stamp Gallery

Henry Luce Foundation Grant to Advance Scholarship on Tibetan Painting Awarded to Rubin Museum

Saint Mary's College of California to Expand Hearst Art Gallery

Pavilion of Art & Design London Announces More Details

Good Doctor's Suits of Armour Make 782,508 in Sell Out Auction At Bonhams

Exhibition of Flower Drawings at Fitzwilliam Museum Explores the Legacy of Redouté

artnet Auctions Announces Important Selection of 20th Century and Contemporary Design

Connie Wolf Appointed Next Director of Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University

Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize 2011 Shortlist Announced in London

Christie's Announces Global Art Sales Total $3.2 Billion in the First Half of 2011

Rare Early Marilyn Monroe Images, First Time at Auction, Offered by Heritage Auctions

Prado Displays Caravaggio's Entombment of Christ, on Loan from the Vatican Museums

Auction of Mike Mitchell's Beatles Photographs He Took as a Teen Soars Over $300,000 at Christie's

July 21, 2011

British Realist Painter Lucian Freud, Famed for His Nudes, has Died Aged 88

Auction of Mike Mitchell's Beatles Photographs He Took as a Teen Soars Over $300,000 at Christie's

Prado Displays Caravaggio's Entombment of Christ, a Masterpiece Loaned from the Vatican Museums

Rare Early Marilyn Monroe Images, First Time at Auction, Offered by Heritage Auctions

Christie's Announces Global Art Sales Total $3.2 Billion in the First Half of 2011

Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize 2011 Shortlist Announced in London

Connie Wolf Appointed Next Director of Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University

artnet Auctions Announces Important Selection of 20th Century and Contemporary Design

Exhibition of Flower Drawings at Fitzwilliam Museum Explores the Legacy of Redouté

Good Doctor's Suits of Armour Make 782,508 in Sell Out Auction At Bonhams

Grand Openings Return of the Blogs Commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art in New York

Original Spider-Man #49 Cover Art, by John Romita Sr., Expected to Bring $100,000+ at Heritage Auctions

Important Decorative Arts Acquisitions Announced by Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Art

Chateau Lafite Rothschild 1982 Brings $50,788 to Lead $2.7+ Million Heritage Wine Auction

National Museum Wales' Historic Photography Goes Digital Thanks to Gift

Life of Russian Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin in Britain Exhibition at the British Council

Claremont Rug Company Announces a "New" Trend Among Connoisseurs of Art-Level Antique Carpets

Stolen Painting Believed to Be a Modigliani Held Clue to Serbia War Crimes Arrest

Two New Exhibitions Open at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston

Sotheby's to Support Charity Jewels Auction in Mumbai: 'Emeralds for Elephants'

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Announces New Deputy Director for Advancement

Kenneth Grange Making Britain Modern Opens at the Design Museum in London

Only Copy of Magna Carta in the United States Treated at National Archives in Washington

Ex-Astronaut Edgar Mitchell Says Apollo 14 Moon Mission Camera was a NASA Gift

World Record om artnet Auctions: Andy Warhol Flowers Painting Sold for Over US 1.3 Million

Jury: United States Government Rightfully Seized 1933 Gold Coins

artMRKT Hamptons, July 14-17, Debuts with Strong Sales and Attendance

Photographs of Sikkim by Alice Kandell are Now Online

Smithsonian Names New Under Secretary for Finance and Administration and Chief Financial Officer

NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman Announces New Research on the Value Added by Cultural Industries

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Investigators analyse ashes taken from the house of one of the suspects as Dutch heist paintings feared burnt

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- A team of twelve restorers inspect the "Isenheim Altarpiece" at the Unterlinden museum

4.- Russian scientists make rare find of 'blood' in carcass of female woolly mammoth

5.- Taliban criticise Kabul's pink balloon art project by 31-year-old artist from New York

6.- Gagosian Gallery in London presents a group of four tapestries by Gerhard Richter

7.- Archaeologists find Colonial and Pre-hispanic vestiges thought to be 500-1,000 years-old

8.- RM stuns market as Villa Erba sale realises more than $35 million; Ferrari sells for $12,812,800

9.- Indianapolis Museum of Art receives major painting by William-Adolphe Bouguereau

10.- Newly discovered prisoner journal donated to Auschwitz by widow of US lieutenant Clifford Hensel



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site