#LorettaLynn biopic 'Coal Miner's Daughter' was released 35 years ago today. "Loretta Lynn grew up in the remote, poverty-stricken town of Butcher Hollow, Kentucky. Named after Loretta Young, Lynn didn't do much singing in her early youth. Instead, after one month of dating, she was married at age 13 to Mooney (Moonshine) Lynn (he was 19), who took her 3,000 miles away to Custer, Washington, where he worked in logging camps. Lynn became a mother at 14 and had four children in her first four years of marriage; she was a grandmother at 29. Besides taking care of the kids, taking in other people's laundry and occasionally making extra money by picking strawberries with migrant workers, Lynn began writing songs on her Sears Roebuck guitar. Her husband encouraged her to go public and became her manager, lining up shows at local bars and clubs. At age 27 Lynn cut a record for the California Zero label, 'I'm a Honky Tonk Girl,' which she and Mooney promoted themselves by visiting radio stations around the country. They worked their way to Nashville, and the song eventually became a Number 14 hit on the C&W national chart.... In 1976 Lynn (with 'New York Times' reporter George Vecsey) wrote her autobiography, 'Coal Miner's Daughter,' and it became one of the 10 biggest-selling books of that year. In 1980 a movie based on Lynn's autobiography and starring Sissy Spacek came out, to much acclaim. Spacek, who sang Lynn's songs in the film, won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance." From RollingStone.com. Photograph by Sylvia Pitcher #CoalMinersDaughter

rollingstoneさん(@rollingstone)が投稿した動画 -

Rolling Stoneのインスタグラム(rollingstone) - 3月8日 06時20分


#LorettaLynn biopic 'Coal Miner's Daughter' was released 35 years ago today. "Loretta Lynn grew up in the remote, poverty-stricken town of Butcher Hollow, Kentucky. Named after Loretta Young, Lynn didn't do much singing in her early youth. Instead, after one month of dating, she was married at age 13 to Mooney (Moonshine) Lynn (he was 19), who took her 3,000 miles away to Custer, Washington, where he worked in logging camps. Lynn became a mother at 14 and had four children in her first four years of marriage; she was a grandmother at 29. Besides taking care of the kids, taking in other people's laundry and occasionally making extra money by picking strawberries with migrant workers, Lynn began writing songs on her Sears Roebuck guitar. Her husband encouraged her to go public and became her manager, lining up shows at local bars and clubs. At age 27 Lynn cut a record for the California Zero label, 'I'm a Honky Tonk Girl,' which she and Mooney promoted themselves by visiting radio stations around the country. They worked their way to Nashville, and the song eventually became a Number 14 hit on the C&W national chart.... In 1976 Lynn (with 'New York Times' reporter George Vecsey) wrote her autobiography, 'Coal Miner's Daughter,' and it became one of the 10 biggest-selling books of that year. In 1980 a movie based on Lynn's autobiography and starring Sissy Spacek came out, to much acclaim. Spacek, who sang Lynn's songs in the film, won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance." From RollingStone.com. Photograph by Sylvia Pitcher #CoalMinersDaughter


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

8,141

129

2015/3/8

サイコバニーのインスタグラム
サイコバニーさんがフォロー

Rolling Stoneを見た方におすすめの有名人