Mickey Gilley

2022 - 5 - 7

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Image courtesy of "Deadline"

Mickey Gilley Dies: Proprietor Of World's Biggest Honky Tonk ... (Deadline)

Gilley's was a football-field-sized dancehall, boasting a capacity of 6,000. It caught fire as the center of the John Travolta-Debra Winger film Urban Cowboy in ...

He grew up with his two famous cousins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart, surrounded by the influence of music. Before that, Gilley was a country music singer who made his mark with “Is It Wrong for Loving You,” and had 39 Top Ten Hits on the BIllboard Country Music charts. Mickey Gilley, who ran one of the world’s largest honky tonks in Pasadena, Texas and was credited with helping foster country music’s revival in the late ’70s as a key part of the Urban Cowboy film, has died.

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Celebrity death: American country music singer, songwriter Mickey ... (WPVI-TV)

PASADENA, Texas -- Country music artist Mickey Gilley dies at 86 years old, according to Mayor of Pasadena Jeff Wagner. The video above is from a previous ...

Gilley grew up surrounded by the influence of music with his two famous cousins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart. Gilley grew up surrounded by the influence of music with his two famous cousins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart. In 1980 he appeared in the film "Urban Cowboy" alongside John Travolta, Debra Winger, and Johnny Lee. He later went on to star in numerous popular television series including "Murder She Wrote," "The Fall Guy," "Fantasy Island" and "Dukes of Hazzard."

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Mickey Gilley, American country music singer dies at 86 (KPLC)

Lake Charles, LA (KPLC) - Jeff Wagner, Mayor of Pasadena, Texas, announced in a Facebook post that country singer/songwriter Mickey Gilley has passed away ...

“Our prayers for comfort and peace are with Mickey’s family, his loved ones and his fans,” Wagner said. Pasadena gained exposure around the world when Gilley’s Club was shown in the 1980 film, “Urban Cowboy”. Gilley charted 42 singles in the Top 40 Country Charts over a span of two decades.

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Mickey Gilley, country singer who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy ... (WAGM)

Country star Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy” and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots, ...

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. Overall, he had 39 Top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "KPRC Click2Houston"

'A true legend': Mickey Gilley, popular Country Western singer, dies ... (KPRC Click2Houston)

The Country Western community lost a legend regarding the death of Mickey Gilley who died on Saturday, sources say.

“We were so honored to have Mickey perform at our State of the City in February, 2020. Our prayers for comfort and peace are with Mickey’s family, his loved ones and his fans.” According to Gilleys.com, the singer was born on March 9, 1936, in Natchez, Mississippi. His biography says he grew up in Louisiana where he learned the sounds of rhythm and blues by sneaking up to the windows of the clubs at night.

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Country music legend Mickey Gilley dead at 86 (KHOU.com)

Country music legend Mickey Gilley died on Saturday, Pasadena Mayor Jeff Wagner announced. He was 86-years-old.

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County music legend, and longtime Branson entertainer Mickey ... (KY3)

BRANSON, Mo. (AP/KY3) - NEW YORK (AP) — Country star Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy” and a nationwide ...

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. Overall, he had 39 Top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

Country singer Mickey Gilley dies at age 86 - CNN (CNN)

Country singer Mickey Gilley, best known as the pioneer of the "urban cowboy" style, died Saturday in Branson, Missouri, his publicist Zach Farnum said.

Gilley was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1984. "We just lost a great human being," Brown said. starting with "Room Full of Roses" in 1974.

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Image courtesy of "Variety"

Mickey Gilley, Country Star Whose Texas Club Was Backdrop for ... (Variety)

Mickey Gilley, the country music icon whose bar served as the backdrop for John Travolta's "Urban Cowboy," has died. He was 86.

In 1971, Gilley launched the honky-tonk Gilley’s in Pasadena, Texas, which would later feature in the hit 1980 romantic drama “Urban Cowboy,” starring John Travolta and directed by James Bridges. The film’s popularity helped country music reach new audiences throughout the 1980s. Gilley’s honky-tonk served as the setting for the film, which led to the musician’s ascension into screen acting, with roles in television series such as “Murder She Wrote,” “The Fall Guy,” “Fantasy Island” and “Dukes of Hazzard.” Credited with popularizing the Urban Cowboy movement, Gilley’s music, including hit songs like “Stand By Me,” “Room Full of Roses” and “Lonely Nights,” created a bridge from the artist’s country roots to an ascension on pop charts.

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Image courtesy of "Houston Chronicle"

Mickey Gilley, country music icon and 'Urban Cowboy' inspiration ... (Houston Chronicle)

'He passed peacefully with his family and close friends by his side,' read a statement.

He eventually found his place in country music, and the popularity of Gilley’s made him a superstar. Gilley earned numerous honors throughout his career, including six ACM Awards, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and induction into the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame. Gilley's last album, "Two Old Cats," was released in 2018. "And it makes sense to me. All I recall is it was the ride of my life.” "I lost the use of my hands when I fell, and like to have broke my neck, so I can't play piano anymore.” "It was my great honor to know this man most of my life," Wagner wrote. A conversation about recording a couple of songs just for fun eventually became the “Two Old Cats” album. Jeff Wagner, Mayor of Pasadena, wrote on Facebook that "Pasadena has lost a true legend." His music was originally inspired by Louisiana's rhythm and blues, but much of it had a polished, countrypolitan sound. Gilley, despite his advanced age and share of mishaps, continued to make appearances. It inspired the movie "Urban Cowboy" and took country music to new heights of popularity. He played himself in the 1980 film starring John Travolta and Debra Winger.

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Country music icon Mickey Gilley dies at age 86 (KLTV)

PASADENA, Texas (KLTV) - Country music legend Mickey Gilley has died, according to Pasadena Mayor Jeff Wagner. KTRK in Houston reported that Gilley died at ...

“Gilley says ‘Gilley’s; The World’s Biggest Honkey Tonk’ was the turning point in his career,” a previous East Texas News story stated. At the time of the interview with Hallmark, Gilley was recovering from a fall that paralyzed him. That year, KLTV’s Joan Hallmark interviewed the country music legend for her Proud of East Texas series. “We were so honored to have Mickey perform at our State of the City in February 2020.” Gilley had been dealing with health issues before his death. It was my great honor to know this man most of my life.”

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Image courtesy of "Bay to Bay News"

Mickey Gilley, who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy,' dies at 86 (Bay to Bay News)

FILE - Mickey Gilley poses with the Triple Crown Award on the red carpet at the 50th annual Academy of Country Music Awards at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, ...

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. Overall, he had 39 Top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "The New York Times"

Mickey Gilley, Country Music Star Whose Club Inspired 'Urban ... (The New York Times)

Mr. Gilley, who had more than 30 chart-topping records, owned a Texas nightclub that was behind a country music revival.

The mechanical bull was certainly a major draw at Gilley’s, but Mr. Gilley always made it clear that it was not his idea. No longer a presence on the country charts, he also marketed his own brand of beer and made cameos in prime-time television shows like “The Fall Guy” and “Fantasy Island.” “It was never meant to be in a nightclub.” Although he was unable to play the piano again, he otherwise recovered and resumed singing in public well into his 80s. Mr. Gilley closed the honky-tonk in 1989, a year before a fire destroyed much of the building. Well into his 30s before he had his first hit, and over 40 when his nightclub achieved widespread acclaim, Mr. Gilley was something of a late bloomer. He was married to Vivian McDonald from 1962 until her death in 2019. His first recording to reach the charts, “Is It Wrong (For Loving You),” in 1959, featured the future star Kenny Rogers on bass guitar. But it worked because of what it represented — country music and the cowboy image.” Gilley’s and the scene that coalesced around it also brought country music newfound crossover success with adult contemporary radio. He placed 34 records in the country Top Ten during his two decades on the charts. Among the hall’s main attractions was its mechanical bull, a repurposed piece of rodeo-training equipment on which the club’s more intrepid patrons vied to see who could ride the longest before being thrown off.

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Mickey Gilley, country singer who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy ... (wflx)

Country star Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy” and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots, ...

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. Overall, he had 39 Top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "The Washington Post"

Mickey Gilley, singer whose club inspired 'Urban Cowboy,' dies at 86 (The Washington Post)

He had 17 No. 1 country hits, and his nightclub in Texas was the inspiration for the 1980 film "Urban Cowboy."

“I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Mr. Gilley told the Associated Press in 2002. Mr. Gilley began performing in the 1950s but found little success before opening opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Tex., in the early 1970s. His Texas nightclub shut down in 1989 and was destroyed by fire soon afterward. Mickey Leroy Gilley was born March 9, 1936, in Natchez, Miss. He grew up across the Mississippi River from Ferriday, La., where he learned to play boogie-woogie piano and sing with his cousins, rock-and-roll star Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart, the future evangelist. The soundtrack included such hits as Johnny Lee’s “Lookin’ for Love,” Boz Scaggs’s “Look What You’ve Done to Me” and Mr. Gilley’s “Stand by Me.” The movie turned the Pasadena club into an overnight tourist draw and popularized pearl snap shirts, longneck beers, the steel guitar and mechanical bulls across the country. Such hit songs as “Stand By Me” and “Lonely Nights” created a bridge from the artist’s country roots to an ascension on pop charts and were credited with popularizing the Urban Cowboy movement.

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Image courtesy of "NBC News"

Mickey Gilley, country star who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy,' dies ... (NBC News)

Country star Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy” and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots, ...

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. Overall, he had 39 Top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "Cowboys and Indians"

Happy Trails To Mickey Gilley (Cowboys and Indians)

The celebrated singer-songwriter Mickey Gilley charted with such hits as “Room Full of Roses,” “Lonely Nights” and “Stand by Me.”

I loved the day I was fortunate to hang out backstage with Johnny Lee & Mickey Gilley during one of their shows. “Another great loss in Country Music — so sad to hear of the passing of Mickey Gilley. Our paths crossed a few times being in Branson; and Gene Watson and I did his TV show. Not only was he a great singer he owned the biggest nightclub in Texas at one time. No one could play a honky-tonk piano better than Gilley, and no one had a better time on stage than Gilley. After his accident took away his ability to play, he often called me to play piano for him when he was in Nashville. He said I sounded more like Mickey Gilley than he did. “With the Urban Cowboy movement of the 1970s, Mickey Gilley introduced his unique piano playing style to a whole new generation. “Mickey Gilley is one of the most famous country singers of all time. “My heart aches hearing of the passing of the incomparable Mickey Gilley. I was blessed to have known him and to have had the honor to record a song with him. I truly respect him as a musician and he was a great entertainer. We had performed a lot around the country together and especially at his Gilley’s club in Texas. We had quite a time! “I enjoyed working on Mickey Gilley records as a backup singer, with the great Eddie Kilroy as producer. Mayor of Pasadena Jeff Wagner paid tribute to Gilley on Saturday: “His talent and larger-than-life personality helped ignite a new interest in country music as he introduced the world to Pasadena through his dance hall and Urban Cowboy in 1980. A native of Natchez, Mississippi, Gilley was widely credited as influencing generations of country music artists with his signature combination of Louisiana rhythm and blues and country-pop crossover melodies.

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Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

Country singer Mickey Gilley, who helped inspire Urban Cowboy ... (The Guardian)

Star said the film – based on his Texas club – had 'huge impact' on his career while in life 'I am doing exactly what I want to do'

He moved to Houston to work construction but played the local club scene at night and recorded and toured for years before catching on in the 1970s. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley said in 2002. By mid-decade, he was a successful club owner and had enjoyed his first commercial success with Room Full of Roses. He began turning out country hits regularly, including Window Up Above, She’s Pulling Me Back Again and the honky-tonk anthem Don’t the Girls All Get Prettier at Closing Time. Overall, he had 39 top 10 country hits and 17 No. 1 songs.

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Image courtesy of "Los Angeles Times"

Mickey Gilley, musician whose club inspired the Travolta film 'Urban ... (Los Angeles Times)

Mickey Gilley, a musician who scored more than three dozen top-10 country hits and whose honky-tonk club inspired the 1980 film "Urban Cowboy" and the ...

People go to the music show, they go fishing; it’s one of the most beautiful areas in the country.” ... It was the first time you could walk into a casino in Las Vegas or Reno or Lake Tahoe or Atlantic City and see guys in cowboy hats.” “Branson is the most amazing and exciting thing that’s happened to me in my lifetime,” Gilley told The Times in 1994. “Everyone became a cowboy or cowgirl,” Gilley recalled to The Times later. “The only reason I got into the music industry was because of Jerry Lee,” Gilley told The Times in 1994. “I saw what he was doing, and since I played piano and sang, I thought all I had to do was cut a record and I’m a star.

Mickey Gilley, who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy,' dies at 86 (NPR)

Country star Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film "Urban Cowboy" and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots, ...

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Image courtesy of "Jackson Clarion Ledger"

Mississippi native Mickey Gilley, who helped inspire 'Urban Cowboy ... (Jackson Clarion Ledger)

Mickey Gilley's namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy” and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots.

Like Lewis, he would sneak into the windows of Louisiana clubs to listen to rhythm and blues. “I thank John Travolta every night before bed for keeping my career alive,” Gilley told the AP in 2002. Gilley had suffered health problems in recent years. Gilley — cousin of rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis — opened Gilley’s, “the world’s largest honky tonk,” in Pasadena, Texas, in the early 1970s. In recent years, Gilley moved to Branson. Gilley was born in Mississippi in 1936.

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Image courtesy of "Variety"

Mickey Gilley Was a Consummate Musician Who Sparked 1980s ... (Variety)

The country legend, whose famous club sparked the 1980s 'Urban Cowboy' craze, always saw himself as a musician first.

Gilley was on the road when his business partner had the contraption installed, and he was not amused when he first laid eyes on it. Next thing I know, we had this guy coming down from New York and writing an article about the urban cowboy, and it was going to change my life. Now envisioning what he called “Country Night Fever,” Gilley wisely held his tongue about his dislike for the article, which he felt put country music down. Although he became synonymous with the movie and the cultural moment it sparked, in his heart he was a musician first. “Room Full of Roses” became a local and then a regional hit, and Nashville promotion man Eddie Kilroy brought the record to Playboy, where it lifted off nationally. “First thing I thought of was people getting hurt on it, and sure enough they did. Gilley became a partner in club in the early 1970s, before he was a major hitmaker and before he knew if he his career would last. By the time director James Bridges turned his lens on modern Houston for “Urban Cowby,” the club had become nationally renown as a haven for music and more. And with my cousin Jerry Lee hitting with ‘Whole Lotta Shakin’ ‘ back in the ‘50s, I felt at that time like if he could do it, I could do it, too.” So, in 1971, with partner Sherwood Cryer, he opened the doors to the nightclub that bore his name. “As far as my recording career was concerned, I didn’t think it was ever going to happen.” The singer-pianist was a versatile stylist, an outstanding instrumentalist and one of country music’s most prolific hitmakers.

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