- Archie Campbell
Infobox musical artist
Name = Archie Campbell
Background = solo_singer
Img_capt = Archie Campbell in 1977
Born = birth date|1914|11|7 Bulls Gap,Tennessee
Died = death date and age|1987|8|29|1914|11|7 Knoxville,Tennessee
Origin = Knoxville,Tennessee , USA
Genre = Country
Occupation =Musician ,Comedian ,Actor
Label =RCA
Instrument =Archie Campbell was a writer and star of
Hee Haw , a popular long-running country-flavored television variety show. He was also a recording musician with several hits on theRCA label in the 1960s.Early career
Campbell studied art at
Mars Hill College in Mars Hill,North Carolina , after which he began a radio career atWNOX in Knoxville. After a year alongsideRoy Acuff on their "Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round" he relocated to WDOD in Chattanooga, where he stayed until joining theUnited States Navy in 1941. At the end ofWorld War II , Campbell returned to WNOX. He left that station for rivalWROL where he helped start Knoxville's first country music television show (onWROL-TV ), "Country Playhouse" that premiered in 1952 and ran until 1958.At the close of that show, he moved to Nashville to replace
Rod Brasfield on the nationally-syndicated Prince Albert segment of the famousGrand Ole Opry . Shortly after, he signed a contract withRCA Victor and one of his early singles, "Trouble in the Amen Corner" reached the 1960 Country music Top 25. After an unsuccessful stint with theStarday label, Campbell returned to RCA in 1966 and had three Top 30 singles: "The Men in My Little Girl's Life" (1966), "The Dark End of the Street " (1968), and "Tell It like It Is" (1968). He was named "Comedian of the Year" in 1969 by theCountry Music Association .Routines
One of Campbell's 'signature' routines was to tell stories in "
Spoonerism " form, with the first letters of words in some phrases intentionally switched for comic effect. The best-known of these stories was "RinderCella," his re-telling of the fairy tale "Cinderella", about the girl who "slopped her dripper" (dropped her slipper). Campbell once told the "RinderCella" story on an episode of thegame show "Juvenile Jury ". At the conclusion of the story, host Jack Barry said "That's one of the funniest stories Carchie Ampbell tells." All of Campbell's spoonerism routines borrowed heavily from comedy routines performed on the radio byColonel Stoopnagle in the 1930s. ("Colonel Stoopnagle" was the stage name of F. Chase Taylor, 1897-1950.)Campbell also performed a routine, with various partners, generally known as "That's Bad/That's Good." Campbell would state a troublesome occurrence; when the partner would sympathize by saying, "That's bad," Campbell would quickly counter, "No, that's good!", and then state a good result from the previous occurrence. When the partner would say, "That's good!", Campbell would immediately counter with "No, that's bad!" and tell the new result . . . and so on.
"Hee Haw"
In 1969 Campbell joined "Hee Haw" on
CBS as a chief writer and on-air talent. His regular characterizations included the Barber, in which he performed his Spoonerism stories and his "That's Bad/That's Good" routines; the Doctor; and, "Justus O'Peace," his version of the classic "Judge" routine ofPigmeat Markham .During his "Hee Haw" years Campbell also recorded several comedy/music albums such as "Bull Session at Bull's Creek" with
Junior Samples and "Archie Campbell" (Elektra 1976). He frequently performed duets with singerLorene Mann .Later life and death
In 1984, Campbell hosted TNN's "Yesteryear" interview show. Campbell was an accomplished amateur golfer and built one of the earliest lighted
golf course s in the United States. An avid painter, he also owned an art gallery and served on the school board in Knoxville, where he lived until he suffered a fatal heart attack in 1987. His childhood home on Main Street in Bull's Gap has been preserved as a memorial, and has been expanded into a "tourism complex and museum" which hosts annual "Archie Campbell Days" each September. He is buried near the town ofPowell, Tennessee .Following Campbell's death, U.S. Highway 11 through Bulls Gap, Tennessee was renamed "Archie Campbell Highway" in Campbell's memory.
References
* [http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/campbell_archie/artist.jhtml CMT.com profile]
* [http://www.heehaw.com/Cast-ArchieCampbell.htm HeeHaw.com profile]
*imdb name|id=0132218|name=Archie Campbell
*Jones, Loyal (1998). "Archie Campbell". In "The Encyclopedia of Country Music". Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 75-6.
*http://www.rissystreasures.com/heehaw/archie.htm
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