- Myrna Lorrie
-
Myrna Lorrie (b. Lorraine Petrunka, August 6, 1940, Cloud Bay, Ontario) is a Canadian country singer.
Lorrie first sang publicly at age 12 on Fort William radio station CKPR. At age 14 she recorded the song "Are You Mine" with Buddy DuVall, which was released on Abbott Records. The song became a hit in both Canada and the United States; it reached #6 on the US Country Singles chart in 1955.[1] She then toured North America with Hank Snow.
Lorrie then took a hiatus from performing until 1963. In 1964 she started The Myrna Lorrie Show, which ran on Canadian television until 1969. Several hits for Columbia Records followed, including "Tell Me Not to Go", "Turn Down the Music", and "Changing of the Seasons".[2] She continued performing on television into the 1980s, co-hosting Countrytime on CBC from 1970 to 1974 and Nashville Swing from 1977 to 1981. Her 1989 release Blue Blue Me yielded the Canadian hits "Blue Blue Me" and "Sometime".
Lorrie was awarded two Juno awards for best female country singer, in 1970 and 1971. She was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 1989.
Contents
Discography
Albums
This list of songs or music-related items is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.- Myrna Lorrie (Harmony Records)
- Child to Woman (Musicor Records)
- It's Countrytime (MCA Records)
- Blue Blue Me (Sibley Records, 1989)
Singles
Year Single Chart Positions CAN Country US Country 1955 "Are You Mine" — 6 1964 "Do You Wish You Were Free" 2 — 1965 "I Can't Live with Him" 1 — 1966 "Your Special Day" 7 — 1968 "Turn Down the Music" 2 — "Changing of the Seasons" 4 — 1971 "Bringing Mary Home" 37 — 1989 "Blue Blue Me" 25 — References
- ^ Billboard Singles, Allmusic.com
- ^ Myrna Lorrie at the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
Categories:- 1940 births
- Canadian country singers
- Canadian female singers
- Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Abbott Records artists
- RCA Victor artists
- Columbia Records artists
- People from Thunder Bay District
- Living people
- Juno Award winners
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.