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Okla-homey
5/17/2006, 06:58 AM
May 17, 1992 Lawrence Welk dies

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On this day in 1992, bandleader Lawrence Welk dies of pneumonia at age 89.

Welk was born in 1903 in Strasburg, North Dakota, one of eight children born to immigrants from the Alsace-Lorraine region between France and Germany. He grew up speaking German and was always bashful about his accented English.

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Welks birthplace

He dropped out of school in the fourth grade and pursued an interest in music, acquiring an accordion by mail order. When the fragile instrument broke, he struck a deal with his parents to borrow $400 for a new accordion; in return, he agreed to work on their farm until he turned 21.

He began playing at weddings and barn dances, and by his early 20s he was leading polka bands and making radio appearances.

By 1927, Welk had assembled his own band, called L.W.'s Hotsy Totsy Boys, which played regularly on a South Dakota radio show. In 1930, Welk married and began a career in business, managing such enterprises as a hotel, a restaurant, and a music store. He continued playing with his band and traveling during this time.

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A young Lawrence Welk when he was burning up the polka circuit

In 1939, Welk wrote the song that later became his theme, "Bubbles in the Wine." The song became a hit, as did about 20 other Lawrence Welk tunes, including "Don't Sweetheart Me" (1944) and "Shame on You" (1944).

In 1946, he began a series of successful engagements in California, and in 1951, he launched his own show on a local TV station in Los Angeles. The show caught on, and ABC picked it up in 1955 and began airing it on Saturday night.

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Despite lukewarm reviews at first, the show quickly drew loyal viewers. Unlike other musical programs on TV, The Lawrence Welk Show did not feature celebrity guests, chitchat, or comedy skits-- just straightforward dance music.

Although often mocked as corny and sentimental, Welk's show gained a strong following and stayed on the air for 16 years. In fact, from 1956 to 1959, his Saturday night show was so popular that ABC gave him a second hour-long show, airing first on Monday nights, later on Tuesdays, called Lawrence Welk's Top Tunes and New Talent. In 1961, he topped the charts with "Calcutta."

When ABC finally cancelled The Lawrence Welk Show in 1971, Welk began producing it himself as a syndicated series. The show became one of the most popular syndicated series of its era and gained a larger audience than ever. He retired from performing in 1982 but remained active in business, with investments in recording and music publishing.

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Lawrence Welk is buried in Culver City CA.

As a related aside, Oklahoma has a special connection to Lawrence Welk. Re-runs of "The Lawrence Welk Show" are produced by OUr own OETA for national distribution on 279 Public Television stations throughout North America...and blue-hairs everywhere thank OETA.:D

http://www.oeta.onenet.net/welk/

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Stars of the show can still be seen performing live where else? Branson bay-bee!

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Okieflyer
5/17/2006, 07:02 AM
Good work. I knew you could make even Lawrence Welk interesting...and it was!

SoonerBorn68
5/17/2006, 07:05 AM
The world might as well stopped at my grandparents' house when he was on. :D

Thanks Homey!

TUSooner
5/17/2006, 10:14 AM
Yep, both my GMs & GPs loved Lawrence.
I took a better view of him after learning that being in his band was one of the best paying gigs in the whole US of A, even in the 60s and 70s.

picasso
5/17/2006, 10:20 AM
I can remember lying in the floor of our living room watching it with the folks.

that Bobby sure could dance, and he was a Mouskateer!

a one and a two and a...

stoops the eternal pimp
5/17/2006, 10:26 AM
I remember my great grandfather who quit school in the 3rd grade to go work in the coal mines watching him every Sunday night on OETA......They were almost the exact same age..What was funny was if someone would mention how young Welk looked he would say "If I had went to wavin around a da.. stick instead of going into those mines, I d look pretty young too!"

critical_phil
5/17/2006, 10:28 AM
The world might as well stopped at my grandparents' house when he was on. :D

.....that, and Hee Haw.


as always, nice job homey.......

GDC
5/17/2006, 10:32 AM
.....that, and Hee Haw.

I was thinking the same thing.

OhU1
5/17/2006, 10:35 AM
Lawrence Welk rocks! :)

I had a few brews and was flipping the channels last week. I came across L.W. and had a few laughs. The book Stepford Wives must have been inspired by the women on that show.

Yes, my late 98 year old grandma loved the L.W. show.

stoops the eternal pimp
5/17/2006, 10:41 AM
Friggin HEE HAW....Every Saturday night at 6, I was subjected to an hour of that show...Nice lookin Hee Haw babes tho..That Lulu Roman was fine

critical_phil
5/17/2006, 10:41 AM
I was thinking the same thing.


of course Hee Haw was a little more fun to watch.





i'm referring specifically to the big juggy chicks. Hee Haw was the 70's hillbilly equivalent of modern day Telemundo.

frankensooner
5/17/2006, 10:48 AM
My family has enjoyed the Welk Family Resort in Branson! The breakfast buffet was fantastic!

picasso
5/17/2006, 10:56 AM
Friggin HEE HAW....Every Saturday night at 6, I was subjected to an hour of that show...Nice lookin Hee Haw babes tho..That Lulu Roman was fine
any show that touted the talents of Buck Owens should be blacklisted.

however, there was much Gailard.

you guys remember the guy who did the tap dancing on Lawrence Welk? I'd run in the kitchen and do my best impersonation.:D

VeeJay
5/17/2006, 11:05 AM
Wow! Everyone has a LW story.

Here's mine. My grandparents lived in Tupelo, MS. One of the performers on there, Guy Hovis, was from Tupelo. My grandmother knew his mom and whenever we visited on the weekends - the world indeed stopped while LW was on.

I thought it was boring, too. But my grandparents and my mom loved the show (mom still watches it in reruns, I think).

picasso
5/17/2006, 11:11 AM
oh it's on Saturday evenings on OETA.

baby.