Patsy Cline

Patsy Cline
Patsy Clinewas an American country music singer. Part of the early 1960s Nashville sound, Cline successfully "crossed over" to pop music and was one of the most influential, successful and acclaimed vocalists of the 20th century. She died at the age of 30 in a multiple-fatality crash of the private plane of her manager, Randy Hughes...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionCountry Singer
Date of Birth8 September 1932
CityWinchester, VA
CountryUnited States of America
Anybody that'll stand up to The Cline is all right.
I played with Arthur Godfrey for about a year and a half.
I would never have gone anywhere if it hadn't been for Mother's faith and support.
Carnegie Hall was real fabulous, but you know, it ain't as big as the Grand Ole Opry.
I'd like to do my first record I ever made, A Church, a Courtroom, and Then Goodbye.
I wish to be put away in a western dress I designed, with my daughter's little gold cross necklace and my son's small white testament in my hands, and my wedding band on.
It sure gives me faith and a wonderful feeling to know how many fans and friends are wanting me well again.
You're gonna have to learn to get out there in front of those cameras and hold your head up. Take charge when you're singing.
You might say it was my return to the living that launched me as a singer. I was placed in an oxygen tent, and the doctors brought me back to life.
The final words of a domestic bully: If you leave me now furious angels will descend upon you and bring you back to me.
The one thing I wanted to do more than anything else was sing country music.
My new house is going to have wall-to-wall awards!
I can't miss a night's work and let my public down.
Boys, they can't take my refrigerator now. They'll never get my car now. I paid cash for 'em and they're mine, and I'm keepin' 'em!