Jeannie Seely Dies: Grammy-Winning Country Artist Behind ‘Don’t Touch Me’ Was 85
She was not on the list.
Jeannie Seely, the Grammy-winning country music artist and Grand Ole Opry legend, has died. She was 85.
The artist’s rep revealed to multiple outlets that Seely died on Friday at Summit Medical Center in Hermitage, Tennessee, due to complications from an intestinal infection, following two emergency abdominal surgeries and other health problems this year.
Duane Allen of The Oak Ridge Boys remembered Seely in a
statement. “I am praying for Jeannie Seely. I believe that she’s joined Jesus
Christ, Gene Ward, Nora Lee Allen, Joe Bonsall, Rusty Golden and all of our
dear loved ones we’ve lost,” he said. “She made a lasting impact on not only
Nashville but the world. Her contribution to country music and the Grand Ole
Opry will never be forgotten. Most don’t know, but the last date I had with my
beautiful wife was a double date with Jeannie Seely and Gene Ward. My heart is
breaking right now.”
Born July 6, 1940, in Titusville, Pennsylvania, Seely’s
breakout country hit came with her 1966 single ‘Don’t Touch Me’, written by
Hank Cochran. The song earned her a Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal
Performance.
Blazing a trail as the first woman to regularly host and
emcee Grand Ole Opry segments, she became a member of the storied institution
in 1967. Seely also pushed boundaries when she became known for performing on
the Opry stage in a mini-skirt.
Seely had more than two dozen singles place on the Billboard country charts, including ‘Can I Sleep in Your Arms’ and ‘Lucky Ladies’. Through the ’60s and ’70s, she performed duets like ‘Wish I Didn’t Have to Miss You’ with her music partner Jack Greene.
On screen, Seely appeared as herself in the 1980 Jerry
Schatzberg-helmed romantic western drama Honeysuckle Rose, in addition to
starring alongside Faye Dunaway, Tom Skerritt and Ian Somerhalder in Changing
Hearts (2002). She also performed on stage in musicals The Best Little Whore
House in Texas (1988) and Always, Patsy Cline (2001), as well as a 2005
Nashville production of The Vagina Monologues.
Seely remained active in country music in her final years, also launching her ‘Sundays with Seely’ segment on Willie Nelson’s SiriusXM radio series Willie’s Roadhouse in 2018.
Preceded in death by her husband Gene Ward, parents Leo and
Irene Seely, and siblings Donald, Bernard and Mary Lou, Seeley is survived by
many close friends, family members and her cat Corrie.
Actress
Circle Sessions: At Home (2020)
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Bill Anderson: Waffle House Christmas
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Music Video
Jeannie Seely
2018
Changing Hearts (2002)
Changing Hearts
5.7
Mrs. Jenkins
2002
Confederate Railroad: Trashy Women
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Jeannie Seely
1993
Heart of Nashville: One Big Family
Music Video
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1985
Dyan Cannon, Amy Irving, and Willie Nelson in Honeysuckle
Rose (1980)
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6.3
Jeannie
1980
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Profile (2018)
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performer: "Don't Touch Me"
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Shailene Woodley, and Zoë Kravitz in Big Little Lies (2017)
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Opry Video Classics: Queens (2007)
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9.0
Video
performer: "Don't Touch Me"
2007
Dolly Parton and Porter Wagoner in Company's Comin': A
Tribute to Porter Wagoner (1997)
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TV Special
performer: "I've Enjoyed as Much of This as I Can
Stand", "In The Shade Of The Family Tree"
1997
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Rose (1980)
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6.3
performer: "Make the World Go Away"
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