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Pee Wee King was
born Julius Frank Anthony Kuczynski on February 18, 1914 in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The son of a Polish polka bandleader,
he mastered the accordion early in life. In the mid-1930s,
King and promoter J. L. rank formed the Golden West Cowboys, a
pillar of the Grand Ole Opry from 1937 to 1947. During those
years, the band boasted such Opry talents as Eddy Arnold and
Cowboy Copas.
In 1947 King
moved the group to Louisville, Kentucky, where he remained
enormously popular on television for a decade. He also
headlined TV programs in other cities including an ABC-TV
series. With band member Redd Stewart, King wrote “Tennessee
Waltz” in 1947, an American classic and one of King’s biggest
hits. This helped him win Hall of Fame membership in 1974. The
song became the official state song for Tennessee in 1965.
Other hit songs composed by King and Stewart were “Bonaparte’s
Retreat,” “Slow Poke,” and “You Belong To Me.”
King made his
film debut in 1958, appearing with Gene Autry in “Gold Mine In
The Sky.”
He disbanded the
“Golden West Cowboys” in 1968 and retired to his home in
Louisville, Kentucky. On February 28, 2000 he suffered a heart
attack and was hospitalized. Pee Wee King died on March 7,
2000.
Dusty Owens
TCM Radio News
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