Jean Shepard Biography | Country Music | Ken Burns | PBS

Jean Shepard Biography

Closeup image of Jean Shepard
CREDIT: Buddy Squires, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

In the 1950s, self-supporting female country artists were rare. Women who rose to stardom on the West Coast rather than through the Grand Ole Opry were rarer still, as were women who adopted a hard-edged honky-tonk style or sang from a woman’s perspective. Jean Shepard was all that and more. Neither a “girl singer” with a male-fronted band nor part of a husband–wife team, Shepard was among the first women in country music to front her own tour and sing on topics that dealt frankly with love, helping pave the way for artists such as Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton.

Jean was born into a sharecropper’s family in Oklahoma, in the midst of the Great Depression.

I had a hard life, but it was a good life. I had a wonderful mother and daddy. I chopped corn and I picked cotton. And it didn’t hurt me a bit. But every Saturday night, we’d take an hour off and turn on an old radio and listen to the Grand Ole Opry. That’s how I come about country music – and loved the sounds that came out of that radio.

The family moved to California in 1943, settling in Visalia. There, Jean and a handful of high school friends started a country band, the Melody Ranch Girls. In 1952, based on the recommendation of Hank Thompson, producer Ken Nelson signed 17-year-old Shepard to Capitol Records. Her second single, “A Dear John Letter” (1953), was a smash hit, reaching No. 1 on the country charts, crossing over to No. 4 pop, and becoming the first post-World War II record by a female country artist to sell more than a million copies. After recording one successful honky-tonk single after another – many featuring young Bakersfield artist Buck Owens on guitar – Jean signed onto the inaugural cast of the Ozark Jubilee television program. In November of 1955 she joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry. Shepard soon fell in love with fellow cast member Harold “Hawkshaw” Hawkins, a charismatic West Virginian known for his good looks, tall stature, and rich baritone voice. In 1960, they were married.

He wanted to be married onstage. Do you believe that? Because he loved Hank Williams, and Hank Williams had been married onstage. So it was a beautiful wedding, in front of about four thousand people. I had a lot of witnesses!

Less than two-and-a-half years later, their love affair ended in tragedy when Hawkins died in the same 1963 airplane crash that took the lives of Patsy Cline, Cowboy Copas, and Randy Hughes. Shepard was eight months pregnant with their second son at the time. After the birth of Harold, Jr., she returned to work – ultimately releasing 73 singles to the country charts during a career that spanned more than six decades.

Jean Shepard was a part of the Grand Ole Opry cast for 60 consecutive years, making hers the longest tenure of any female member. She was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2011.

Born: November 25, 1933, Pauls Valley, Oklahoma; Died: September 25, 2016, Nashville, Tennessee

Sign up to get updates about the film and future projects from Ken Burns and Florentine Films.
Connect with Us