Notas del episodio
Connie Smith never wanted to be famous. Bill Anderson discovered her at a talent contest, handed her a hit song called 'Once a Day,' and watched it spend eight consecutive weeks at number one—the longest run for a debut single by a female country artist in history. Smith responded to this extraordinary success by trying to walk away from it.
Smith's reluctance wasn't a pose or a negotiating tactic. She genuinely preferred her private life to the demands of stardom, and she spent decades in a quiet tug-of-war between her remarkable talent and her desire to be left alone. George Jones called her the best female country singer of all time. She wished he hadn't.
• The talent contest discovery that launched a record-breaking debut single
• Why eight weeks at number one with a debut single didn't translate to ambition
• The lifelong tension between extr ...
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