Good morning all,

Helping out with a good cause (music of course)!

The Louisiana Hayride's Homecoming (50th Anniversary show) will be here April
3rd, starring Willie Nelson, Gov Jimmie Davis (100 yrs old!), Kenny Wayne
Shepherd, Johnny Gimble, Jett williams, Merle Kilgore, Tilman Franks, Jerry
Kennedy, Joe Osborn, D J Fontana, Reggie Young, Billy Sanford, Maggie Lewis
Warwick, Felton Pruitt, Johnny Gimble!, KWKH DJ Frank Page, Bryan and Gordon
Kennedy, Kenny Bill Stinson, Buddy Flett, and David Egan many more to be
announced soon.

The show will be at the newly renovated Municipal Auditorium (Shreveport, LA),
home of the original Hayride, a beautiful hall that holds 3,000.  It will be
broadcast on select NPR stations across the country on April 17th.

Tickets are $15, $25, & $35 and are available at TicketMaster.

If all goes well (wishful thinking, crossed fingers) they're gonna have one
show a month and *possibly* syndicated TV (NOW we're talkin')!!!

*** FYI - A very special souvenir booklet, full color, 5,000 one-time
printing, will be sent to all NPR stations and special European outlets that
have interest in the Hayride.  Ad space is being sold for this booklet and the
DEADLINE is March 20 (artwork by 3/22). Those buying ad space receive
complimentary VIP tickets to the show.  *** 

Anyone interested in placing an ad in this special souvenir booklet (tax
deductible options), please E-mail me off-list.

Let's hope this is a success, the possibilities are mind-boggling.  I'm sure
everyone's thinking about who you'd LOVE to see appear on this show each
month!!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I've included a recent story which tells about the efforts of Maggie (Lewis)
and Alton Warwick to restore the Hayride, my apologies if this story has
already been posted:

*Couple seeks to restore Hayride to its former glory*
(Tuesday, January 19, 1999)
By Mary Foster
Associated Press writer 

SHREVEPORT, La. - Almost 40 years have passed since the sounds of the
Louisiana Hayride floated out over the bayous and swamps of its home state,
then west to the little towns and ranches of Texas, north and east to the
hardscrabble farms of Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama and points beyond. 

The live radio shows packed the Municipal Auditorium on Saturday nights and
had people dancing on their porches, in their living rooms and in honky-tonks
and churches around the country. The Hayride was Elvis Presley's first
national stage and launched the careers of some of country music's biggest
names.

Now Maggie and Alton Warwick are hoping to bring the Hayride back on a regular
broadcast as it was back then.

"It's amazing how many people have stories about the Hayride," said Maggie
Warwick, who first listened to the program as a west Texas teenager and later
performed on the show.

"So many people remember the shows, being there or listening to them on the
radio. It was a big part of our lives."

>From 1948 to 1960 the Hayride blossomed in the region still known as the "Ark-
La-Tex," a mix of cultures that included hillbilly, Western swing, blues,
gospel, jazz and pop music.

"People think hillbilly is a derogatory term now," said Tillman Franks, a
Hayride alumnus. "Back then it was just the kind of music a lot of people
liked. They called it country and western later to try to dress it up, but it
was pretty darn good when it was plain old hillbilly."

Aired live on 50,000-watt KWKH radio,the show was relayed nationally by CBS
and overseas by Armed Forces Radio. As Saturday night entertainment, it was
addictive.

"We had the only radio around and people came from all over to listen to the
Hayride," John LeBlanc of Lafayette remembered. "We lived way out in the
middle of nowhere, but come Saturday night the yard was full of pickups and
our old Philco was playing full-blast."

The Shreveport Municipal Auditorium bustled every Saturday night with people
jamming the aisles for music, comedy and contests all wrapped in a down-home
atmosphere.

"They used to give away prizes. I guess they were from the sponsors," said
architect Bill Weiner, who attended as a teenager. "I won it one night and I
remember I got a bunch of stuff that seems pretty funny now -- loaves of
bread, pots and pans, some dishes -- things a teenager wouldn't even take
now."

It was on the Municipal Auditorium stage that Hank Williams built his
reputation in the early 1950s, followed by Johnny Cash, Slim Whitman and
Johnny Horton.

Elvis Presley started out earning $18 a show at the Hayride. Three years
later, for his final performance, the show had to be moved from the 3,200-seat
auditorium to the State Fair Grounds for the 10,000 teenage girls wanting to
see The King.

"The gyrating rotary troubadour was seldom if ever heard by an audience,
screaming every time he moved," the Shreveport Times reported the next day.
"One of the finest displays of mass hysteria in Shreveport history."

It was at the Hayride in 1956 that producer Horace Logan tried to quiet the
frenzied audience and coined a phrase by announcing, "Elvis has left the
building."

The Hayride was called the "Cradle of the Stars" for the many young talents
who appeared there before becoming famous and going on to the bigger, but more
staid Grand Ole Opry -- Jim Reeves, Kitty Wells, Faron Young. Jimmie Davis,
Louisiana's singing governor, was a regular. Gene Autry rode his horse onto
the stage.

"The Hayride was where new things happened, where people got started," said
Warwick, who appeared on the program in 1959 after winning a talent contest.
"Shreveport was on the cutting edge back then. The Grand Ole Opry was too
conservative."

The Opry was so conservative that it did not allow groups to have drums or
horns and let Williams and Elvis perform only after they became successful.

"They came to the Hayride, and when they were famous from being there, the
Opry took them," Franks said. "But they always belonged to us."

Today, with good times and casinos pumping money into the Shreveport economy,
the Auditorium has been restored and the Warwicks, who own a production
company and a record label, are hoping to bring the Hayride back.

The couple owns the rights to the Hayride name and their band performs
regularly, attracting fans of the old show. On April 3, a 50th-anniversary
salute to the Hayride will be performed at the Municipal Auditorium.

--copied from http://www.jim-reeves.com/hayride.html

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