News

Jeannie Seely's 5,398th Grand Ole Opry appearance was her final one — a legacy-honoring celebration at the Opry House.
Jeannie Seely was laid to rest in a very special memorial in Nashville on Thursday (Aug. 14), and the country community came ...
Seely — who lost her husband Eugene Ward to cancer last December — was born in Titusville, Pa., in 1940 and raised in nearby ...
"I was in excruciating pain," the legend shared, adding he's on the mend, "thanks to a bunch of ice packs and pain pills.” ...
She blazed a trail for women in country music with the candor of her songs and her bold fashion sense. She was the first ...
Friends and fellow Grand Ole Opry members celebrated the life of country music legend Jeannie Seely in a memorial service ...
Country star Jeannie Seely, who rose to fame in the '60s and '70s and became one of the Grand Ole Opry's most beloved performers, has died at 85.
Jeannie Seely will get her final sendoff at the legendary Grand Ole Opry, where she performed more than any other artist.
Country music trailblazer and Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely died on Friday (Aug. 1) at Summit Medical Center in Hermitage, Tenn., due to complications from an intestinal infection. She was 85.
Jeannie Seely appeared on Grand Ole Opry radio program more than any other performer and was first to record a live album on Opry stage ...
Jeannie Seely — known as “Miss Country Soul” and hailed “a trailblazer, an icon, and the oldest actively working female entertainer in country music” — has died. She was 85.
Seely made her Grand Ole Opry debut in 1966. “Every emotion a person could feel was going through my mind and body, from nerves to sheer terror,” she recalled of her inaugural performance.