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Bruce Watson. Updated July 14, 2016 at 6:04 PM. As the world mourns the death of singer and sausage king Jimmy Dean, his second wife, Donna Meade Dean, has been pushed into the spotlight. Then ...
Columbia Records. RCA Victor. Jimmy Ray Dean (August 10, 1928 – June 13, 2010) [ 1 ] was an American country music singer, television host, actor and businessman. He was the creator of the Jimmy Dean sausage brand as well as the spokesman for its TV commercials, and his likeness and voice continue to be used in advertisements after his death.
In modern times, singer and businessman Jimmy Dean and his wife Donna Meade Dean made their home at Chaffin's Bluff, located on private property on the Henrico County side of the river. Dean died at his home there on June 13, 2010.
Eddie Dean (born Edgar Dean Glosup; July 9, 1907 – March 4, 1999) [1] was an American Western singer and actor. His smooth baritone impressed both Roy Rogers and Gene Autry, who considered Dean the best cowboy singer of all time. [2] Eddie Dean's show-business career began in 1937, as a radio singer. Within the year Republic Pictures, a ...
3 Things We Can Learn from Jimmy Dean's Life of Entrepreneurship. Jimmy Dean was not only a successful country music star, he excelled in almost every area of business in which he entered. Whether ...
Jimmy Dean, country music singer, actor and sausage pitchman died on Sunday at his home in Varina, Virginia. He was 81. Despite a long and successful career as an entertainer, Dean was probably ...
Big Bad John. "Big Bad John" is a country song originally performed by Jimmy Dean, who wrote and composed it. [1] It was released in September 1961 and by the beginning of November it had gone to number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. It won Dean the 1962 Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Recording, and was nominated for the Grammy Award for ...
The Jimmy Dean Show was later an hour-long weekly music and variety television show carried by ABC for three seasons from September 19, 1963, to April 1, 1966, out of ABC Studio One in New York. [3][4] Its first season was written by Peppiatt and Aylesworth, and Scott Vincent was the announcer. Of the eighty-six episodes produced at ABC, ten ...