Patsy Cline Net Worth

Patsy Cline’s Net Worth

Patsy Cline Net Worth

$10 Million

Net worth:

$10 Million

Date of birth:

Sep 8, 1932 – Mar 5, 1963 (30 Years Old)

Gender:

Female

Height:

5 ft 5in (1.67m)

Profession:

Singer, Songwriter

Nationality:

United States of America

What was Patsy’s Net Worth?

After inflation adjustments, Patsy Cline was an American country singer. Her net worth was $10 million when she died in 1963. Patsy Cline is known for her rich voice and contralto voice. She was one of the 20th century’s most influential and successful vocalists. Cline was a pioneer of country music and helped to open the doors for women in this genre.

She was the first female solo performer to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Patsy Cline released three studio albums: “Patsy Cline”, “Showcase”, and “Sentimentally Yours” (1962). “A Portrait of Patsy Cline”, “That’s How a Heartache Begins” (1964), “Patsy Cline,” (1957), and “Showcase,” (1961). Cline has released 24 singles. “Walkin’ After Midnight,” I Fall to Pieces,” and “Showcase” (1961) were her studio albums. “A Portrait of Patsy Cline” (1964), “That’s How a Heartache Begins” (1964), “That’s How a Heartache Begins” (1964), and “Always” (1980) were the top 10 hits on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. Cline, who was 30 years old, was killed in a plane accident on March 5, 1963.

Early Life

Patsy Cline was the daughter of Virginia Patterson Hensley and Hilda Patterson. She was born in Winchester, Virginia, on September 8, 1932. She was the child of Hilda Patterson and Samuel Hensley. Hilda was only 16 at the time Patsy was born. Samuel had two other older children, who lived with their foster parents since the mother’s death. Samuel Jr. and Sylvia Mae were Cline’s younger siblings. The family moved often, with Samuel working as a blacksmith wherever he could. Patsy later revealed to Loretta Lynn that her father, who had left the family in the late ’40s, had sexually abused them. She asked Loretta Lynn to tell her about the incident and she said, “Take this to your grave.” Cline, then 13, was admitted to the hospital with rheumatism and throat infection. She said that her heart stopped beating and that she had a terrible throat infection. Cline was placed in an oxygen tent by the doctor. It was my return to life after several days that made me a singer. My throat was affected by the fever and I was able to sing with a voice similar to Kate Smith after I recovered. Patsy began singing soon and joined a local choir. Cline was also a self-taught pianist. Cline was a teenager and performed on the Winchester radio station WINC. She also starred in a cabaret show at nightclubs. Patsy was a student at John Handley High School. She dropped out of school before she earned her diploma. To help her family, she took a job as a soda jerk and clerk at Gaunt’s Drug Store.

Success

Cline, then 15, wrote to Grand Ole Opry asking for an audition. The Opry replied and requested recordings and photographs. Patsy and her family soon flew to Nashville and Patsy auditioned for Moon Mullican (an Opry performer). Although the audition went well Cline didn’t hear back from Opry so her family drove back home to Virginia. Cline auditioned in 1952 for Bill Peer, a local bandleader and she began performing with Bill Peer’s Melody Boys and Girls. The peer suggested she choose a stage name. The newly married singer chose Patsy (inspired by Patterson’s middle name) to go along with her new name, Cline. She won $100 in a local contest of country music and was given the chance to perform regularly on “Connie B.” Gay’s Town and Country Time. Peer distributed demo tapes with Patsy in 1954. In September of that year, she signed a 2-year contract with Four Star Records. This allowed her to keep the majority of the royalties from her music sale sales. The label leased songs from Cline’s first recording session to Decca Records. Cline’s first single, “A Church, a Courtroom, Then Goodbye”, was released in 1955. She performed “Walkin’ After Midnight” in January 1957 on “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts”, and won the contest. Decca Records released the single as single just a few weeks later. It reached #2 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart and #12 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart.

Patsy’s debut album, entitled “Showcase”, was released in August 1957 by Decca Records. It was followed in 1961 by “Sentimentally Yours”, and in 1962 by “Showcase”. Cline signed a management agreement with Randy Hughes after moving to Nashville in the late ’50s. He got her booked several times on the Grand Ole Opry. Decca signed her in 1961. Her next four singles, “I Fall To Pieces”, “Crazy”, “She’s Got You” and “When I Get Thru With You” all reached the top 10 of the “Billboard Hot Country Songs” chart. Charlie Dick, her second husband suggested Patsy record Crazy. Willie Nelson wrote Crazy. It’s not what I like and I’m not going to record it. That’s it. Cline eventually chose to perform the song differently from Nelson and reached #2 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs and Adult Contemporary charts, and #9 on Billboard’s Hot 100 charts. Cline was named “Favorite Female Voice” by Billboard magazine and “Most Programmed Female Artist” by Cashbox Magazine by the end of 1961. Cline spent more than a month in Las Vegas performing at the Merrit Theatre. This made her the first woman country artist to headline her own Vegas show. Patsy’s last single, 1963’s “Leavin’ on Your mind,” was released two months before her death. It reached #8 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs charts.

Personal life

Patsy Cline Net Worth

Patsy married Gerald Edward Cline, on March 7, 1953. They divorced four years later. Charlie Dick was her next marriage. They welcomed their daughter Julie on August 25, 1958, and their son Randy on February 28, 1961. Although their marriage was “fueled by alcohol and argument, passion jealousy, success and tears, and jealousy,” Patsy and Charlie survived until she died in 1963. Cline was hit head-on by a car in Nashville, in June 1961. Patsy was thrown into the windshield and suffered severe facial injuries. She also sustained a broken wrist. Sam Jr. and Patsy, who were both in the car that struck Patsy, died shortly after being taken to the hospital. Cline arrived at the hospital and doctors initially thought she wouldn’t survive. Patsy had surgery and spent one month in the hospital. Six weeks later, Cline’s first public appearance at Grand Ole Opry was made. She said that the encouragement she received from her family was the greatest gift that they could have given her. You came through for me right when I needed you most. You’ll never know how much this country gal was made by you.

Death

Patsy and other country music stars performed at a benefit concert for “Cactus” Jack Call at the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kansas, on March 3, 1963. Cline was unable to fly from Fairfax Airport due to fog the next day. Dottie West offered Patsy the opportunity to ride with her back to Nashville (a 16-hour drive), but Patsy refused, saying, “Don’t worry about me, Hoss. It’s my turn to go when it’s mine. Cline flew home in a Piper PA-24 Comanche plane with Randy Hughes as her pilot. Hawkshaw Hawkins and Cowboy Copas were also onboard. It refueled in Rogers in Arkansas and landed at Dyersburg, Tennessee, at 5:15 p.m. Hughes declined the Dyersburg Municipal Airport manager’s offer to let the group stay the night due to inclement weather and high wind. He offered them free accommodation, but Hughes said, “I’ve already made it this far.” We’ll be there before it is too late. The plane took off at 6:07 p.m. and crashed in a forest close to Camden, Tennessee shortly thereafter. Cline’s wristwatch, which was found to have been lost, was later recovered. The plane crashed in a forest near Camden, Tennessee, shortly after 6:20 p.m. All aboard were killed. Some of the items recovered from the aircraft were donated to Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame. Patsy was laid to rest in a golden casket at Shenandoah Memorial Park, Winchester, Virginia. Her grave is marked by a bronze plaque that reads “Death Cannot Kill What Never Dies: Love”.

Read also – Paige Turco Net Worth

Awards and Honours

Induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame was made posthumously. She was also honored with the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1995. A star was added to the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her achievements in 1999. Cline’s songs “Crazy” (and “I Fall To Pieces”) have been inducted into The Grammy Hall of Fame. In 1993, Cline was featured as a stamp in the “Legends” series of stamps by the United States Postal Service. Her childhood home was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. Celebrating Patsy Cline Inc. restored it and opened it for tours in 2011. On the second floor, the Patsy Cline Museum was opened in 2017.

Real Estate

Cline was given a $22,000 royalty from her record label in 1962. She used the money to pay down a 2,770-square-foot Nashville home. Unfortunately, Patsy was unable to live in her dream house of four bedrooms and three bathrooms for more than a year. Her husband then sold it to Wilma Burgess, a singer. Wilma believed the house was haunted. She wrote in “Honky Tonk Angel” that she thought Patsy lived in her four-bedroom, three-bathroom “dream home” for less than a year and that the upstairs bedroom would be where the toilet would flush by itself. Doors would automatically open and close. The home was sold for $540,000 in April 2022.

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