BRENDA LEE, AND HER CAREER THAT SHE STARTED WHEN SHE WAS JUST A LITTLE GIRL - Actual news
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BRENDA LEE, AND HER CAREER THAT SHE STARTED WHEN SHE WAS JUST A LITTLE GIRL

She was born in 1944, and when she was 8, she lost her father. She was born with the name of Brenda May Tarpley, and then changed to Lee, once she lost her father.

Photo of Brenda LEE (Photo by GAB Archive/Redferns)

She always wanted to take care of her sister, brother and mother, and she started to believe that she can, when she had paid $20 for the first time alone, on her own.
“Even at that young age, I saw that helped our life,” she said and added, “It put some food on the table. It helped, and I loved it.”
In her interview with Christianity Today, “I don’t think of myself that way!” she said about being a legend.
“I’m just a girl who’s been really blessed to be doing what I’m doing, and there’s a lot of people who’ve sweated a lot of tears and put a lot of life’s work into me to be able to have my dream. So, if I’m a legend, then they’re legends, too.”
Public Domain

When it was 1956, she had joined with Red Foley, in Bell Auditorium, Augusta.
Later on she had appeared on Foley’s Ozark Jubilee, a music show that millions of people had attended, at the age of 12.
And on that year, she had a contract with Decca Records, and moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where she bind country music with rhythm and blues.
“No, not really. Nobody ever told me to be nervous. The stage always felt like hometown to me because I had been in front of people ever since I was 3 years old, singing to people. So it was a very comfortable spot for me.” She had stated about being nervous or not at that age, when she was on the stage.
“Little Miss Dynamite” she started to get called, ın 1957.
“I knew it was magical,” she said about the things she had managed to accomplish, at the age of 13.
Brenda Lee, kissed by Fabian Forte, 1961 / Public Domain

On the next years, she had hits like, “Sweet Nuthin’s,” “All Alone Am I,” and “Fool #1.”
And when she was just 16, she had created her songs, “I’m Sorry”, “I Want to be Wanted,”.
“Of course, I wasn’t even allowed to walk through a casino, I was so young. So I really didn’t even know what a casino looked like. They took me in the kitchen, then into the showroom. And then when my show was over, I was brought back out through the kitchen and back up to my room. Children weren’t allowed … in the casino area.”
“There wasn’t anything to do in Vegas for a kid. The most fun I had was on the stage.”
“Many times, I yearned to be with my friends rather than be out there on the road.” She had said about being not able to live her childhood.
“He was extremely intelligent, very acerbic with his jokes, just a gentle person. When I found out that they later said they were fans of my music, I was just floored.” She said about John Lennon.
Publicity photo of singer Brenda Lee in 1977.

“I was just stunned. I don’t think I had ever heard anything like it.” Elton John had said about her .
I had been dancing to Little Richard’s music at sock hops forever. How to summarize magic? … I didn’t understand the words, or what they meant, I just knew that I loved how that music made me feel.” She said about her late friend, Little Richard.
“I’m sure he’s in heaven, he was such a man of God.”
“He was looking out for me when I chose my husband. I wanted somebody with integrity, honesty, and somebody that loved me … and that would protect me and take care of me. I have found that. And I can only attribute that to God.”
She stated about her song that hit the charts, after being published 59 years ago, “It’s crazy to be shopping in a department store and hearing yourself sing at the same time. It’s pretty surreal. … It’s just been a wonderful, wonderful gift.” To New York Post.
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