Bobbie Gentry
- Writer
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Country singer/songwriter Bobbie Gentry was born Roberta Lee Streeter
on July 27, 1944 in Chickasaw County, Mississippi. Gentry grew up in
poverty on her grandparents' farm after her parents divorced when she
was a little girl. She learned to play piano by watching the church
pianist. Her grandmother traded a milk cow for a piano so Bobbie could
practice regularly. She wrote her first song "My Dog Sergeant is a Good
Dog" on the piano; she later used this song as a humorous part of her
nightclub act. At age six, Gentry went to live with her father in
Greenwood, Mississippi, where she attended elementary school. Bobbie
next moved to Palm Springs, California to live with her mother. It was
during this time she taught herself how to play the banjo, guitar, bass
and vibes. She began performing at a country club while still in high
school and graduated from Palm Valley School in 1960. At age 14, Gentry
took her stage name from the 1952 movie
Ruby Gentry (1952). She briefly
worked as a dancer and singer in a Las Vegas revue show called Folies
Bergere before moving back to California. Bobbie studied philosophy at
UCLA and subsequently transferred to the Los Angeles Conservatory of
Music, where she majored in theory, counterpoint and composition while
working as a secretary to keep herself afloat. In 1967, Gentry scored a
massive smash hit with the moody and compelling story song "Ode to
Billie Joe", which peaked at number one on the Billboard pop charts for
a whole month. Bobbie won three Grammy Awards for this song, including
Best New Artist and Best Vocal Performance by a Female. In addition,
the Academy of Country Music named Gentry the Top New Female Vocalist
of 1967. "Ode to Billie Joe" has been covered by such artists as
Sinéad O'Connor,
Tammy Wynette,
Patti Smith and
Ike Turner &
Tina Turner. Gentry had only modest
success with the offbeat "Okolona River Bottom Band" and a spirited
rendition of Doug Kershaw's "Louisiana
Man". Bobbie recorded three charming duets with
Glen Campbell which included a
cover of "Let It Be Me" by
The Everly Brothers. Bobbie had
another substantial Top 30 hit with the sassy "Fancy", which did well
on both the pop and country charts.
(Reba McEntire had a Top 10 country hit
with her 1991 cover of this particular song). In Europe, Gentry enjoyed
a number one hit in England with "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" and a
Top 40 success with "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head". In the late
60s, she headlined her own Las Vegas revue show in which she did the
dance choreography, designed the costumes, and even wrote and arranged
the music. In 1974, Gentry hosted her own short-lived TV variety show.
That same year, she wrote and sung the haunting ending credits theme
song "Another Day, Another Time" for the terrific redneck exploitation
winner
Macon County Line (1974). "Ode
to Billie Joe" was adapted into a movie in 1976. Bobbie was briefly
married to both Desert Inn Hotel manager Bill Harrah and fellow country
singer/songwriter Jim Stafford. In the late
70s, Bobbie Gentry quit the music business and went on to run her own
TV production company in Los Angeles.