--- In
JerryLeeLewisIFC@yahoogroups.com, "Knights TV & Computers" <graham@...>
wrote:
>
> The Night the Killer Stayed in Town
>
> By Tim Davis - Bonham Texas Journal
>
>
>
> August 1959 might have been just another month in Bonham's history except for
the fact that a young man who would become a Grammy-winning legend and an early
inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame rolled into town late one evening
and took a room in the city's newest hotel.
>
> In the mid 1950s Jerry Lee Lewis embarked on a promising future in music that
began in the studios of Sam Phillips's Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee. Lewis
eventually found himself in the company of other Sun legends such as Carl
Perkins, Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley. It was the time of Blue Suede Shoes, I
Walk the Line, Hound Dog and Great Balls of Fire.
>
> In 1957, at the age of twenty-two, Lewis almost destroyed his young career
when he shocked the world by marrying his thirteen-year-old cousin, Myra Gale
Brown. In an effort to smooth things over with his fans and the general public,
Lewis began playing any place he could. No venue, including Barrett's Place in
Paris (March 1959), was too small.
>
> When playing in north Texas, it was not unusual for Lewis to take a room in a
small town hotel. Such was the case the night of August 13, 1959 when the piano
pounder drove into Bonham and rented a room at the Blue Bonnet Hotel. Joining
him was his cousin and business manager, Chuck Lewis.
>
> If Jerry Lee hoped to sneak out of Bonham the next morning unnoticed, it was
not to be. Someone, undoubtedly a hotel employee, leaked word to Mrs. W. G.
Forgy, then a reporter with the Bonham Daily Favorite. Recognizing a potentially
interesting story, Forgy convinced Lewis to grant her an interview. Moreover,
realizing Lewis's appeal with teenagers, she convinced three Bonham High School
sophomores, Wanda Dagley, Kathy Chaney and Sandy Moore, to meet her at the Blue
Bonnet to get autographs and have their picture made with the man who became
known as The Killer.
>
> Today the girls talk fondly about their meeting with Lewis. Sandy Moore, now
Sandy Gox of Knoxville, Tennessee, recalls that he "was very courteous and
gentleman like. He wasn't," she further recalls, "the Killer yet."
>
> Wanda Dagley, now Wanda Thomason of Garland, recalls how soft his hands were.
"That really surprised me, given how hard he pounded those piano keys," she
stated.
>
> In the article about Lewis and his meeting with the girls that appeared in the
August 14 Bonham Daily Favorite, Kathy Chaney, now Kathy Mosley of Boerne,
Texas, recalled that it was the first time she "ever had the autograph of a
platter spinner," referring to Lewis's former career as a radio disc jockey.
>
> The article noted that Lewis made small talk with the girls about his latest
single (Let's Talk About Us), his recent visit to Europe and the fact that he
was in the middle of a nine-day tour that would take him through Tulsa, Paris
and Port Lavaca before returning to his boyhood home of Ferriday, Louisiana.
>
> Some Bonham residents recall that KFYN radio got in on the fun and convinced
Lewis to give them an interview before leaving town. Carolyn McDonald recalls
that she "went down to the radio station with [her] brother, Don Campbell, to
see Jerry that day." She further recalls him "playing the piano or at least
playing one of his records for us," and that he gave one of his forty-five
singles to her brother.
>
> And so, after signing a few autographs, posing for at least one picture and
giving a radio interview, Jerry Lee Lewis headed for Oklahoma and left at least
a few Bonhamites buzzing about the night The Killer stayed in town.
>
> Many thanks to the following people: Suzie Henderson of the Family History
Center and the ladies at the Bonham Public Library. Special thanks to Wanda
Thomason, Sandy Gox and Kathy Mosley for enduring my many intrusions on their
spare time.