Born Mary Frances Penick, December 30, 1931, in Dry Ridge, KY; daughter of William (a farmer and electrician) and Sarah Penick; married second husband, Ralph Emery (a disc jockey), 1960 (divorced, 1964); married Joey Spampinato (a singer), 1987. Addresses: Home--Brentwood, TN. Office--Grand Ole Opry, 2804 Opryland Drive, Nashville, TN 37229.

When the single "The End of the World" burst onto the Billboard charts in 1962, it signalled a turning point in the career of country vocalist Skeeter Davis. As one half of the talented vocal duo the Davis Sisters, Skeeter had been poised on the brink of major stardom a decade before, until that group's tragic demise. Her first gold record since going solo, Skeeter's hit was also one of the most notable of the early "crossovers," topping the pop and country charts simultaneously. "The End of the World" set the stage for the beginning of Davis's rise as one of the most popular--as well as one of the most outspoken--female voices in country music in the decades that followed.

Davis was born Mary Frances Penick, in Glencoe, Kentucky, on December 30, 1931. She was the first of seven children born to William and Sarah Penick, and the strong moral values she developed while helping to raise her younger siblings in rural Dry Ridge, Kentucky, would strongly influence her musical career. When her family moved to Covington, Ohio, during her junior year of high school, young Mary Frances made the acquaintance of fellow home economics classmate Betty Jack Davis at Covington's Dixie Heights High.

Thus began Davis's country music career, on the traditional path of a country "sister" act. Although unrelated by blood, Skeeter and Betty Jack--B. J. to her friends--shared a common love of music; they soon sang together every day at lunch and spent so much time in each other's company that they became almost as close as real sisters. Skeeter quickly joined her friend as a singer at the famed "Renfro Valley Barn Dance" broadcast from nearby Renfro Valley; the two also got a steady lunchtime job at a local television variety show while still in high school. The TV show emcee would always be in a rush to announce the girls, who would run over from school to perform on their lunch break. One day he fumbled the name Penick and dubbed the pair the "Davis sisters."

The name suited Skeeter and B. J.; after graduation in 1949, they went to Lexington radio station WLAX and performed regularly as the Davis Sisters. The two spent 1952 on Casey Clark's "Big Barn Dance Frolic" on Detroit's WJR. From there it was off to WKRC-Cincinnati and Wheeling, West Virginia's WWVA. After recording several demo tapes with Detroit's Fortune Records--including a cover of Hank Williams's "Kaw Liga"--the Davis Sisters travelled to New York City in 1952 to meet Steve Sholes of RCA Victor. The trip netted them a record contract with the major label.

"Our singing style was never something we practiced or sat down and figured out," Skeeter told Bob Allen in the Journal of the American Academy for the Preservation of Old-Time Country Music. "The vocal arrangements that we came up with were always completely spontaneous; it just came out when Betty Jack and I sang together." The 1953 release of the Davis Sisters' first album on RCA showcased a vocal duo poised on the edge of country superstardom. The Sisters' harmonies would strongly influence future duos like the Everly Brothers. The album's title cut, "I Forgot More than You'll Ever Know," quickly made the climb to Number One; it would stay on the Billboard country charts a record 26 weeks.

But 1953 proved to be a fateful year--not just for the Davis Sisters, but for country music as well. On January 1, while on his way to a concert date in Canton, Ohio, 29- year-old country superstar Hank Williams succumbed to a decades-long addiction, quietly dying of a drug and alcohol overdose in the back seat of his Cadillac. Almost exactly eight months later, on August 2, Skeeter and B. J. would also be involved in tragedy while on the road; a car whose driver had fallen asleep at the wheel struck the duo as they were driving home to Cincinnati from a performance on WWVA. The head-on collision left Skeeter with a concussion and serious internal injuries. It left her best friend dead. Months would pass before Skeeter would recover sufficiently from the shock to resume her musical career.

Stricken by grief, Betty Jack's family clung to Skeeter. She was paired with B. J.'s sister, Georgia Davis, in an attempt to get a new version of the Davis Sisters out before paying audiences. The two recorded several albums and toured with country talents Hank Snow, Maybelle Carter, and Elvis Presley before Georgie left the music business in 1957 to raise a family. A year later, Skeeter finally broke away from the control of the Davis family and went solo, becoming one of the first RCA artists to work under the guidance of guitarist/producer Chet Atkins. 1959's Set Him Free was a success: Davis received her first Grammy nomination for the record, which established her on the country charts and gained her entry into the Grand Ole Opry, the venerable "mother church" of country music then lorded over by the legendary Roy Acuff.

In 1960 Davis married popular WSM radio personality Ralph Emery. But the stress of music-industry demands--as well as Emery's battle with pills and alcohol--would destroy their marriage in four years. Despite the turmoil in her private life, Davis--who had enjoyed several career boosts during the 1950s--achieved star status in the early years of the 1960s. Combining her traditional country roots with pop influences, she co-wrote and recorded "My Last Date With You," her first crossover success. In addition to writing many other songs, Davis began pairing with Connie Francis, Bobbie Vinton, Duke Ellington, and other pop celebrities on vocal collaborations.

When television host Dick Clark welcomed Davis to his rock and roll-oriented American Bandstand, it was clear that the road she was travelling circled a mighty long way around the local honky tonk, a fact that dismayed many of her country fans; the increasing notice Davis was receiving outside traditional country music circles didn't seem fitting or proper for an Opry regular. Her continuing flirtation with the works of pop and rock artists--such as the late Buddy Holly and the Rolling Stones, not to mention jazz great Ellington--diminished her appeal to hard-core country fans further. But Davis continued to proclaim her deep country roots, despite her personal satisfaction in broadening her musical scope. As she has often said, "I've been with the Opry since joining in 1959--which proves that my heart's in country."

Davis's continued experimentation with musical genres over the years has made her somewhat difficult for critics to pigeonhole. During the 1970s, she became well known for her renditions of sacred music; her work with televangelist Oral Roberts brought her vocal talents into the living rooms of Americans unfamiliar with her work as a pop/country artist. But, in 1965 she had toured with the Rolling Stones, and in 1985 she was hard at work in the studio recording an album with the rhythm and blues band NRBQ. Davis would marry Joey Spampinato, a member of NRBQ, in 1987.

In addition to recording and her work on television, Davis toured extensively throughout North America and beyond-- she claims that she has performed in every major U.S. city at least once during her career. In booking her live performances, however, she has demanded an unusual restriction: that performances not be scheduled where liquor is served. It was not that she personally objected to drinking; rather, she didn't want to put temptation in the path of loyal fans who did not already have a taste for alcoholic beverages. A devout Christian since she was 18, Davis has demonstrated the tenets of her faith by remaining active in community projects for the less privileged residents of the greater Nashville area and performing for church-related events. In fact, her ethical standards once caused her temporary dismissal from the stage of the Grand Ole Opry; in 1973, she spoke out during an Opry broadcast on WSM to criticize the Nashville Police Department's handling of a local altercation. Opry head Acuff, a staunch traditionalist, had no choice but to temporarily censure the popular star.

Despite her somewhat controversial profile, Davis has enjoyed numerous successes throughout her long career. Recording over 60 singles and 30 popular albums for RCA, she has been nominated for five Grammy awards. Her hits have included 1960's "I'm Falling Too," "Where I Ought to Be" in 1962, "He Says the Same Things to Me" in 1964, and "One Tin Soldier," the Top Ten theme to the 1972 movie Billy Jack. Her duets with country singers like Bobby Bare, Porter Wagoner, and George Hamilton IV, as well as her strong and continued support of young talent and of the Grand Ole Opry, have more than reaffirmed Davis's roots in country music.

by Pamela L. Shelton

Skeeter Davis's Career

With friend Betty Jack Davis, formed duo the Davis Sisters, c. 1948; performed regularly on WLEX, Lexington, KY; signed with RCA Records, 1952; released debut LP, I Forgot More than You'll Ever Know, 1953; seriously injured in an automobile accident that killed Betty Jack, 1953; performed with Georgia Davis as the Davis Sisters; began solo career, 1958; joined Grand Ole Opry, Nashville, TN, 1959; toured with the Rolling Stones, c. 1965; has toured extensively in the U.S., as well as England, Germany, Jamaica, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, and Sweden.

Skeeter Davis's Awards

Named most promising female country vocalist by Cash Box magazine, 1959; gold record, 1963, for End of the World; Peter DeRose Memorial Award, 1965, for "Somebody Loves You"; numerous awards for songwriting from performance rights societies BMI and ASCAP.

Famous Works

Recent Updates

September 19, 2004: Davis died on September 19, 2004, in Nashville, Tennessee, of breast cancer. She was 73. Source: USA Today, www.usatoday.com/life/digest.htm, September 20, 2004; CNN.com, www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/Music/09/20/obit.davis.ap/index.html (September 22, 2004); New York Times, September 22, 2004, p. B8(L).

Further Reading

Books

Visitor Comments Add a comment…

almost 14 years ago

Skeeter was one of a kind. Some folks thought her religious views were problematic and others thought her openness to all was suspicious.Skeeter was a bit of a hippy in Nashville, when it was not fashionable. She was one of the first country artists to take a stand for Aids reform, and I am sure got criticized. Her career was harmed a great deal by Ralph Emery, her ex husband, and their quarrel was well publicized. But the music was fantastic and her style was unique.She never claimed to have the chops of Patsy Cline or Brenda Lee, but her style was simple Skeeter sweet. It is a shame that RCA has not released her product. because she had some gems.

about 14 years ago

WSM should make available Skeeter's last live interview. She spent over two hours on the air with Eddie Stubbs discussing her life and her career. They played music that dated back to the Davis Sisters to reggae that she had recorded in Jamaica and everything in between. It was absolutely fascinating. Skeeter told Mr. Stubbs and the listeners that she would be going back into St. Thomas Hospital the following day and she knew her prognosis was not good, but she was ready. I cried that night, and knew without hearing when I heard The End of the World playing on the radio when I turned it on that Skeeter had passed on. She was one of a kind. Country music was not always kind to her.

over 15 years ago

I have been, and still am, an avid fan of country music since 1946. I was in the WWVA audience when the Betty Jack and Skeeter sang "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know About Him". I still remember how they held hands in their fabulous performance. It was the following day when the news came about the tragic accident.