Redd Stewart(1923-2003)
- Actor
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
May 27, 1923 - Born Henry Ellis Stewart in Ashland City, Tennessee; the
son of musical parents and raised in Louisville, Kentucky. Redd's
family moved to Louisville, Kentucky, while he was still young. He
learned to play the banjo, piano, fiddle and guitar as a child, then
dropped out of junior high to perform in local bands. He legally
changed his first name to Redd because of his red hair, freckles and
fair complexion. 1935 - Redd was contracted to write a song for a car
dealer's commercial in Louisville, Kentucky at the age of 14 (he
completed only the seventh grade.) He then formed and played in various
bands around Louisville, including the Prairie Riders. 1937 - Pee Wee
King came to Louisville to play on WHAS and signed Redd as a musician
with the Golden West Cowboys. At the time, Eddy Arnold was the band's
vocalist. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Redd was drafted into
the U.S. Army and sent to the South Pacific. While stationed there with
the rank of sergeant, Redd wrote "A Soldier's Last Letter," which
Ernest Tubb worked on and recorded in 1944, making it a No. 1 hit
staying at the top for four weeks out of a seven month stay on the
Country charts and crossing over to the Pop chart Top 20. When Redd
returned to Pee Wee's Golden West Cowboys at the end of WW II, he
became the band's vocalist, Arnold having gone solo. Now Redd started
to take songwriting seriously. 1946 - married Frances Jean Grimes at
the age of 23. 1947 - appeared on the Grand Ole Opry until 1947 and a
year earlier, he and Pee Wee wrote their first major success,
"Bonaparte's Retreat," which was Kay Starr's launch-pad to stardom.
1947 - Signed a lifetime exclusive songwriting contract with Acuff-Rose
Publications. 1947 - It's a Girl! Redd & Jean's first child was born -
Lydia Nixon Stewart (named after Pee Wee King's wife- Lydia.) 1948 -
"Tennessee Waltz", his most popular song, was written with Pee Wee
King. (King & Stewart decided to write the song after hearing Bill
Monroe's Kentucky Waltz on the radio. Stewart emptied a matchbox and
tore it open to write down the song.) 1953 - It's a Boy! Redd & Jean's
second child was born - Colonel Henry Redd Stewart, Jr. 1954 - It's
another Boy! Redd & Jean's third child was born - William (Billy) Rae
Stewart 1947-1957 - In 1947, Pee Wee, Redd and the band moved to WAVE
Louisville, Kentucky, where they had a weekly radio show and then later
in the year, they transferred to WAVE-TV, where they had a television
show until 1957. Redd sang on Pee Wee King's 1948 version, which
reached the Top 3 on the Country chart and crossed over to the Top 30
on the Pop charts, on RCA Victor. It was re-issued in 1951 and climbed
to the Top 10. Other hit versions, in 1948, were by Cowboy Copas (Top
3) and Roy Acuff (Top 15). The following year, Tennessee featured in
the title of two other King hits on which Redd appeared, namely,
"Tennessee Tears" and "Tennessee Polka." Pee Wee King's version of
"Bonaparte's Retreat" edged into the Top 10, during 1950. However, it
was in 1951 that Pee Wee had a No.1 hit with the King-Stewart song
"Slow Poke," which also became a No.1 Pop success. That year, Patti
Page took "The Tennessee Waltz" to No.1 on the Pop chart, which also
became a Top 3 Country hit. It went on to sell over 6 million copies.
The following year, the song became a Top 10 hit for Hawkshaw Hawkins
and "You Belong to Me" became a Pop hit for Jo Stafford. By now, Pee
Wee had dropped his band's name and as Pee Wee King & his Band, he
racked up "Silver and Gold" (Country Top 5/Pop Top 20) and "Busybody"
(Country Top 10/Pop Top 30). Redd was still the featured vocalist on
the 1954 Pee Wee King double-sided hit "Changing Partners/Bimbo." Their
final hit together was "Backward, Turn Backward." Redd toured with Pee
Wee throughout the 50's and 60's, and during that time, their songs
continued to be recorded. In 1959, Billy Grammar had a Pop success with
"Bonaparte's Retreat" as did Bobby Comstock and Jerry Fuller with
"Tennessee Waltz." Other charted versions of Redd's songs were
"Bonaparte's Retreat" by Carl Smith (1970) and Glen Campbell (1974) and
"Tennessee Waltz" by Sam Cooke (1964) and Lacy J. Dalton (1980). On
February 17, 1965, "Tennessee Waltz" was officially proclaimed by
Governor Frank Clement as the Tennessee state song. As well as
recording with Pee Wee, Redd also recorded on his own, including the
1959 Audio Lab album "Redd Stewart Sings Favorite Old Time Tunes." He
also appeared in several movies with Pee Wee King, including "Gold Mine
in the Sky (1938), "Ridin' the Outlaw Trail" (1951) and "The Rough,
Tough West" (1952), the last two starred Charles Starrett as the
Durango Kid. In 1961, Redd and Pee Wee appeared in the movie,
"Hoedown." 1971 - Redd re-marries. Marries Darlene Collins (of the
Collin Sisters) 1972 - Redd was inducted as a charter member of the
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame- Hall of Fame Highest Achievement
1974 - Redd & Jean's third son marries. Billy marries Sharon Kay Lebo.
1974 - Redd & Jean's second granddaughter was born - Allison Marie
Stewart (Billy & Sharon's first daughter.) 1977 - Redd & Jean are
grandparents again - Jennifer Lynn Stewart (Billy & Sharon's second
daughter.) 1992 - Redd's granddaughter marries - Allison marries Ed
Lowery Waterfield. 1992- Redd's first great grandson was born - Joseph
Rae Waterfield (Allison & Ed's first son.) 1997 - Redd's second great
grandson was born - Christopher Lowery Waterfield (Allison & Ed's
second son.) August 2, 2003 - Died at Baptist Hospital East in
Louisville. He was 80 years old. He died from complications from
injuries suffered in the early 1990s after a fall at his home in
Louisville.