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Mom’s
was the original name of Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge, Tootsie
Bess bought Mom’s in 1960. |
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She
credits a painter with naming Tootsie’s. She came in one
day to find that he had painted her place orchid…thus
the name Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge. |
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She
was a singer/comedienne with “Big Jeff & The Radio
Playboys”. Jeff Bess was the bandleader and Tootsie’s
husband. |
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She
recorded, “My Little Red Wagon” and “Tootsie’s
Wall of Fame” |
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Records
recorded about Tootsie’s include “The Wettest Shoulders
in Town” and “What’s Tootsies Gonna Do When
They Tear the Ryman Down?” |
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Charlie
Pride gave her the jeweled hatpin that she used to stick unruly
patrons. |
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It
is rumored that Roger Miller wrote “Dang Me” in
Tootsies. |
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Famous
early customers were Kris Kristofferson, Faron Young, Willie
Nelson, Tom T. Hall, Hank Cochran, Mel Tillis, Roger Miller,
Webb Pierce, Waylon Jennings, Patsy Cline and many more. |
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Movies filmed at Tootsie’s include “W.W. & the
Dixie Dance Kings” starring Bert Reynolds, “Coal
Miner’s Daughter” about Loretta Lynn and starring
Sissy Spacek, and “The Nashville Rebel” starring
Tex Ritter, Porter Wagoner, Faron Young, Loretta Lynn, The Wilburn
Brothers, and Waylon Jennings. |
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A
segment of the Dean Martin summer show was filmed at Tootsie’s. |
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TNN
(The Nashville Network) did a 30-minute show about Tootsie’s,
produced by Gus Barba. |
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Esquire
and Penthouse magazines did articles about Tootsie’s. |
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Willie
Nelson got his first songwriting job after singing at Tootsie’s. |
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The
photo and memorabilia lined walls are called the “Wall
of Fame”. |
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Tootsie
was known to slip $5s and $10s into the pockets of luckless
writers and pickers. |
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It
was said that she had a cigar box behind the counter full of
IOU’s from where she had given drinks and food to hungry
pickers and writers. Supposedly, at each years end, a bunch
of Opry Performers would take all the IOUs and pay Tootsie so
she wouldn’t lose the money. |
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At
her funeral were Tom T. Hall, Roy Acuff and Faron Young. She
was buried in an orchid gown, with an orchid placed in the orchid-colored
casket, so she could take her favorite flower with her to heaven.
Connie Smith sang some of Tootsie’s favorite hymns at
the funeral. |