Roy Clark, Country Music Hall of Fame member and former “Hee Haw” host, dead at 85

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Michael Ochs Archives/Getty ImagesRoy Clark, the Grammy, ACM and CMA-winning Country Music Hall of Fame member and celebrated picker who’s best-known by most as co-host of TV’s Hee Haw, has died at age 85.

Clark’s publicist confirmed he died Thursday morning at his Tulsa, Oklahoma home of complications from pneumonia.

Just two years ago, Clark revived his classic “I’m a pickin’ and I’m a grinnin’” bit for the landmark 50th Annual CMA Awards, with Brad Paisley stepping in for his late Hee Haw co-host, Buck Owens.  

Hee Haw — a rural variety show that mixed homespun comedy with current country stars — premiered on CBS in 1969. When it was cancelled by the network, it moved to syndication, where it ran until 1992.

Though his musical prowess was somewhat overshadowed by his comedy success on Hee Haw, Clark was an accomplished multi-instrumentalist, admired for his abilities on both guitar and banjo. At the peak of his career, he was well-known enough to guest-host The Tonight Show for Johnny Carson.

Clark was also largely responsible for the country music boom that took over Branson, Missouri for a time. Standards like “The Tips of My Fingers,” “Yesterday, When I Was Young,” “Thank God and Greyhound You’re Gone,” and “Come Live with Me” are just a few of the hits he placed on the country chart.

Roy Clark was a Grand Ole Opry member who was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009. He’s survived by his wife of 61 years, Barbara. A memorial will be held in Tulsa in the coming days.

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