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Eddy Arnold

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Birth name
  
Richard Edward Arnold


Instruments
  
guitar, banjo

Name
  
Eddy Arnold

Eddy Arnold wwwcountryuniversenetwpcontentuploads201408

Born
  
May 15, 1918 (
1918-05-15
)

Origin
  
Henderson, Tennessee, United States

Genres
  
country music, gospel music, pop music

Occupation(s)
  
singer, songwriter, TV host, actor

Role
  
Music performer · eddyarnold.com

Died
  
May 8, 2008, Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Movies and TV shows
  
The Eddy Arnold Show

Albums
  
The Tennessee Plowboy, Seven Decades Of Hits, Heroes of the Big Country, The Essential Eddy Arn, Legends Of Country

Profiles


Also known as
  
The Tennessee Plowboy

Eddy arnold cattle call in balanced stereo


Richard Edward "Eddy" Arnold (May 15, 1918 – May 8, 2008) was an American country music singer who performed for six decades. He was a Nashville sound (country/popular music) innovator of the late 1950s, and scored 147 songs on the Billboard country music charts, second only to George Jones. He sold more than 85 million records. A member of the Grand Ole Opry (beginning 1943) and the Country Music Hall of Fame (beginning 1966), Arnold ranked 22nd on Country Music Television's 2003 list of "The 40 Greatest Men of Country Music."

Contents

Eddy Arnold Country singer Eddy Arnold dies at age 89 NY Daily News

Cattle Call (Studio Version) / LeAnn Rimes & Eddy Arnold


Early years

Eddy Arnold Eddy Arnold Quotes QuotesGram

Arnold was born on May 15, 1918, on a farm near Henderson, Tennessee. His father, a sharecropper, played the fiddle, while his mother played guitar. Arnold's father died when he was just 11, forcing him to leave school and begin helping on the family farm. This led to him later gaining his nickname—the Tennessee Plowboy. One of his brothers, PFC John Hendrix Arnold, fought in World War II and died in the Normandy landings. Arnold attended Pinson High School in Pinson, Tennessee, where he played guitar for school functions and events. He quit before graduation to help with the farm work, but continued performing, often arriving on a mule with his guitar hung on his back. Arnold also worked part-time as an assistant at a mortuary.

Eddy Arnold Eddy Arnold Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In 1934, at age 16, Arnold debuted musically on WTJS-AM in Jackson, Tennessee, and obtained a job there during 1937. He performed at local nightclubs and was a permanent performer for the station. During 1938, he was hired by WMPS-AM in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was one of its most popular performers. He soon quit for KWK-AM in St. Louis, Missouri, followed by a brief stint at WHAS-AM in Louisville, Kentucky.

Eddy Arnold Eddy Arnold Biography

He performed for WSM (AM) on the Grand Ole Opry during 1943 as a solo artist. In 1944, Arnold signed a contract with RCA Victor, with manager Colonel Tom Parker, who later managed Elvis Presley. Arnold's first single was little noticed, but the next, "Each Minute Seems a Million Years", scored number five on the country charts in 1945. Its success began a decade of unprecedented chart performance; Arnold's next 57 singles all ranked in the top 10, including 19 number-one successes.

Eddy Arnold EDDY ARNOLD FREE Wallpapers amp Background images

In 1946, Arnold scored his first major success with "That's How Much I Love You". In 1948, he had five successful songs on the charts simultaneously. That year, he had nine songs in the top 10; five of these were number one and scored there for 40 of the year's 52 weeks. With Parker's management, Arnold continued to dominate, with 13 of the 20 best-scoring country music songs of 1947–1948. He became the host of Mutual Radio's Purina-sponsored segment of the Opry and of Mutual's Checkerboard Jamboree, a midday program shared with Ernest Tubb that was broadcast from a Nashville theater. Recorded radio programs increased Arnold's popularity, as did the CBS Radio series Hometown Reunion with the Duke of Paducah. Arnold quit the Opry during 1948, and his Hometown Reunion briefly broadcast in competition with the Opry on Saturday nights. In 1949 and 1950, he performed in the Columbia movies Feudin’ Rhythm and Hoedown.

Arnold began working for television in the early 1950s, hosting The Eddy Arnold Show. The summer program was broadcast successively by all three television networks, replacing the Perry Como and Dinah Shore programs. He also performed as a guest and a guest host on the ABC-TV show Ozark Jubilee from 1955–60. Arnold featured in the syndicated Eddy Arnold Time from 1955 to 1957. From 1960 to 1961, he hosted NBC-TV's Today on the Farm.

In 1955, he asked songwriter Cindy Walker to write a song for him based on the idea of unrequited love, with the title "You Don't Know Me". They share co-credit for writing the song.

Second career: The Nashville sound

With the rise of rock and roll in the 1950s, Arnold's record sales declined, though fellow RCA Victor recording artist Jim Reeves and he had a greater audience with popular-sounding string-laced arrangements. Arnold annoyed many people of the country music establishment by recording with the Hugo Winterhalter Orchestra at RCA's studios in New York. The pop-oriented arrangements of "The Cattle Call" and "The Richest Man (in the World)", however, helped to expand his appeal beyond its country music base. This style, pioneered by Reeves and Arnold, became known as the "Nashville Sound". During 1953, Arnold and Tom Parker had a dispute, and Arnold dismissed him. From 1954 to 1963, Arnold's performances were managed by Joe Csida; in 1964, Csida was replaced by Jerry Purcell.

Arnold embarked on a second career that brought his music to a more diverse audience. In the summer of 1965, he had his first number-one country song in 10 years, "What's He Doing in My World" and struck gold again six months later with the song that became his most well-known, "Make the World Go Away", accompanied by pianist Floyd Cramer on piano and featuring the Anita Kerr Singers. As a result, Arnold's rendition became an international success. "Make The World Go Away" became his only top ten pop hit.

Bill Walker's orchestra arrangements provided the lush background for 16 continuous successes sung by Arnold in the late 1960s. Arnold performed with symphony orchestras in New York City, Las Vegas, and Hollywood. He performed in Carnegie Hall for two concerts, and in the Coconut Grove in Las Vegas. In 1966, Arnold was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, the youngest performer to receive the honor. The following year, Arnold was voted the first-ever awarded Country Music Association's Entertainer of the Year. Two years later, he released an autobiography named It's A Long Way From Chester County.

Having been with RCA Victor since 1944, Arnold left the label in 1973 for MGM Records, where he recorded four albums, which included several top-40 successes. He returned to RCA in 1976.

Later years and death

During the 1980s, Arnold declared himself semiretired, but he continued recording. In 1984, the Academy of Country Music awarded Arnold its Pioneer Award. His next album, You Don't Miss A Thing, was not released until 1991. Arnold performed road tours for several more years. By 1992, he had sold nearly 85 million records, and had a total of 145 weeks of number-one songs, more than any other singer.

In 1996, RCA issued an album of Arnold's main successes since 1944 as part of its 'Essential' series. Arnold, then 76 years old, retired from active singing, though he still performed occasionally. On May 16, 1998, the day after his 80th birthday, he announced his final retirement during a concert at the Hotel Orleans in Las Vegas. That same year, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences inducted the recording of "Make The World Go Away" into the Grammy Hall of Fame. In 2000, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. In 2005, Arnold received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy, and later that year, released a final album for RCA entitled After All These Years.

Arnold died from natural causes on May 8, 2008, in a nursing home in Nashville, exactly one week before his 90th birthday. His wife of 66 years, Sally Gayhart Arnold, had preceded him in death by two months. They were survived by two children (Richard E. Arnold, Jr., and JoAnn Arnold Pollard), two grandchildren (K. Michelle Pollard and R. Shannon Pollard, Jr.), and four great-grandchildren (Katie E. Pollard, Sophie Pollard, Rowan Pollard, and Ben Johns).

On May 31, 2008, RCA released "To Life" as a single from the album After All These Years. It debuted at number 49 on the Hot Country Songs charts, Arnold's first entry in 25 years and the recording by the oldest person to chart in Billboard magazine. It set the record for the longest span between a first chart single and a last: 62 years and 11 months ("Each Minute Seems Like a Million Years" debuted on June 30, 1945), and extended Arnold's career chart history to seven decades.

Filmography

Actor
1964
The Ed Sullivan Show (TV Series) as
Singer
- Episode #17.17 (1964) - Singer
1950
Hoedown as
Eddy Arnold
1949
Feudin' Rhythm as
Eddy Arnold
Soundtrack
2023
Asteroid City (performer: "The Cattle Call")
2022
A Christmas Story Christmas (performer: "Jolly Old Saint Nicholas")
2022
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall? (2022) - (performer: "Here Comes Heaven" - uncredited)
2018
Second Act (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2018
Show Jana Krause (TV Series) (music - 1 episode)
- Episode dated 17 October 2018 (2018) - (music: "Pouhý známý")
2018
That Time of Year (performer: "Jingle Bell Rock")
2016
Hail, Caesar! (performer: "The Cattle Call")
2015
I Saw the Light (performer: "Anytime")
2014
The Heart of Country: How Nashville Became Music City USA (TV Movie documentary) (performer: "Yesterday's Memories")
2010
Fallout: New Vegas (Video Game) (performer: "It's a Sin")
2010
Rock & Chips (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Pilot (2010) - (writer: "Lovin' Up a Storm" - uncredited)
2009
Dancing with the Stars (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Round Eight (2009) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me" - uncredited)
2008
W. (performer: "What a Wonderful World")
2008
Terribly Happy (performer: "You Always Hurt the One Your Love")
2008
Hellboy II: The Golden Army (performer: "Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town")
2007
Opry Video Classics: Pioneers (Video) (performer: "Cattle Call")
2007
The Brave One (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2006
Best of Country Live! (Video) (performer: "Tennessee Waltz")
2006
How I Met Your Mother (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Drumroll, Please (2006) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2005
Peter Cincotti: Live in New York (Video documentary) (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2005
Doc Martin (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- The Family Way (2005) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me" - uncredited)
2005
Great Performances (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Michael Bublé: Caught in the Act (2005) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2005
The Notorious Bettie Page (performer: "One Kiss Too Many") / (writer: "One Kiss Too Many")
2005
Later... With Jools Holland (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Episode #25.5 (2005) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me" (Instrumental))
2005
Grand Ole Opry's Vintage Classics (TV Special) (performer: "You Don't Know Me") / (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2004
Body Electric (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Show 1925 (2004) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2004
Ray (performer: "Anytime") / (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2003
Bad Santa (performer: "Up on the House Top")
2003
Idol stjörnuleit (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Episode #1.4 (2003) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
2001
Against the Dying of the Light (Short documentary) ("You Don't Know Me")
2000
Nurse Betty (performer: "The Cattle Call")
1998
In God's Hands (performer: "You Don't Know Me") / (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1998
Dawson's Creek (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Dance (1998) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1997
Two Girls and a Guy (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1997
My Best Friend's Wedding (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1997
'Til There Was You (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1997
Private Parts (performer: "Cattle Call")
1996
The Mirror Has Two Faces (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1994
Trapped in Paradise (performer: "Up on the Housetop")
1993
Groundhog Day (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1991
My Own Private Idaho (performer: "Cattle Call")
1990
Postcards from the Edge (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1989
Let It Ride (performer: "Cattle Call")
1989
Great Balls of Fire! (writer: "I'm Throwing Rice at the Girl That I Love")
1988
Designing Women (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Second Time Around (1988) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1986
Women of Valor (TV Movie) (performer: "I'm Waiting for Ships That Never Come In")
1986
Fame (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- W.S.O.A. (1986) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1982
Fantasy Island (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Everybody Goes to Gilley's/Face of Fire (1982) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me" - uncredited)
1982
Personal Best (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1980
Melvin and Howard (performer: "Tennessee Stud")
1977
Kojak (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Once More from Birdland (1977) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1973
The Graham Kennedy Show (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Episode dated 8 November 1973 (1973) - (writer: "Goodbye Sunshine")
-
The Johnny Cash Show (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode, 1971) (writer - 1 episode, 1971)
- The History of Country Music: Part 1 (1971) - (performer: "You Don't Know Me", "Portrait of a Woman") / (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1970
The Kraft Music Hall (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- John Davidson, Jackie DeShannon, Charlie Callas, Eddy Arnold (1970) - (performer: "Talk To The Animals")
1967
Clambake (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1967
A Time for Killing (performer: "The Long Ride Home")
1966
The Danny Kaye Show (TV Series) (performer - 2 episodes)
- Episode #4.22 (1967) - (performer: "There's Always Potato")
- Cyril Ritchard, Eddy Arnold (1966) - (performer: "Make the World Go Away", "Just a Little Lovin'", "Where I Come From")
1965
Hollywood a Go Go (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Episode #1.46 (1965) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
1965
The Dean Martin Show (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Episode #1.4 (1965) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
-
The Jimmy Dean Show (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode, 1963) (writer - 1 episode, 1963)
- Maureen O'Hara, Bronwyn FitzSimons, Professor Backwards (1963) - (performer: "She Thinks I Still Care" (uncredited), "Bouquet of Roses" (uncredited), "Anytime You're Feelin Blue" (uncredited), "I Really Don't Want To Know" (as "How Many Arms Have Held You"), "You Don't Know Me" (uncredited), "You're a Real Good Friend" (uncredited), "Just a Little Lovin'" (uncredited), "Columbus Stockdale Blues" (uncredited), "Gotta Travel On" (uncredited)) / (writer: "You Don't Know Me", "Just a Little Lovin'" - uncredited)
-
Ozark Jubilee (TV Series) (performer - 3 episodes, 1960) (writer - 1 episode, 1960)
- Episode dated 26 July 1960 (1960) - (performer: "I'll Have Nothing to Do", "I Really Don't Want to Know" - uncredited)
- Episode dated 24 June 1960 (1960) - (performer: "Paper Roses", "Detour" (uncredited), "It's a Sin")
- Episode dated 7 May 1960 (1960) - (performer: "Wreck of the Old 97", "Y'All Come")
- Episode dated 27 February 1960 (1960) - (writer: "You Don't Know Me")
-
Country Style, U.S.A. (TV Series short) (performer - 1 episode, 1959) (writer - 1 episode, 1959)
- Episode #3.1 (1959) - (performer: "Any Time", "Till You Come Back Again", "I'll Hold You in My Heart") / (writer: "I'll Hold You in My Heart")
1959
The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show (TV Series) (writer - 2 episodes)
- Edgar Bergen (1959) - (writer: "Chip Off the Old Block" - uncredited)
- Cliff Arquette (1959) - (writer: "Chip Off the Old Block" - uncredited)
1959
The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (TV Series) (writer - 1 episode)
- Country Style (1959) - (writer: "Chip Off the Old Block" - uncredited)
1957
The DuPont Show of the Month (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- Crescendo (1957) - (performer: "Sweet Betsy from Pike")
1956
Tension at Table Rock (performer: "The Ballad of Wes Tancred")
1956
The Tennessee Plowboy (Short) (performer: "Cattle Call", "I Walked Alone Last Night (Where Once We Wandered)")
1950
Hoedown (performer: "Just a Little Lovin' (Will Go a Long Way)", "Bouquet of Roses", "I'm Throwing Rice (At the Girl I Love)") / (writer: "Just a Little Lovin' (Will Go a Long Way)", "I'm Throwing Rice (At the Girl I Love)")
1949
Feudin' Rhythm (performer: "Cattle Call", "You Know How Talk Gets Around", "The Nearest Thing To Heaven", "There's No Wings On My Angel") / (writer: "There's No Wings On My Angel")
1948
Song of the Drifter (writer: "I'll Hold You In My Heart")
1947
Community Sing 9652: April Showers (Short) (writer: "That's How Much I Love You")
Thanks
1971
The Last Picture Show (for their music we thank: courtesy of RCA Records)
Self
2006
Best of Country Live! (Video) as
Self
2005
Eddy Arnold Sings the Hits (Video documentary) as
Self
2002
The Definitive Elvis: Elvis and the Colonel (Video documentary) as
Self
1997
Christmas Time with Eddy Arnold (Video) as
Self
1996
Third Annual Evening of Country Greats (TV Special documentary) as
Self
1996
Prime Time Country (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode dated 14 October 1996 (1996) - Self
1996
Salute to the '50s: The Reunion of the Decade (TV Special documentary) as
Self
1996
America's Music: The Roots of Country (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self (1996)
1996
An Evening of Country Greats: A Hall of Fame Celebration (TV Special) as
Self
1992
Country Music Hall of Fame 25th Anniversary Celebration (TV Special documentary) as
Self
1990
An All Star Salute to Country Music (TV Special) as
Self
1986
Academy of Country Music's 20th Anniversary Reunion (TV Special) as
Self
1984
The 19th Academy of Country Music Awards (TV Special) as
Self - Winner
1982
Roy Acuff... 50 Years the King of Country Music (TV Special) as
Self
1979
The Arthur Godfrey Special (TV Special) as
Self
1977
Happy Birthday, Las Vegas (TV Special) as
Self
1962
The Mike Douglas Show (TV Series) as
Self - Co-Host / Self - Vocalist / Self / ...
1976
Sammy and Company (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold and the amazing Kreskin (1976) - Self
1975
Dinah! (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.180 (1976) - Self
- Episode #1.116 (1975) - Self
1965
The Merv Griffin Show (TV Series) as
Self / Self - Guest
- Episode dated 8 April 1975 (1975) - Self
- Eddy Arnold, Dr. Joyce Brothers, Dr. Carlton Fredericks, Arthur Treacher, Jack Sheldon (1973) - Self
- Eddy Arnold, Guy Marks, Freda Payne, Tony Love, Antonio Carlos Jobim (1970) - Self
- Eddy Arnold, Soupy Sales, Phil Leeds, Terry O'Mara, Merv Griffin's 9-year-old son Tony (1969) - Self - Guest
- Ray Milland, Betsy Palmer, Eddy Arnold, Marcia Wallace, Julie Budd, James Manns (1969) - Self
- Kitty Carlisle, Jackie Mason, Eddy Arnold, Frank D'Rona, Westbrook Pegler, Dom DeLuise (1965) - Self
1974
Stand Up and Cheer (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode dated 18 March 1974 (1974) - Self
1971
The Lee Phillip Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold and Dalton Trumbo (1971) - Self
1967
The Kraft Music Hall (TV Series) as
Self - Host / Self / Self - Co-Host
- Eddy Arnold and the Young Americans (1971) - Self - Host
- Christmas Program (1970) - Self - Host
- John Davidson, Jackie DeShannon, Charlie Callas, Eddy Arnold (1970) - Self
- Eddy Arnold, Phil Harris, Bernadette Peters, Bobbie Gentry, Browning Bryant (1969) - Self - Host
- Polly Bergen, Eddy Arnold, Browning Bryant, The Cowsills, Johnny Puleo and The Harmonicats (1969) - Self
- Christmas Show (1968) - Self - Host
- The Kraft Premiere Show (1968) - Self - Co-Host
- County Fair #7 (1968) - Self - Host
- Country Fair #6 (1968) - Self - Host
- County Fair #5 (1968) - Self - Host
- Country Fair #4 (1968) - Self - Host
- Country Fair #3 (1968) - Self - Host
- Country Fair #2 (1968) - Self - Host
- County Fair #1 (1968) - Self - Host
- Dinah Shore Presents The Nashville Sound (1967) - Self
1971
The Johnny Cash Show (TV Series) as
Self - Singer
- The History of Country Music: Part 1 (1971) - Self - Singer
1970
The Jim Nabors Hour (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.11 (1970) - Self
1970
The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold, Shecky Greene, Don Rice III, Sunday's Child (1970) - Self
1970
The Real Tom Kennedy Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.45 (1970) - Self
1963
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (TV Series) as
Self - Guest / Self / Self - Guest Host
- Episode dated 2 March 1970 (1970) - Self
- Episode dated 2 February 1968 (1968) - Self - Guest
- Danny Thomas/Carl Ballantine/Psychiatrist Dore Miller (1967) - Self - Guest
- Episode dated 22 August 1967 (1967) - Self - Guest
- Vincent Price Eddy Arnold (1967) - Self - Guest
- Betsy Palmer, Mitzi Gaynor, Eddy Arnold (1967) - Self - Guest
- Tom Smothers, Fred Finn, Eddy Arnold (1966) - Self - Guest
- Eddy Arnold (1965) - Self
- Episode #6.20 (1963) - Self - Guest Host
- Peter Donald Eddy Arnold, Sandy Stewart, The Powerhouse Four (1963) - Self - Guest
1969
The David Frost Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.8 (1969) - Self
- Episode #1.23 (1969) - Self
1969
The Dennis Wholey Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.2 (1969) - Self
1969
The Joey Bishop Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #3.181 (1969) - Self
1968
Showtime (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Guest Host: EDDIE ARNOLD (1968) - Self - Host
1968
The Red Skelton Hour (TV Series) as
Self / Henry Dittendorfer
- San Fernando: Man with a Heart of Stolen Gold (1968) - Self / Henry Dittendorfer
1968
Carol Channing and 101 Men (TV Special) as
Self
1968
Dee Time (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #3.22 (1968) - Self
1968
American Profile (TV Series documentary) as
Self - Host
- Music from the Land (1968) - Self - Host
1968
The Jackie Gleason Show (TV Series) as
Self - Musical Guest
- Episode #2.17 (1968) - Self - Musical Guest
1966
The John Gary Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold, Susan Barrett, Wayne Cochran and the CC Riders, Bill Dana, Fannie Flagg (1967) - Self
- Episode #1.5 (1966) - Self
1967
Pat Boone in Hollywood (TV Series) as
Self
- Phil Foster, Eddy Arnold, Marty Ingels, Abbe Lane (1967) - Self
1966
The Dean Martin Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #3.4 (1967) - Self
- Episode #2.12 (1966) - Self
1967
Personality (TV Series) as
Self
- Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam, Carol Burnett, Eddy Arnold (1967) - Self
1966
The Danny Kaye Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #4.22 (1967) - Self
- Cyril Ritchard, Eddy Arnold (1966) - Self
1949
Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall (TV Series) as
Self / Self - Guest
- Eddy Arnold, Nancy Ames, Chet Atkins, Hendra & Ullett (1967) - Self - Guest
- Eddy Arnold (1955) - Self
- Eddy Arnold (1955) - Self
- Eddy Arnold (1952) - Self
- Eddy Arnold and Arnold Stang (1950) - Self
- Robert Q. Lewis and Eddy Arnold (1949) - Self
1966
The Andy Williams Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Steve Allen, Inger Stevens, Petula Clark, Eddy Arnold (1966) - Self
1966
Top of the Pops (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #3.21 (1966) - Self
- Episode #3.8 (1966) - Self
- Episode #3.5 (1966) - Self
1966
This Proud Land (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
- The South (1966) - Self
1966
Danny Thomas Special: Danny Goes Country and Western (TV Movie) as
Self
1966
Juke Box Jury (TV Series) as
Self - Panellist
- Episode #1.339 (1966) - Self - Panellist
1966
The Eamonn Andrews Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.18 (1966) - Self
1966
The Bell Telephone Hour (TV Series) as
Self - Singer
- The Music of the West (1966) - Self - Singer
1965
The Steve Lawrence Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold, Minnie Pearl, Johnny Cash, Boots Randolph, Grampa Jones, The Jordanaires (1965) - Self
1963
The Jimmy Dean Show (TV Series) as
Self
- The Pop and Country World of Nashville (1965) - Self
- Episode #2.25 (1965) - Self
- Episode #2.17 (1965) - Self
- Episode #2.8 (1964) - Self
- Episode #1.22 (1964) - Self
- Eddy Arnold, Gwen Verdon, Roger Price, Allan Sherman, Molly Bee (1963) - Self
1965
The Best on Record (TV Special) as
Self
1965
ABC's Nightlife (TV Series) as
Self - Guest Host / Self
- Episode #1.54 (1965) - Self - Guest Host
- Episode #1.53 (1965) - Self - Guest Host
- Episode #1.52 (1965) - Self - Guest Host
- Episode #1.51 (1965) - Self - Guest Host
- Episode #1.50 (1965) - Self - Guest Host
- Episode #1.30 (1965) - Self
1964
That Regis Philbin Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.43 (1964) - Self
1964
Hootenanny (TV Series) as
Self / Self - Performer
- Episode dated 6 June 1964 (1964) - Self
- Episode dated 14 March 1964 (1964) - Self
- University of Tennessee (1964) - Self - Performer
1962
The Tonight Show (TV Series) as
Self - Country Vocalist
- Episode #1.74 (1962) - Self - Country Vocalist
1962
The Tonight Show Starring Jack Paar (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #5.185 (1962) - Self
1959
The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #5.27 (1961) - Self
- Episode #3.52 (1959) - Self
- Roy Rogers & Dale Evans, The Sons of the Pioneers, Rex Allen, Jo Stafford, Eddy Arnold, Red Foley, Pat Boone, Homer & Jethro (1959) - Self
1960
Ozark Jubilee (TV Series) as
Self - Host / Singer
- Episode dated 26 July 1960 (1960) - Self - Host / Singer
- Episode dated 24 June 1960 (1960) - Self - Host / Singer
- Episode dated 7 May 1960 (1960) - Self - Host / Singer
1959
Country Style, U.S.A. (TV Series short) as
Self - Singer
- Episode #3.1 (1959) - Self - Singer
1957
The DuPont Show of the Month (TV Series) as
Self
- Crescendo (1957) - Self
1957
This Is Your Life (TV Series) as
Self
- Minnie Pearl (1957) - Self
1957
The Country Boy Eddie Show (TV Series) as
Self - Guest (1961)
1956
The Eddy Arnold Show (TV Series) as
Self - Host
- Julie Gilmer (1956) - Self - Host
- Trio Los Borincanos (1956) - Self - Host
- Georgia Brown, The Foggy River Boys (1956) - Self - Host
- Peggy Dietrich (1956) - Self - Host
- Shirley Caddell (1956) - Self - Host
- The Philharmonics (1956) - Self - Host
- Fran Warren (1956) - Self - Host
- Lou Monte (1956) - Self - Host
- Johnny Desmond (1956) - Self - Host
- The Diamonds (1956) - Self - Host
- Betty Johnson, The Jordanaires (1956) - Self - Host
- Anita Ellis (1956) - Self - Host
- Beverly Collins (1956) - Self - Host
- Cathy Carr (1956) - Self - Host
- Helen O'Connell (1956) - Self - Host
- Sunny Gale (1956) - Self - Host
- Betty Madigan (1956) - Self - Host
- Lu Ann Simms (1956) - Self - Host
- Vaughn Monroe (1956) - Self - Host
- Karen Chandler (1956) - Self - Host
- Eileen Barton (1956) - Self - Host
- Dolores Hawkins (1956) - Self - Host
1956
The Patti Page Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.1 (1956) - Self
1956
The Tennessee Plowboy (Short) as
Self - as the Tennessee Plowboy
1955
Stage Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold/Gene Nelson/Gene Sheldon (1955) - Self
1955
Caesar's Hour (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold (1955) - Self
1954
The Spike Jones Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Prison Life (1954) - Self
1953
The Dave Garroway Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Eddy Arnold (1953) - Self
1953
The Eddy Arnold Show (TV Series) as
Self - Host
1952
The Eddy Arnold Show (TV Series) as
Self - Host
1952
The Ezio Pinza Show (TV Series) as
Self - Country Vocalist
- Episode #1.9 (1952) - Self - Country Vocalist
1950
The Milton Berle Show (TV Series) as
Self - Singer
- Episode #3.13 (1950) - Self - Singer
- Episode #2.21 (1950) - Self - Singer
1949
Hometown Jamboree (TV Series) as
Self
1949
It's in the Groove (Documentary short) as
Self
1948
The R.C.A. Thanksgiving Show (TV Special) as
Self
Archive Footage
2019
My Music: A Classic Christmas (TV Special documentary) as
Self
2014
The Heart of Country: How Nashville Became Music City USA (TV Movie documentary) as
Self (2002)
2007
Opry Video Classics: Pioneers (Video) as
Self
2006
My Music: Country Pop Legends (TV Special) as
Self
2005
Grand Ole Opry's Vintage Classics (TV Special) as
Self

References

Eddy Arnold Wikipedia


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