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The circumstances of Williams's death are still controversial. The result of the original autopsy indicated that Williams died of a heart attack. [17] Author Colin Escott concluded in his book Hank Williams: The Biography that the cause of death was heart failure caused by the combination of alcohol, morphine and chloral hydrate. [18]
Their son, Randall Hank Williams (now known as Hank Williams Jr.), was born on May 26, 1949. [94] The marriage was always turbulent and rapidly disintegrated, [ 95 ] and Williams developed serious problems with alcohol, morphine, and other painkillers prescribed for him to ease the severe back pain caused by his spina bifida occulta . [ 96 ]
"The Conversation" by Waylon Jennings and Hank Williams Jr., with the opening lyric sung by Jennings, "Hank, let's talk about your daddy" "Crank the Hank" by Dallas Wayne "Crazy Town" by Jason Aldean "Curse of Hank" by Tim Hus "The Death of Hank Williams" and "Hank Williams Sings the Blues No More", both by Jimmie Logsdon
Hank Williams Jr.'s sons and daughters have followed in his musical ... Hank and Mary welcomed their daughter Katherine Williams-Dunning on Oct. 21, 1992. She died in a car crash at age 27 on June ...
In 1987, singer-songwriter Hank Williams was given a posthumous Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Actors’ Playhouse delivers a concert and cautionary tale in ‘Hank Williams: Lost Highway ...
Williams was born Randall Hank Williams on May 26, 1949, in Shreveport, Louisiana. His father nicknamed him Bocephus (after Grand Ole Opry comedian Rod Brasfield 's ventriloquist dummy). [ 7 ] After his father's death in 1953, he was raised by his mother, Audrey Williams .
Mary Jane Thomas, wife of country singer-songwriter Hank Williams Jr., died on March 22 in Jupiter of a collapsed lung that was accidentally punctured one day earlier during surgery at the Jupiter ...
Homesick (lyrics by Williams; music composed by Hank Williams, Jr.) Honey, Do You Love Me, Huh? (co-written with Curley Williams) Honky Tonk Blues; Honky Tonkin' How Can You Refuse Him Now; How Many Times Have You Broken My Heart? (lyrics by Williams, recorded by Gillian Welch and Norah Jones for The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams) Howlin' at ...