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Do. I live. In a part of the. Thing. And coming to you direct from the Old Opry house with
30 minutes of the finest in country music. Thanks. Thanks. Ha ha thanks thanks. Thanks thanks.
Thanks. Thanks thanks thanks. Thanks. Thanks thanks. Thanks thanks. Thanks thanks. Thanks.
Thanks thanks. Thank. You Greg Wood. That's gotta hurt it a little bob is sure to get us rolling here tonight. I believe my friends I want to welcome you to Rose Ark opera to night. Now we got a lot of good country songs coming your way. I hope you'll stay with us for the next half hour we got a few things Maadi make you laugh a little bit. I know you're speaking about a lot of fun a little to know you're going to enjoy a cold sweet country music. Was.
It. And. Thanks.
Thanks. Thank you very much. Friends Oh good first quote a bagpipe player Brady got a hold of him so he had got to improvise a little bit. I don't know this is not sweet country music. I don't get to see country music at all. But he's got the girls to help him and he's going to do a little bag without the bag take it away. It came in there. Thank.
YOU THANK YOU. Thank.
You. Thank. You. I'm not sure to be a prebuttal but there from we've got the bluegrass band here. We've switched around a little bit we got Scotty on the string banjo and we got Jim Smith on the federal jokes hours and the rhythm section and we hope you'll enjoy a little tune called the grassy fiddle bloom. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank God thank God. Thanks. Thanks. Thanks. Yes. Am I Am. I am. I am. I am. I was. I am. I was I am I am. I am I
am. Thanks. I see it as an educational tool and I like to explain a little bit of it to you might in fact all read this story to you as a punctuation to help you understand the story better. And before do that I like to explain the punctuation to you so you know what type mark some use it. Now when I come to a period in the
story it will be a little dot. So when I come to a period it will be a. Now a karma a comma a little scrape. So when I come to common the story it'll be right there. Yeah. Quotation marks are total marks right close together. Now you normally find them out in a corner. So when I come to quotation marks there be that have you left handed a beat down. A semi-colon is a period with the comma. So when I come to a simple colon in the story it'll be OK. Now a question mark quite a bit. It's a half circle with a short line with a period under. Now when I come to a question mark it obeyed. OK now I haif our day.
She just little short one. So when I come down hyphen in the story it'll be a good boy. Euro sounds like a flat car. You go up. Look when I am not asked them I should point out it's just a long straight line with a period on. So when I comed an exclamation point it'll be. Now I'll read the short story as a punctuation in the open window. There are subtle A came a light. The prince had only one thing on his mind. Do you hear said Pat. She had met Sir Henry. He could still remember the end happy evening when her father had
thrown him out. They had been setting in the park and Sir Henry had said early. Is this a first time you've really cared for me. She answered. Yeah up and it's so wonderful. And he was near her in break here. You know it's wonderful and I could do without you.
And happily ever after. Which was. Wow.
Amie. Thank you very much. I mean if you want to go a bit rounds we've got to know that the late Ernest made famous it's called waltz across Texas. Here's Vic in the bardo. Why don't sing it for your kids. Who. Go out. Who. Are. And. That's a true. CHAR.
I am. I am. I am. I am.
Thank you very much. Little to no scholar made famous in the bluegrass world I don't know how bluegrass Kristie is this little to go all the roses in the snow now hope you all enjoyed. The. Show and.
With. The. Yeah. You.
Feel. The. Wrath. Thank you very much. We hope you like it. You know so my favorite music was the old Western Swing music that Bob used to play. We've got an old Bob Wilston here when of course he's going to sing for school I'm satisfied with you. Let's hear Wendell. That is good and we hope you'll enjoy it a little bit.
That's we're about to get time for one more good tune here and we've saved your gospel to the Bardos going to sing one for us. Wonder if the angels could use another singer to say good night to miss him next week and we hope you've enjoyed a good night. Have.
You been watching the redirect for the Osage Beach Missouri. This is Larry. Remind you to join us in at the same time next week. And remember any time you're visiting Lake of the Ozarks come see us in person at the Old Opry House.
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Series
Lee Mace's Ozark Opry
Producing Organization
KMOS
Contributing Organization
KMOS (Warrensburg, Missouri)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip/147-085hqcwn
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/147-085hqcwn).
Description
Episode Description
Lee Mace hosts this episode featuring country music performers from The Ozark Opry Quartet, The Ozark Opry Blue Grass Band, and a number of ensemble singers. The Ozark Opry Dancers perform and Bill Atterberry as character Goofer does a comedy routine about punctuation. Songs include: "Bobbie Sue", "Sweet Country Music", Ray Stevens's "Bagpipes (That's My Bag)", "The Grassy Fiddle Blues", Ernest Tubbs's "Waltz Across Texas", "The Rose in the Snow", Bob Wells's "I'm Satisfied with You", and the gospel song "I Wonder If the Angels Could Use Another Singer".
Series Description
Lee Mace's Ozark Opry is a variety show featuring music, dancing, and comedy in the tradition of Ozarks.
Created Date
1985-03-13
Asset type
Episode
Genres
Performance
Topics
Music
Rights
No copyright statement in the content.
Media type
Moving Image
Duration
00:29:12
Credits
Distributor: Ozark Opry Productions
Distributor: Rhees Communications
Executive Producer: Mace, Lee
Executive Producer: Rhees, Joseph
Executive Producer: Ozark Opry Productions
Host: Mace, Lee
Host: Craig, Wendell
Host: Lombardo, Vicky
Host: Branscomb, Scotty
Host: Sars, Chuck
Host: Smith, Jim
Host: Moore, Christy
Host: Ozark Opry Dancers
Host: Ozark Opry Blue Grass Band
Host: Ozark Opry Quartet
Performer: Atterberry, Bill
Producing Organization: KMOS
AAPB Contributor Holdings
KMOS
Identifier: OO 221 (Tape Label)
Format: Betacam: SP
Generation: Master
Duration: 00:28:32
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
Citations
Chicago: “Lee Mace's Ozark Opry,” 1985-03-13, KMOS, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed July 16, 2025, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-147-085hqcwn.
MLA: “Lee Mace's Ozark Opry.” 1985-03-13. KMOS, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. July 16, 2025. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-147-085hqcwn>.
APA: Lee Mace's Ozark Opry. Boston, MA: KMOS, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-147-085hqcwn