Tag Archives: Judds

Wynonna Judd’s Daughter: Mom Won’t Take My Calls From Jail – The Daily Beast

  1. Wynonna Judd’s Daughter: Mom Won’t Take My Calls From Jail The Daily Beast
  2. Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Country music legend’s daughter officially charged with soliciting prostitution PennLive
  4. Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ New York Post
  5. Wynonna Judd’s Daughter, 22, Sentenced to Eight Years in Prison PEOPLE

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Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Wynonna Judd’s daughter Grace Kelley back in jail as disheveled mugshot is revealed despite trying to turn… The US Sun
  3. Country music legend’s daughter officially charged with soliciting prostitution PennLive
  4. Wynonna Judd’s Daughter, 22, Sentenced to Eight Years in Prison PEOPLE
  5. Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ New York Post

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Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ – New York Post

  1. Wynonna Judd’s daughter thinks her mom blocked her number after getting slapped with prostitution charges: ‘She thinks I’m out here doing crazy s–t’ New York Post
  2. Wynonna Judd’s daughter Grace Kelley, 27, is charged with soliciting for prostitution after holding sign up on Daily Mail
  3. Wynonna Judd’s daughter arrested in Alabama on indecent exposure charges AL.com
  4. New Details Emerge in Arrest of Wynonna Judd’s Daughter Grace Kelley Parade Magazine
  5. Wynonna Judd’s Daughter Grace Kelley Charged with Soliciting for Prostitution Following Arrest for Indecent Exposure PEOPLE

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‘Do not let Wy come to my funeral. She’s mentally ill’: Naomi Judd’s devastating suicide note

Naomi Judd left a suicide note insisting her daughter Wynonna was barred from her funeral – and claimed she was mentally ill.

The Post-it-style paper was found near the 76-year-old’s body after she shot herself dead at her Tennessee mansion in April.

It said: ‘Do not let Wy come to my funeral. She’s mentally ill.’ The word ‘not’ appeared to have been underlined.

The note was among a series of documents released by Williamson County Sheriff’s Department this week.

Wynnona did attend the funeral, a source told Radar Online, and believes the note was written when her mother was not in her right mind.

The cops also shared images of the country music star’s blood-stained bedding as well as a photograph of a gun on her nightstand.

Meanwhile they made public a series of notes written by a deputy who attended the crime scene, saying Naomi had threatened to kill herself ‘half a dozen times’.

The Judds – daughters Wynonna, 58, Ashley, 54, and husband Larry Strickland – tried to prevent the police report being made public, but dropped the case in December.

Naomi Judd left a suicide note beside her bed, insisting her daughter Wynonna should not attend her funeral

Naomi Judd (right) is seen with her daughter Wynonna (left), in one of their final appearances in public. She is pictured waving at crowds at the CMT Music Awards on April 11, 2022

Sheriffs released photos of the scene where Judd took her own life

The startling images from the scene showed the Post-it-style note stuck to what appeared to be a magazine.

It also showed her grand bed covered in blood that had stained her sheets and pillow after the tragedy.

Meanwhile a deputy’s notes shed more light on what happened the day she died, including conversations cops had with the family.

Strickland, her husband of 33 years, was in Europe at the time of her death and the police report noted she did not like being alone.

‘Didn’t like being alone/Larry in Europe,’ a sheriff’s deputy wrote, in a handwritten note from the scene.

‘She threatened to kill herself a half a dozen times, guns were involved. She locked herself in her bedroom. She would threaten to shoot the people who took her (illegible.)’

The police report also details how Ashley found her mother and comforted her as they waited 30 minutes for an ambulance to arrive at the Leipers Fork home, 25 miles south of downtown Nashville.

Ashley found her mother in a manic state and called the family doctor, Dr Ted Klontz. The actress told police her mom screamed: ‘Kill me, kill me now. I don’t want to live!’

She said she replied: ‘Now, mom, you know I’m not going to do that.’

Ashley texted Klontz, writing: ‘She’s having an episode. Yelling and crying and pacing … Emergency … Please come to mom’s … Now.’

When Klontz arrived, she told him: ‘She was screaming and speaking in tongues.’ Ashley said her mother calmed down when the doctor arrived, and later left them alone to discuss her condition.

When she returned to the room, she found her mother with a bullet wound to the head. She told the doctor: ‘She did it. She finally did it.’

Ashley Judd (left)  with her mother Naomi  Judd (center) and her sister Wynonna Judd (right)

Naomi Judd’s home in Tennessee where she was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head

In a harrowing essay in The New York Times, Ashley in August described how discovering her mother was ‘the most shattering day of my life.’

‘The trauma of discovering and then holding her laboring body haunts my nights,’ she wrote.

But instead of being able to comfort her mother in her dying moments, Ashley said police officers harshly interrogated her and kept her from her mother.

‘I felt cornered and powerless as law enforcement officers began questioning me while the last of my mother’s life was fading,’ she wrote.

‘I wanted to be comforting her, telling her how she was about to see her daddy and younger brother as she ‘went away home,’ as we say in Appalachia.’

Ashley said she was in such a state of shock after she found her dying mother that she answered questions from police she did not want to.

She said: ‘I would never have answered on any other day’ and never thought to consider whether the public would later have access to it.

‘In the immediate aftermath of a life-altering tragedy, when we are in a state of acute shock, trauma, panic and distress, the authorities show up to talk to us,’ she wrote.

‘Because many of us are socially conditioned to cooperate with law enforcement, we are utterly unguarded in what we say.

‘I never thought to ask my own questions, including: Is your body camera on? Am I being audio recorded again? Where and how will what I am sharing be stored, used and made available to the public?”

According to the report, the gunshot that killed Judd ‘perforated through the right side of the scalp and entered the skull through an entrance-type gunshot wound’ 

The country superstar died of a self-inflicted bullet wound in April 2022 at the age of 76

Ashley Judd (left) with her mother Naomi Judd (right). Ashley and her family filed a petition to seal police records of interviews taken in the moments after Naomi’s suicide last April. The family dropped their efforts in December

Both Ashley and Wynonna were written out of their mother’s will, with it left to Strickland to make decisions over her estate and assets.

The Judd family said in a statement confirming her death: ‘Our beloved mother and wife succumbed to mental illness. 

‘Everyone who has gone through this tragedy understands that in the depths of a mental health crisis, thinking is profoundly distorted.

‘Moreover, the worst days are never representative of the comforts and pleasures of the days free from the disease.

‘In the aftermath of this tragedy, our family has tried to grieve, together, with our community, and importantly, with the privacy that everyone who loses a family member deserves. 

‘We have always been a forthright and open family about both our hardships and the depth of our love for each other.

‘In this particular matter, however, we ask for privacy, because a death with privacy is a death with more dignity.’ 

The Judds were the most successful country singers of the 80s, winning five Grammys, nine CMAs, and selling 20million records.

In the immediate aftermath of their mother’s death Ashley and Wynonna supported each other in their loss, attending her induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, May 1 – the day after their mother’s suicide.

Naomi and Wynonna Judd pictured in their heyday

 On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life

Naomi had a tumultuous upbringing – and in part she attributed her depression to the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of an uncle when she was just three.

When she was 22, Naomi was raped and beaten by an ex-boyfriend, a trauma that saw her flee Los Angeles for rural Kentucky, where she lived with her children on welfare while training to become a nurse.

They lived in a home with no electricity, phone, television or indoor plumbing.

Naomi moved to Nashville when she qualified and ultimately became head nurse in an intensive care unit.

It was there that she learned a patient’s father was in the music industry. She made a tape of herself singing with Wynonna, gave it to him and ‘The Judds’ career in music was launched.

On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life.

She wrote about ‘personal healing,’ her sense of being ‘helpless’ and the few things she knew in the face of such despair and drama.

She said she would continue to fight for her faith, herself and her family, to continue to ‘show up & sing.’

And she vowed to ‘break the cycle’ of addiction and dysfunction that has stalked the Judd women.

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Naomi Judd’s public memorial will air on CMT

The Judd sisters announced on April 30 that they had lost their mother “to the disease of mental illness.” She was 76.

CMT announced on Wednesday that in cooperation with the Judd family, a public memorial service would air on the network as a commercial-free special at 6 p.m. EST on Sunday.

The live celebration will be held at the former home of the Grand Ole Opry, Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.

“We are sincerely privileged to work alongside Wynonna and Ashley to present this live celebration of life for their mother Naomi,” a statement about the event read. “While we all continue to deeply mourn the loss of such a legendary artist, we are honored to commemorate her legacy alongside the country community, her friends, family and legions of fans across the world at the perfect venue: The Mother Church of Country Music. This special will celebrate her timeless voice, unforgettable spirit and the immense impact she left on our genre through the best form of healing we have – music.”

Performers and special appearances will be announced in the days to come.

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The Judds join Country Music Hall of Fame one day after Naomi Judd’s unexpected death

Ray Charles and The Judds joined the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday in a ceremony filled with tears, music and laughter, just a day after Naomi Judd died unexpectedly.

The loss of Naomi Judd altered the normally celebratory ceremony, but the music played on, as the genre’s singers and musicians mourned Naomi Judd while also celebrating the four inductees: The Judds, Ray Charles, Eddie Bayers and Pete Drake. Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood, Vince Gill and many more performed their hit songs.

Naomi and Wynonna Judd were among the most popular duos of the 1980s, scoring 14 No. 1 hits during their nearly three-decade career. On the eve of her induction, the family said in a statement to The Associated Press that Naomi Judd died at the age of 76 due to “the disease of mental illness.”

Daughters Wynonna and Ashley Judd accepted the induction amid tears, holding onto each other and reciting a Bible verse together.

“I’m sorry that she couldn’t hang on until today,” Ashley Judd said of her mother to the crowd while crying. Wynonna Judd talked about the family gathering as they said goodbye to her and she and Ashley Judd recited Psalm 23.

“Though my heart is broken I will continue to sing,” Wynonna Judd said.

Naomi Judd, left, and Wynonna Judd, of The Judds, perform at the “Girls’ Night Out: Superstar Women of Country,” in Las Vegas, April 4, 2011. 

Julie Jacobson / AP


Fans gathered outside the museum, drawn to a white floral bouquet outside the entrance and a small framed photo of Naomi Judd below. A single rose was laid on the ground.

Charles’ induction showcased his genre-defying country releases, which showed the genre’s commercial appeal. The Georgia-born singer and piano player grew up listening to the Grand Ole Opry and in 1962 released “Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music,” which became one of the best selling country releases of his era.

The piano player, blinded and orphaned at a young age, is best known for R&B, gospel and soul, but his decision to record country music changed the way the world thought about the genre, expanding audiences in the Civil Rights era.

Charles’ version of “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” spent five weeks on top of the Billboard 100 chart and remains one of his most popular songs. He died in 2004.

Brooks sang “Seven Spanish Angels,” one of Charles’ hits with Willie Nelson, while Bettye LaVette performed “I Can’t Stop Loving You.”

Country Music Hall of Famer Ronnie Milsap said he met Charles when he was a young singer and that others tried to imitate Charles, but no one could measure up.

“There was one of him and only one,” said Milsap. “He sang country music like it should be sung.”

The Hall of Fame also inducted two recordings musicians who were elemental to so many country songs and singers: Eddie Bayers and Pete Drake.

Bayers, a drummer in Nashville for decades who worked on 300 platinum records, is a member of the Grand Ole Opry band. He regularly played on records for The Judds, Ricky Skaggs, George Strait, Alan Jackson and Kenny Chesney. He is the first drummer to join the institution.

Drake, who died in 1988, was a pedal steel guitar player and a member of Nashville’s A-team of skilled session musicians, played on hits like “Stand By Your Man” by Tammy Wynette and “He Stopped Loving Her Today” by George Jones. He is the first pedal steel guitar player to become part of the Hall of Fame.

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Naomi Judd, of Grammy-Winning the Judds, Dies at 76

Naomi Judd, of the Grammy-winning duo the Judds and the mother of Wynonna and Ashley Judd, died on Saturday. She was 76.

Ashley Judd, the actress, confirmed her mother’s death on Twitter. She did not specify a cause of death but said, “We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness.”

Scott Adkins, a publicist, said Ms. Judd died on Saturday outside Nashville but did not give a more specific location.

The country music duo the Judds, made up of Naomi and Wynonna Judd, was to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday. They had just announced their final tour — and their first together in a decade. It was to begin in the fall.

The mother-daughter duo had 14 No. 1 singles during a three-decade career.

The Judds’ hits included “Mama He’s Crazy,” “Why Not Me,” (both in 1984); “Girls Night Out” (1985); “Rockin’ With the Rhythm of the Rain” and “Grandpa” (both in 1986); “Turn It Loose” (1988); and “Love Can Build a Bridge” (1990).

They won nine Country Music Association Awards and seven awards from the Academy of Country Music. They also won five Grammy Awards for hits like “Why Not Me” and “Give a Little Love.”

The pair stopped performing and recording in 1991, after Naomi Judd learned she had hepatitis.

Ms. Judd is survived by her two daughters and her husband, Larry Strickland, who was a backup singer for Elvis Presley.

In a news release this month announcing the upcoming tour, Ms. Judd said she was looking forward to reconnecting with fans and singing with her daughter Wynonna.

Referring to Wynonna, Ms. Judd said: “She asked me if I was still going to twist, twirl and crack jokes. I answered, ‘Heck yeah! I’m too old to grow up now!’”

This obituary will be updated.



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Country Music HOF Ceremony To Proceed Following Naomi Judd’s Death – Deadline

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum will continue with its medallion ceremony on Sunday, May 1st in Nashville following news of the death of country music icon Naomi Judd, who, along with her daughter Wynonna, was set to be inducted as The Judds.

According to a Country Music Hall of Fame rep, Wynonna Judd is expected to attend the induction ceremony.

CEO of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Kyle Young, said in a statement provided to Billboard that the Judd family requested the ceremony to carry on in light of Naomi’s passing.

We are shocked and saddened to learn of the death of Naomi Judd, who enters the Country Music Hall of Fame tomorrow as a member of mother-daughter duo The Judds…Naomi overcame incredible adversity on her way to a significant place in music history. Her triumphant life story overshadows today’s tragic news. Her family has asked that we continue with The Judds’ official Hall of Fame induction on Sunday. We will do so, with heavy hearts and weighted minds. Naomi and daughter Wynonna’s music will endure,” Young said in a statement.

Other inductees are to include Eddie Bayers, Ray Charles and Pete Drake.

Plans for a public red carpet arrivals are cancelled.

Earlier Saturday, Naomi Judd’s daughters, Wynonna and Ashley, announced the death of their mother in a statement released on social media.

“Today we sisters experienced a tragedy. We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness,” the statement read. “We are shattered. We are navigating profound grief and know that as we loved her, she was loved by her public. We are in unknown territory.”

Naomi Judd was 76.

No memorial plans have been announced yet.



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Naomi Judd, of Grammy-winning duo The Judds, dies at 76

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Naomi Judd, the Kentucky-born singer of the Grammy-winning duo The Judds and mother of Wynonna and Ashley Judd, has died. She was 76.

The daughters announced her death on Saturday in a statement provided to The Associated Press.

“Today we sisters experienced a tragedy. We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness,” the statement said. “We are shattered. We are navigating profound grief and know that as we loved her, she was loved by her public. We are in unknown territory.”

Naomi Judd died near Nashville, Tennessee, said a statement on behalf of her husband and fellow singer, Larry Strickland. It said no further details about her death would be released and asked for privacy as the family grieves.

The Judds were to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday and they had just announced an arena tour to begin in the fall, their first tour together in over a decade. They also made a return to awards shows when they performed at the CMT Music Awards earlier this month.

“Honored to have witnessed “Love Can Build a Bridge” just a few short weeks ago,” singer Maren Morris posted on Twitter on Saturday.

“This is heartbreaking news! Naomi Judd was one of the sweetest people I’ve ever known,” singer Travis Tritt posted on Twitter, noting that he had worked with Judd several times on screen and during performances.

The mother-daughter performers scored 14 No. 1 songs in a career that spanned nearly three decades. After rising to the top of country music, they called it quits in 1991 after doctors diagnosed Naomi Judd with hepatitis. Wynonna continued her solo career.

The Judds’ hits included “Love Can Build a Bridge” in 1990,“Mama He’s Crazy” in 1984, “Why Not Me” in 1984,“Turn It Loose” in 1988, “Girls Night Out” in 1985, “Rockin’ With the Rhythm of the Rain” in 1986 and “Grandpa” in 1986.

Born Diana Ellen Judd in Ashland, Kentucky, Naomi was working as a nurse in Nashville, when she and Wynonna started singing together professionally. Their unique harmonies, together with elements of acoustic music, bluegrass and blues, made them stand out in the genre at the time.

“We had a such a stamp of originality on what we were trying to do,” Naomi Judd told The AP after it was announced that they would be joining the Country Music Hall of Fame.

The Judds released six studio albums and an EP between 1984 and 1991 and won nine Country Music Association Awards and seven from the Academy of Country Music. They earned a total of five Grammy Awards together on hits like “Why Not Me” and “Give A Little Love.”

The Judds sang about family, the belief in marriage and the virtue of fidelity. Because Naomi was so young looking, the two were mistaken for sisters early in their career.

They first got attention singing on Ralph Emery’s morning show in early 1980, where the host named them the “Soap Sisters” because Naomi said she used to make her own soap.

After the success of “Mama He’s Crazy,” they won the Horizon Award at the 1984 CMA Awards. Naomi started her speech by saying “Slap the dog and spit in the fire!”

Daughter Ashley Judd is an actor known for her roles in such movies as “Kiss the Girls,” ″Double Jeopardy” and “Heat.”

Strickland, who was a backup singer for Elvis Presley, was married to Naomi Judd for 32 years.



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