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Country singer Dolly Parton raises laughs at charity awards gala

Alex Dobuzinskis (Reuters)
Los Angeles, United States
Sun, February 10, 2019

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Country singer Dolly Parton raises laughs at charity awards gala Dolly Parton speaks during a gala event honoring Dolly Parton as the MusiCares person of the year, ahead of the Grammy Awards, in Los Angeles, California, US February 8, 2019. (REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni)

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olly Parton became the first country singer to receive the MusiCares Person of the Year award on Friday, taking to the stage with jokes about hillbillies, fighting and pornography.

Comedy played a large role in a night of all-star musical performances in Los Angeles to honor Parton for her music and philanthropy, hosted by country group Little Big Town.

Eight-time Grammy winner Parton, the singer and songwriter behind the hits "9 to 5," "Jolene" and "I Will Always Love You", got the biggest laughs at the 29th annual gala for MusiCares, which helps members of the music industry in need.

Parton, whose career began with appearances at the age of 10 on radio stations in her native Tennessee, began her speech with a joke that made light of her backcountry roots.

"Of course, you know we hillbillies need MusiCares too," she told the audience. "We may not have sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, but two out of three ain't bad."

Parton, 73, also appeared to touch on some of the concerns of the #MeToo movement and sexual misconduct in entertainment and other industries, when she described entering the music business when it was a "man's world".

"Buddy, I had a ball," she said to more laughs. "Because I have actually worked with so many wonderful men and I've never met a man that I didn't like and I've never met a man whose ass I couldn't kick if he didn't treat me with the right respect."

Read also: Putting sex in sexagenarian: Madonna still shocks at 60

To gasps and laughs, Parton then described her feelings at seeing the likes of Willie Nelson, Katy Perry, Mavis Staples and Garth Brooks perform her songs at Friday's gala.

"Watching them is sort of like watching porn," Parton said. "You're not personally involved, but you still get off on it."

Parton has sold more than 100 million records and helped popularize country music outside the United States, often succeeding in crossing over into pop music.

Her own charity work owes much to her admiration for her father, who labored in tobacco fields and construction sites and could not read. The Dolly Parton's Imagination Library, founded in 1995, has mailed more than 100 million books to children in the United States and other countries.

Friday's gala raised $6.7 million for MusiCares, Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow told the audience.

Parton will be honored on Sunday with another tribute at the Grammy Awards, which will be broadcast live.

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