Actor, singer Sheb Wooley, known for No. 1 pop ditty
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) _ Sheb Wooley, a veteran actor in westerns like ``High Noon'' who also recorded the No. 1 pop ditty ``Purple People Eater,'' has died, his wife said. He was 82. <br><br>Wooley
Wednesday, September 17th 2003, 12:00 am
By: News On 6
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) _ Sheb Wooley, a veteran actor in westerns like ``High Noon'' who also recorded the No. 1 pop ditty ``Purple People Eater,'' has died, his wife said. He was 82.
Wooley suffered from leukemia beginning in 1996 and was hospitalized Monday at Skyline Medical Center in Nashville. He had just paid respects to American music legend Johnny Cash on Sunday, said his wife Linda.
``It was just his time to go,'' she said.
Wooley, who died Tuesday, appeared in more than 60 movies, acted in some 50 television shows and recorded pop and country songs.
On the big screen, Wooley appeared in mostly westerns beginning in 1950. His credits included ``High Noon'' (as a whiskey-drinking killer), ``Outlaw Josie Wales,'' ``War Wagon,'' ``Distant Drums,'' ``Man Without a Star,'' ``Giant'' and ``Hoosiers.''
``The Purple People Eater,'' about an unidentified flying object, sold 3 million copies in 1958 as a No. 1 pop record.
The song had people across the country singing:
``It was a one-eyed, one-horned, flying purple people eater.''
In a 1982 Associated Press interview, Wooley recalled the era.
``The space age was upon us. Everyone was thinking about rockets and wondering if maybe we would find people up there. I still wonder if we will. People (heard the song) and imagined some kind of beings.''
He also was in a movie of that name released in 1988, starring Ned Beatty and Shelley Winters.
On TV, Wooley starred as scout Pete Nolan on ``Rawhide,'' a western that helped launch the career of Clint Eastwood.
``We called him 'mumbles,''' Wooley once said about Eastwood. ``He didn't speak his words very loud. The sound man was always saying, 'Kid, speak up!' But he mumbled his way to a fortune.''
As recently as 1990, Wooley made a guest appearance on ``Murder She Wrote.'' Other TV credits included ``The Lone Ranger'' and ``Death Valley Days.''
He recorded a string of hit records from 1958 through the 1960s, mostly country humor songs, including ``Don't Go Near the Eskimos'' and ``Talk Back Blubbering Lips.'' Some were recorded under his alter ego, Ben Colder. He was voted comedian of the year by the Country Music Association in 1968.
He also wrote the theme song of the long-running TV show ``Hee Haw.''
Born Shelby F. Wooley in Erick, Okla., he spent his early years on his father's farm. As a teenager, he did some rodeo riding that helped him find jobs later in movie westerns. A genuine cowboy, he participated in a six-day cattle drive in Montana in 1989.
In high school, he formed a band and later had a network radio show for three years. He signed with MGM Records before making his way into movies.
Funeral services will be at ``high noon'' Monday, at his request, at First Baptist Church in nearby Hendersonville.
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