calsfoundation@cals.org
Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame
The Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame in Pine Bluff (Jefferson County) was created to honor Arkansans who have made outstanding contributions to the entertainment industry. Honorees include performers, non-performing contributors (such as writers, directors, and producers), and pioneers in the entertainment industry.
In 1985, the Arkansas General Assembly authorized the establishment of a museum honoring Arkansans who have made a considerable contribution to the entertainment industry. The first inductees were honored in 1996. The following year, the state legislature transferred the Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame to the Department of Parks and Tourism, along with $300,000. Several cities competed to host the museum. Pine Bluff was eventually chosen, with the Pine Bluff Convention and Visitors Bureau receiving $250,000 to establish the Hall of Fame. On October 2, 1998, the Hall of Fame opened with a permanent home in the Pine Bluff Convention Center. In 2017, the state legislature transferred oversight of the Hall of Fame to the City of Pine Bluff.
The board of the Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame selects honorees for induction, with nominations coming from the artists themselves or from other individuals. After a review of applications to determine if the nominee meets the basic criteria of Arkansas connection and national significance, among other factors, the nominations are held until the board’s annual meeting, at which time they are voted upon.
A life-size animatronic statue of Johnny Cash greets visitors with some of the most popular songs of his career. Many other well-known Arkansas entertainers, both performing and non-performing, who have been inducted into the Hall of Fame have contributed artifacts to the exhibits that represent their achievements. For example, the museum houses Bob Burns’s “bazooka” as well as the musical instruments and clothing of other performers.
Among the inductees into the Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame are radio personalities Chet Lauck and Norris Goff (“Lum and Abner”); musical talents Al Green, the Browns, Patsy Montana, Levon Helm, “Lefty” Frizzell, and Jimmy Driftwood; singer/songwriter and television and motion picture actor Ed Bruce; composer William Grant Still; orchestra conductor Sarah Caldwell; jazz pianist Walter Norris; opera singer Barbara Hendricks; Broadway and motion picture performer William Warfield; gospel songwriter Albert E. Brumley; movie actors “Broncho Billy” Anderson, Julie Adams, Mary Steenburgen, Billy Bob Thornton, Dick Powell, and Alan Ladd; entertainment promoter Jim Porter; author John Grisham; screenwriter James Bridges; motion picture sound and camera lens inventor Freeman Owens; television producer and director Harry Z. Thomason; Broadway producer Elizabeth Williams; and Broadway musical performer Lawrence Hamilton.
Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame Inductees
1996 | Glen Campbell | Billstown/Delight |
Johnny Cash | Kingsland | |
Jimmy Driftwood | Timbo | |
Randy Goodrum | Hot Springs | |
Al Green | Forrest City | |
Wayland Holyfield | Mallet Town | |
Alan Ladd | Hot Springs | |
Tracy Lawrence | Foreman | |
Lum and Abner (Chet Lauck and Norris Goff) |
Mena | |
Art Porter Sr. | Little Rock | |
Patsy Montana | Beaudry | |
Dick Powell | Mountain View | |
Charlie Rich | Colt | |
Mary Steenburgen | Newport | |
Harry Thomason | Hampton | |
Billy Bob Thornton | Hot Springs |
1998 | Bob Burns | Greenwood |
The Browns | Sparkman | |
Melvin Endsley | Drasco | |
Jim Ed Brown | Sparkman/Pine Bluff | |
Levon Helm | Turkey Scratch | |
Bonnie Brown | Sparkman/Pine Bluff | |
Floyd Cramer | Huttig | |
Maxine Brown | Sampti, LA/Pine Bluff | |
Louis Jordan | Brinkley | |
Mark Wright | Fayetteville | |
Jerry Van Dyke | Benton | |
Conway Twitty | Helena |
2000 | Julie Adams | Little Rock |
K. T. Oslin | Crossett | |
James (Jim) Bridges | Paris | |
Sarah Caldwell | Fayetteville | |
Skeets McDonald | Rector | |
Art Porter Jr. | Little Rock | |
Broncho Billy Anderson | Pine Bluff | |
Pharoah Sanders | Little Rock | |
William Warfield | Helena | |
Twila Paris | Springdale |
2002/2003 | Ronnie Dunn | El Dorado |
Barbara Hendricks | Stephens | |
John Grisham | Jonesboro | |
William Grant Still | Little Rock | |
Steve Stephens | Newport | |
Freeman H. Owens | Pine Bluff | |
Walter Norris | Little Rock |
2005 | Collin Raye | De Queen |
John Michael Talbot | Little Rock/Eureka Springs | |
Ed Bruce | Keiser | |
Elizabeth Williams | Arkadelphia | |
Jim Porter | Little Rock | |
Lefty Frizzell | El Dorado | |
Lawrence Hamilton | Foreman | |
John Weston | Brinkley/Smale | |
Albert Brumley | Hartford Music Institute |
2007 | Beth Brickell | Camden |
Gil Gerard | Little Rock | |
Laurence Luckinbill | Fort Smith | |
Gail Davis | McGehee | |
BJ Sams | Little Rock | |
Jack Mitchell | Bella Vista | |
Sonny Burgess | Newport | |
Sarah Tackett | Conway |
2008 | Tess Harper | Mammoth Springs |
Ronnie Hawkins | Huntsville/Fayetteville | |
Wayne Jackson | West Memphis | |
Joe Nichols | Rogers | |
Wilburn Brothers | Hardy | |
Sonny Boy Williamson | Helena | |
Ed Wilson | Rison |
2010 | Kris Allen | Conway |
Lisa Blount | Fayetteville | |
Jim “Moose” Brown | Jonesboro | |
Barbara Fairchild | Knobel | |
Albert King | Forrest City | |
George Newbern | Little Rock | |
Mark Salling | McCrory | |
Jerry McKinnis | Flippin | |
Charles B. Pierce | Hampton |
2013 | Gary Weir | North Little Rock |
Bill Carter | Rector | |
Louie Shelton | North Little Rock | |
Rosetta Nubin Tharpe | Cotton Plant | |
Michael Utley | Blytheville |
2015 | Charlaine Harris | Magnolia |
Buddy Jewell | Lepanto/Osceola | |
Francis McBeth | Arkadelphia | |
Cate Brothers | Fayetteville | |
Al Bell | Brinkley/North Little Rock |
For additional information:
Cofer, Brian. “Hall of Fame for Entertainers Opens Friday.” Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, September 27, 1998, pp. 1B, 8B.
Pine Bluff Convention and Visitors Bureau. https://pinebluffconvention.center/ (accessed January 25, 2023).
Slivka, Judd. “Pine Bluff Panel’s Pick to House Hall of State Stars.” Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, February 18, 1997, pp. 1B, 8B.
Bob Purvis
Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Staff of the CALS Encyclopedia of Arkansas
Comments
No comments on this entry yet.