
Barbara Walters Was Tough But Dolly Parton Was Tougher in That Now-Legendary 1977 Interview
Dolly Parton handled Barbara Walters like a rhinestone-covered pro.
In 1977, two women at the top of their games collided on national television, and only one walked out with her image polished even brighter. It wasn’t Barbara. When the queen of hard-hitting interviews tried to dig into Dolly Parton’s looks, her background, and everything else people thought they could use to write her off, Dolly didn’t flinch. She smiled, she sparkled, and she flipped the script.
It all went down on Walters’ primetime interview special, a program that had already earned a reputation for catching high-profile guests off guard and sometimes backing them into corners. Walters had just finished going toe-to-toe with some of the biggest names in Hollywood, asking the kind of questions others wouldn’t dare. But when she sat across from Dolly, she underestimated one key thing. This wasn’t some naive hillbilly in high heels. This was a woman who had been underestimated her entire life, and who knew exactly how to turn condescension into currency.
From the jump, Walters honed in on Dolly’s appearance. The wigs. The makeup. The tight clothes. She said what a lot of people probably thought but never had the nerve to say to her face: “You don’t have to look like this. You’re a very beautiful woman. You don’t have to wear the wigs or the clothes. Why do you do it?”
And Dolly, with that million-watt grin and a voice sweeter than Tennessee honey, didn’t take the bait. She just answered with the calm confidence of a woman who’s heard it all before. She told Barbara that her style was a choice. That she knew it was over the top. And that it was all part of the plan.
“Once they got past the shock of the ridiculous way I looked and all that, then they would see there was parts of me to be appreciated,” she said. “I’m very real where it counts, and that’s inside.”
That would’ve been enough to silence most people, but Walters pressed on. “Do you ever feel like you’re a joke?” she asked.
Dolly didn’t blink. “Oh, I know they make fun of me,” she said. “But actually, all these years the people have thought the joke was on me, but it’s actually been on the public. I know exactly what I’m doing, and I can change it at any time.”
Right there, she ended the conversation without raising her voice, without a trace of bitterness. Just plain truth. And it’s that truth that has made Dolly Parton one of the most beloved artists in the world. Because while critics were stuck on the surface, Dolly was building an empire with songwriting, business savvy, and a heart that could melt even the coldest interviewer.
What’s wild is that Dolly knew this was coming. In her memoir Dolly: My Life and Other Unfinished Business, she wrote about how people warned her to avoid Walters. They said she’d get eaten alive. But Dolly never bought into that fear.
“Nothing could have been further from the truth,” she wrote. “Barbara is a very insightful person. Once she realized I was real, that my insides weren’t as phony as my outsides, she got completely into it.”
Maybe that’s the most telling part of the story. Dolly didn’t just walk away unscathed. She won Walters over. And not by changing who she was, not by softening her look or watering down her Southern roots. She did it by being exactly who she’s always been.
That’s what makes this interview keep going viral, decades later. It’s not just a clip from the past. It’s a masterclass in grace under pressure. In owning your story. In knowing that confidence doesn’t come from fitting in. It comes from knowing who you are, rhinestones and all.
Dolly’s always said it best: “It costs a lot of money to look this cheap.” But the truth is, there’s nothing cheap about her. She’s a diamond with a twang, and she proved that day she didn’t need defending. She could handle herself just fine.
Barbara Walters might’ve been known for asking the tough questions, but Dolly Parton was tougher. She didn’t fight back with fire. She did it with poise. And in doing so, she didn’t just survive one of the most intense interviews in TV history. She walked out the winner, proving once and for all that a country girl from Sevier County can go toe-to-toe with anyone in the world and come out shining.
And she did it in heels.