
Jeannie Seely to Be Honored with Public Memorial Service at the Grand Ole Opry
Jeannie Seely is getting one last show in the place she owned for nearly six decades, the Grand Ole Opry.
On August 14, the woman who redefined what it meant to be an Opry member will be honored with a public memorial service at the Opry House in Nashville. They’re even billing it as Jeannie Seely’s 5,398th Opry Show, because the woman didn’t just play the Opry… she practically became the Opry. More than 5,397 appearances. No one else in history comes close.
Fans who can’t make it to Nashville can tune in live on WSM 650 AM or stream it on Vimeo, because this farewell isn’t just for the industry suits. It’s for every fan who ever cranked “Don’t Touch Me” and every dreamer who tuned in to the Opry late at night thinking, One day, that’ll be me.
Seely died August 1 at age 85 from complications caused by an intestinal infection. It was the end of a rough stretch that saw her face multiple back surgeries, emergency abdominal operations, a fight with pneumonia, and the heartbreak of losing her husband, Eugene Ward, to cancer just last December.
Born in 1940 in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and raised in Townville, Seely’s love affair with country music started when she was a kid huddled around the radio with her family, listening to Roy Acuff, Minnie Pearl, Ernest Tubb, Kitty Wells, and Little Jimmy Dickens. She was eight years old when she decided she wasn’t just going to sing. She was going to sing there. At the Opry.
She made it happen. In 1966, she broke through with “Don’t Touch Me,” and by 1967, she was an Opry member. She didn’t just join the family, she shook it up. Seely became the first person to wear a mini skirt on the Opry stage, a moment that ruffled feathers and made it clear she wasn’t going to play by anyone else’s rules. That bold streak stayed with her for the rest of her life.
In between her Opry appearances, she racked up a Grammy, earned her spot on the Music City Walk of Fame, and picked up the CMA’s Joe Talbot Award for outstanding contributions to the genre. Even in her later years, she kept the wheels turning, releasing new music in 2024, including her song “Suffertime.” “I just feel blessed every day,” she told PEOPLE. “I’m not retired; I just quit working. They’re two different things. I only do what I enjoy.”
Her final public appearance came on March 1, 2025, at the Legends of Country Music Museum reopening in Nashville, where her portrait now hangs. She looked proud, sharp, and still very much the woman who could command a stage just by stepping into the spotlight.
Now, the Opry will return that love in a sendoff worthy of her legacy. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking for donations to the Opry Trust Fund, which has been helping members of the country music community since 1965, or to a local pet charity, another cause close to her heart.
Jeannie Seely was “Miss Country Soul,” but she was also the kind of artist who didn’t need to tell you she was country. You could hear it in her voice, see it in her grit, and feel it in the way she made the Opry stage hers every time she stepped into that circle.
On August 14, the spotlight will hit her name one last time. Not as a goodbye but as a promise that the woman who gave more Opry shows than anyone else would always be part of the family she had dreamed about joining when she was eight years old.