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Porter Wagoner, 80, country-music legend

Porter Wagoner, the blond pompadoured, rhinestone-encrusted personification of Nashville tradition, host of the longest-running country-music variety show in TV history and mentor to Dolly Parton, died Sunday night of lung cancer. He was 80.

Wagoner died at a hospice in Nashville, Tenn., according to an announcement on the Grand Ole Opry’s Web site.

Parton recently went to a Nashville hospital to visit the man who inspired her best-known song, “I Will Always Love You,” after their acrimonious career split in the mid-1970s.

She described him then as very weak but said Wagoner “had his wits and joked around,” and she vowed she would sing with him again at the Grand Ole Opry when he was ready. Wagoner was released from the hospital Friday and transferred to hospice care.

A little more than year ago, Wagoner had been seriously ill after suffering an intestinal aneurysm but defied a dire medical prognosis and recovered sufficiently to mount a career comeback that led to appearances last summer on “The Late Show With David Letterman” and an opening slot at Madison Square Garden with upstart rock band the White Stripes, whose members are ardent Wagoner fans.

In May 2007 he celebrated his 50th year in the Opry. After years without a recording contract, he also signed with ANTI- records, an eclectic Los Angeles label best known for alt-rock acts like Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Neko Case.

The CD “Wagonmaster,” produced with Marty Stuart, was released in June and earned Wagoner some of the best reviews of his career.

The Missouri-born Wagoner signed with RCA Records in 1955 and joined the Opry in 1957. “It’s the greatest place in the world to have a career in country music,” he said in 1997.

His showmanship, rhinestone suits and pompadoured hair made him famous, with his own syndicated TV show, “The Porter Wagoner Show,” for 21 years beginning in 1960. It was one of the first syndicated shows to come out of Nashville, and it set a pattern for many others.

Among his hits, many of which he wrote or co-wrote, were “Carroll County Accident,” “A Satisfied Mind,” “Company’s Comin’,” “Skid Row Joe,” “Misery Loves Company” and “Green Green Grass of Home.”

Over a period of nearly 40 years, Wagoner placed 81 songs on the country-music chart, 19 of those duets with Parton, who joined his show in 1967. Wagoner and Parton were named country group and country duo of the year in 1970 and 1971 by the Country Music Association.

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