BIOGRAPHY
SYNOPSIS
James
Manheim wrote: “Cristy Lane is best remembered for her 1979 single "One Day at
a Time," a gospel song that blended Protestant fervor with the language of
self-help in a seamless, heartfelt whole. She is also noteworthy as one of the
builders of the Branson, MO, live-entertainment phenomenon. Lane was
born Eleanor Johnston to a family of 12 in Peoria, IL. Married before she was
20, she had three children by 1964. Her husband, Lee Stoller, a salesman,
encouraged her to sing professionally, but she was painfully shy. After some
tentative attempts, she landed several nightclub appearances and then a guest
slot on Chicago's WLS Barn Dance radio program in 1968. She took her stage
name from that of a Peoria DJ, Chris Lane.
Lane scored three more hits the following year and in 1979 was
named New Vocalist of the Year by the Academy of Country Music. During the
awards ceremony Lane sang "I Just Can't Stay Married to You," which later
became a Top Five hit. In late 1979, Lane was signed to United Artists Records
and had three more hits.
That song was a several-years-old entry from Kris Kristofferson’s catalog of
compositions; co-written with Nashville veteran Marijohn Wilkin, it was
of a piece with other religious songs (such as "Why Me, Lord?") the
hard-living Kristofferson had written in soberer moments. Shortly before
Lane’s version appeared, the song had topped British charts in a version by
vocalist Lena Martell. For country radio in 1980, it was an unorthodox song,
but Lane and Stoller correctly estimated its powerful impact. After it hit
number one on the country charts, Lane released "Sweet Sexy Eyes," her final
Top Ten hit. Her career hit the skids temporarily when Stoller was imprisoned
on racketeering charges in 1982, but the couple bounced back after Stoller
observed the spectacular success yodeler-crooner Slim Whitman had experienced
after beginning direct television marketing of his music. By 1986 Lane and
Stoller had put together a strong pair of linked materials: a One Day at a
Time album and a Lane autobiography of the same name. Marketed through
television advertising and later on the World Wide Web, these items sold well
for years and kept Lane's name before a demographic just waiting to be tapped:
that of country fans in late middle age. As Branson began to emerge as a major
entertainment destination in the late '80s and early '90s, Lane and Stoller
jumped on the bandwagon. Their Cristy Lane Theatre became a major Branson
attraction, hosting not only Lane's own performances but also early
appearances by Branson stars-to-be such as Yakov Smirnoff (in 1992). Lane sold
her Branson theater in the mid-'90s but remained active as a performer. She
has recorded several albums of gospel and sentimental standards for marketing
through her website and elsewhere. Plans were laid in the early 2000s for a
film depicting Lane's life story.”