Wills was married and divorced several times between 1935 and 1941. On
August 10, 1942, he was married to Betty Anderson, and they remained
married until his death; they had four children. In 1945 Bob Wills and
Betty have son, Jim.
By 1945, Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys had achieved enough notoriety
that they were invited to play at the prestigious home of country music
at the Grand Ole Opry performance. A drum set was a natural, integral
part of the Playboys' music, but it was unheard of in the world of
country music back then. When the Opry staff told Bob that his drummer
couldn't play, he angrily declared that he would not leave a band member
out. It was all the Texas Playboys or none. Bob did agree, however, to
let the drums be set up behind the curtains. That is, until time to
play, when he hollered, 'Move those things out on stage!' In that
moment, Bob Wills had left a permanent mark: there would forever be a
beat in country music.
Throughout most of the '60s, Bob just lined up the gig, and local
players would be rounded up before his arrival (often under the billing,
'Bob Wills And His Boys'). The basics of country music and Western
Swing were somewhat universal (just as they are for rock and roll; Chuck
Berry's toured this way for years). All they needed to know was how to
play; all he needed was his smile and his fiddle. He'd sometimes hook up
along the road with friends like Hoyle Nix, singing and playing with
his band. The Playboys split wouldn't remain permanent, however, and Bob
and the band would still sometimes travel together.
Bob and his band played at the Broken Spoke bar and dance hall in
Austin. After telling the joint's regulars that the one and only Bob
Wills was coming to play, they simply didn't believe him, or at least
they were certain that he wouldn't show up. 'About that time, the door
opened. Bob Wills opened it up, he had his cigar in his mouth, he had
his fiddle in his hand, and a cowboy hat on, and all those drunks at the
bar and at a table, there was just a complete hush. That night, it
was Bob and The Playboys.
During those years, Bob had continued a recording career, releasing
numerous albums with session musicians and several that reunited him
with Tommy Duncan, one album title referring to them as Mr. Words and
Mr. Music.
In 1957, Wills was elected to the American Society of Composers,
Authors, and Publishers, and in 1968 he was elected to the Country Music
Hall of Fame. In 1969 the governor and legislature of Texas honored
Wills for his contribution to American music, one of the few original
music forms Texas and the Southwest have produced. The day after the
ceremonies in Austin, Wills had the first in a series of crippling
strokes.
By the early 1970s, Bob Wills' poor health had caught up with him for
good. Several strokes and heart attacks had left him paralyzed, confined
to a wheelchair. In 1973, some of the Playboys got together, with the
help of country music star and Wills fan Merle Haggard, to try to put
together one last album while Bob still had the strength to participate.
It was eventually released as Bob Wills And His Texas Playboys For The
Last Time.
They brought Bob Wills over in a wheelchair. That night, Bob had a
massive stroke and never got out of bed again after that night.
Bob Wills died on May 13, 1975 at the age of 70. The headstone of
his grave bears the epitaph, 'Deep Within My Heart Lies A Melody.'
Bob Wills was buried in Memorial Park in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Biography by Leonard Kubiak