Dolly has cameo in 'Miss Congeniality 2 - Armed and Fabulous'

Dolly appeared in a cameo role as herself in the 2005 film "Miss Congeniality 2--Armed and Fabulous" starring Sandra Bullock who plays an FBI agent investigating a case in Las Vegas. During the investigation, Bullock’s character tackles Dolly after mistaking her for a suspicious impersonator.

Bullock explained how she got Dolly to accept the role, which includes some comic groping. She said,

“I sent her a letter with a lot of ‘pleases’ in it, and she wrote back saying ‘OK.’ It always freaks me out when things are easy, because I'm used to having to beg and going for the alternate choices.”

 

 

 

Dolly’s song 'Travelin' Thru' from the 2005 movie 'Transamerica' receives an Oscar nomination

The song was one of three songs nominated for an Oscar the same year. The song "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" from the movie "Hustle & Flow" won the Academy Award.

Dolly spoke to legendary interviewer Larry King about the process that created the song.

“Well Duncan Tucker, who is the writer/director of the film, I understood he was a fan of mine and he called me and asked if I would write this song. And so I said, I'll give it a try. I was actually on tour, and I was out promoting a new CD of my own, the CD that you know about, 'Those Were The Days.' And so I said, I don't know if I'm going to have time to work on it, but I'll see. He said, ‘Oh please, give it a try.’ So he sent me a rough cut of the film, and he gave me some great direction, gave me some great input and I kicked around with it for a little while and one morning I woke up and it just all come together and now here I am, nominated and I was really shocked and surprised it all happened so quick.

The Oscars, "reward the previous year’s greatest cinema achievements as determined by some of the world’s most accomplished motion picture artists and professionals. The Academy’s roughly 6,000 members vote for the Oscars using secret ballots, which are tabulated by the international auditing firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers. The auditors maintain absolute secrecy until the moment the show’s presenters open the envelopes and reveal the winners on live television."

'Blue Valley Songbird,' made-for-tv movie, inspired by Dolly's song of the same name

Dolly starred as Leanna Taylor in her made-for-television movie, "Blue Valley Songbird" and worked behind the scenes as the film’s executive producer.

The movie aired on Lifetime in November of 1999. Leanna Taylor is a Nashville singer who uses her music to face her troubled upbringing. Dolly’s inspiration came from her song "Blue Valley Songbird" on her album "Hungry Again." Dolly said,

“As soon as I wrote the song, I had full intentions of making a movie from it… In my mind, I thought, 'This is like a screenplay.'”

Dolly took a hands-on approach to the project.

"I was very involved… And I promoted shooting the movie in Nashville from day one. I was thrilled that we could film it here… I felt it was very important to find Southern people to write this script… The writers we chose were both from the South, so they had an understanding of it."

While there is no official soundtrack, a number of the songs in the movie are available on Dolly’s album "Hungry Again."

 

Dolly appears as herself in made-for-television film, 'Get to the Heart - The Barbara Mandrell Story'

Dolly make an appearance in the made-for-television film biopic "Get to the Heart - The Barbara Mandrell Story" which originally aired on CBS on, Sept. 28, 1997. The movie covers Barbara’s life from her early musical promise through stardom to her near-fatal car crash and recovery. The movie was based on Mandrell's autobiography, "Get to the Heart: My Story" published in 1990.

Dolly stars as Ruby Diamond in the CBS made-for-television film, "Unlikely Angel"

 

Dolly starred in "Unlikely Angel," a made-for-television film, as Ruby Diamond, a selfish country singer who is granted a second chance at salvation by St. Peter (Roddy McDowall) after she dies in a car accident. If Ruby is able to help reunite and heal a suburban family suffering after the passage of their mother (by midnight on Christmas Eve) she will be given her wings. If she fails to reunite the family, Ruby would head for far smokier shores.

Dolly was also an executive producer for the project and provided some original songs ("Wat'cha Tryin'na Do" and "Unlikely Angel"). "Unlikely Angel" premiered on CBS on Dec. 17, 1996.

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