- Minnie Pearl had two fast food chains in the southern United States during the 1960s and 1970s. They were "Minnie Pearl's Roast Beef" and "Minnie Pearl's Chicken." The slogan for both chains was "Howww-deeee-licious!"
- First country music performer to be surprised with their life story on the 1950's series "This Is Your Life". Though stunned by the surprise, Minnie Pearl knew this was her big chance on network television and milked her appearance for all the comedy she could muster, leading to a highly active career as a guest performer on scores of non-country variety programs and talk shows.
- The costume she wore on stage (red and white checkered dress, straw hat with price tag still on it, etc.) was based on clothes she herself had picked out from a thrift store.
- In 1991 was one of 13 recipients of the National Medal of Art.
- Until his death in 1958, was frequently teamed with actor/comedian Rod Brasfield on the Grand Ole Opry.
- Elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1975.
- Appeared weekly on The Nashville Network's "Nashville Now" from 1984 to 1991 in a Friday night segment called "Let Minnie Steal Your Joke" in which Pearl would read gags submitted by viewers to the studio audience and the most popular by the audience's response would receive a prize.
- Named by Arthur Godfrey as one of the ten greatest television performers of all time for the book "The Book of Lists".
- Interred at Mount Hope Cemetery in Franklin, TN.
- Though not a country hitmaker, she did place a song in the top 10 of Billboard magazine's country singles chart in 1966 -- "Giddyup Go Answer," a recited answer song offering a different perspective to Red Sovine's No. 1 hit "Giddyup Go."
- Received the American Cancer Society's Courage Award in 1987.
- Voted Country Music Woman of the Year in 1996.
- Good friend of Steve Wariner.
- Biography in: "American National Biography." Supplement 1, pp. 476-478. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
- She was awarded the American National Medal of the Arts in 1992 by the National Endowment of the Arts in Washington, DC.
- Profiled in book "Funny Ladies" by Stephen Silverman. (1999)
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