THE DOCTORS DIDN’T EXPECT HER TO SURVIVE THE NIGHT. SIX WEEKS LATER SHE WALKED ONSTAGE ON CRUTCHES AND SANG ANYWAY.She wasn’t born into stages and spotlights. She was Virginia Hensley from Winchester, Virginia. The daughter of a man who walked out on her family. A girl who quit school at sixteen to work the soda fountain and help her mama pay rent. A teenager who taught herself to sing by ear, with no lessons and no money for any.Then came June 14, 1961. A head-on collision on Old Hickory Boulevard in Nashville. Glass through the windshield. Her forehead torn open. A fractured hip. The other driver was already dead. Patsy lay bleeding in the road and told the rescue workers to take care of the other woman first.She spent a month in the hospital. Her chart-topping single “I Fall to Pieces” climbed to number one while she fought to stay alive in a bed she couldn’t get out of.The doctors told her to rest. The label told her to wait. Her husband told her she had nothing left to prove.Patsy looked them dead in the eye and said: “No.”She walked onto the Grand Ole Opry stage on crutches, scars still fresh on her forehead, and sang every note she owed her fans.Some women break. The unbreakable ones get back up bleeding and finish the song.What she told Loretta Lynn and June Carter about her third accident — eighteen months before that plane went down — still chills every woman in country music to this day.
The Night Patsy Cline Was Not Supposed to Survive Patsy Cline did not begin life as a legend. Before the…