Early years
A sixth-grade dropout, Samples was a stock car racing driver and carpenter by trade who went on the radio at the age of 40 and told a story about catching the largest fish ever seen in his hometown. The story was a humorous''Hee Haw''
He was asked to become part of the 1969 cast of ''Hee Haw'' and created a bumbling personality, often stumbling or slow-talking his way through delivery, messing up jokes, and forgetting lines. One sketch of the show he appeared in regularly was "The Culhanes of Cornfield County" in which Junior, Gordie Tapp, Grandpa Jones and Lulu Roman would sit on a sofa and engage in a comedic deadpan routine: For example, in one episode each would talk about the new color TV set that had just been bought, but that they couldn't watch it, because they forgot they had no electricity in the house! His five children also appeared in episodes during the early years of the show, playing the children in the "Schoolhouse" sketches and themselves in quickies.BR-549
Samples' most famous bit was as a used car salesman, inviting callers to call an older five-digit phone number, BR-549, which in the show's later years was changed to BR-1Z1Z. In 1993,Politics
In 1974, Samples announced that he was "seriously considering" running for lieutenant governor of Georgia on a Republican Party ticket with then-Macon mayor Ronnie Thompson, who was seeking the party's gubernatorial nomination. The media at first presented Samples' announcement as a political story. However, Samples was pulling a practical joke for publicity purposes. Thompson remained in the race and was defeated in the general election by the DemocratPersonal life and death
Samples was married to Grace Carrie Bolton (April 27, 1927 – July 9, 2015), and they had five children together. Grace occasionally used Bolden as her maiden name and it was an official alias in legal documents. Junior, whose weight periodically neared 400 pounds (180 kg), was on ''Hee Haw'' for fourteen years, until he died of aDiscography
Throughout the years Samples recorded several comedy albums. Although he was known for his television appearances on ''Hee Haw'', his recordings were often heard on radio. His first break came in 1966 with the recording of "The Whopper". He was nominated for two Comedian of the Year Awards from the Country Music Awards in 1969 and 1970, and made a number of other comedy albums. * ''The World of Junior Samples'' (1967) * ''Bull Session at Bull's Gap'' (1968) * ''That's a Hee Haw'' (1970) * ''Junior Samples and Archie Campbell'' (1977)References
External links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Samples, Junior 1926 births 1983 deaths 20th-century American comedians People from Cumming, Georgia Georgia (U.S. state) Republicans