Donna Fargo

Award-winning country music singer-songwriter Donna Fargo was born Yvonne Vaughn in Mount Airy, North Carolina on November 10, 1945. She began singing at a young age but didn’t start pursuing a music career until after she had moved to Southern California and started a teaching job. In 1966, she changed her stage name to Donna Fargo by the time she released her second single. She made her first high profile performance opening for country music icon Ray Price and in 1969, the Academy of Country Music honored her with the Top New Female Vocalist award. Although she didn’t have any significant success with her first five singles in the mid-to-late 1960s, Donna Fargo scored a country music number 1 hit with “The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A.” in 1972. Her next single, “Funny Face,” also hit the top of the chart and she became one of the most popular artists on the country music scene. In 1972, Donna Fargo won a total of five Academy of Country Music Awards and took home a Grammy Award in 1973 for Best Female Country Performance. Between 1972 and 1977, Donna Fargo had many Top 20 singles including four more chart toppers: “Superman” (1972), “You Were Always There” (1973), “You Can’t Be a Beacon If Your Light Don’t Shine” (1974), and “That Was Yesterday” (1977). In 1978, she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and by the following year, she slowed down her output and focused on her health. While no longer topping the charts, she still managed to score several singles in the Top 100 on the Country Music Singles chart throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. In 2022, Donna Fargo released the All Because of You EP.

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