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    Home » Stephen Colbert Breaks Down in Tears on The Late Show as Dolly Parton’s Heartbreaking A Cappella Rendition of “Bury Me Beneath the Willow” Evokes Childhood Memories and Leaves Audience Speechless
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    Stephen Colbert Breaks Down in Tears on The Late Show as Dolly Parton’s Heartbreaking A Cappella Rendition of “Bury Me Beneath the Willow” Evokes Childhood Memories and Leaves Audience Speechless

    Kelly WhitewoodBy Kelly WhitewoodDecember 2, 20253 Mins Read
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    When Dolly Parton Sang A Cappella, Stephen Colbert Broke — And The World Saw Something Real

    Stephen Colbert has interviewed presidents, movie stars, and cultural giants without losing his trademark cool. But during a 2020 episode of The Late Show, a single unaccompanied folk song from Dolly Parton shattered his composure in the most tender way imaginable.

    It happened during a simple question. Colbert asked Dolly about the songs her mother, Avie Lee Parton, used to sing to her and her eleven siblings in the Smoky Mountains. Parton didn’t pause, didn’t gather herself — she just slipped effortlessly into a verse of the old American folk ballad “Bury Me Beneath the Willow,” singing a cappella with a voice as clear as spring water.

    The studio fell quiet. No guitar, no spotlight shift, no cue from the band — just Dolly’s voice carrying a century-old melody of heartbreak and loss. Within seconds, Colbert’s face softened. His smile wavered. His eyes filled. The late-night host known for ironclad comedic timing suddenly found himself unable to speak. He lifted a tissue to his face, laughing through tears as emotion won out.

    “It’s funny,” Colbert managed to say, “you just did to me what music has done to people for thousands of years.”

    For him, the moment wasn’t just nostalgia — it was personal. The purity of Dolly’s voice, the simplicity of the tune, and the deep-rooted tradition behind it reminded him of his own mother and the folk songs woven into his childhood. He would later explain that it struck a memory he hadn’t prepared for.

    Dolly, with the compassion and humor that define her, reached forward and gently reassured him:
    “I better hush before you cry. I’m sorry,” she joked, patting his arm as the audience laughed warmly.

    But the magic was in what had already happened — a television host letting his guard fall, and an icon reminding the world why her voice is more than sound. It’s lineage. It’s love. It’s history carried forward.

    The moment became an instant classic, shared millions of times online as viewers marvelled at how a single voice, without production or polish, could move a man to tears on national television.

    It also underscored why Dolly Parton remains one of the most beloved figures in American culture. Her roots run deep — and she keeps those roots alive, not just through music but through her work with Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, which has now given away more than 200 million books to children worldwide. She understands that stories and songs are meant to be passed down, protected, and shared.

    On that night, Dolly didn’t just sing a song.
    She opened a door to the past, and Stephen Colbert — along with millions watching — walked right through it.

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