THE WORLD SAW A MAN WHO CONQUERED COUNTRY MUSIC. HIS WIFE SAW THE BATTLE HE KEPT HIDDEN BEHIND THE SMILE. Charley Pride broke nearly every barrier country music put in front of him. Twenty-nine No.1 hits. Three Grammys. CMA Entertainer of the Year. One of RCA’s biggest-selling artists after Elvis. Millions heard “Kiss An Angel Good Mornin’” and saw a calm, gracious man who seemed impossible to shake. But behind the smile, Charley was fighting something most fans never knew about. In his 1994 autobiography, he revealed that he had struggled with manic depression for decades, with symptoms first surfacing in 1968. He admitted part of him still wanted to deny it. But Rozene, his wife, had seen the moments the public never did — the times when the man who looked so steady onstage could lose himself completely. That is what makes the story heavier. Charley had already survived racism, rejection, and the end of a baseball dream. But one of his hardest battles was not with Nashville at all. It was with the storm inside his own mind.
The World Saw a Man Who Conquered Country Music. His Wife Saw the Battle He Kept Hidden Behind the Smile…