BROADWAY NAMED A CHARACTER AFTER HIM. NASHVILLE TOLD HIM HE DIDN’T BELONG. HE ENDED UP WITH MORE #1 HITS THAN ANYONE IN COUNTRY HISTORY. “At first, country DJs were skeptical of the former pop star.” In 1960, Conway Twitty was so famous that Broadway put him in a musical. The character “Conrad Birdie” in Bye Bye Birdie — a wordplay on his name — was originally called “Conway Twitty” until he threatened to sue. He was big enough to parody alongside Elvis. Then he walked away from rock and roll. Moved to country. And Nashville shut the door. DJs refused to play his records. A rock singer pretending to be country — that’s what they called him. For three years, nothing charted. Then in 1968, “The Image of Me” cracked the top ten. After that, he never stopped. 55 number-one hits. More than anyone in country history — until George Strait broke the record in 2006. The genre that rejected him became the one he dominated. And the name Broadway once mocked became the most respected in Nashville.
Broadway Mocked Conway Twitty. Nashville Rejected Him. Then He Made Country History. In 1960, Conway Twitty was famous enough to…