In 1967, folk-country singer Bobbie Gentry became famous for her song “Ode to Billie Joe.” The unlikely hit about a young man’s tragic jump off the Tallahatchie Bridge in Mississippi went to No. 1 on The Billboard Hot 100 and stayed on the charts for 20 weeks.
At the 10th Grammy Awards, Gentry won Best Vocal Performance—Female, and Best Contemporary Female Solo Performance for the song, as well as the Best New Artist trophy.
But nearly 50 years later, fans are still confused by the meaning of the song—and for good reason. Gentry never specifically explained the lyrics.
The song describes Billie Joe McAllister’s girlfriend and her family at the dinner table after her Mama blurts out the news of his suicide. But a closer look at the lyrics shows the clan nonchalantly passing around black-eyed peas, biscuits, and pie as Papa declares Billie Joe “never had a lick of sense.” There’s also a line about Billie Joe and his girlfriend “throwing somethin' off the Tallahatchie Bridge” not long before his suicide.
In an interview for the book The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, Gentry explained to author Fred Bronson that the song was “a study in unconscious cruelty.” “But everybody seems more concerned with what was thrown off the bridge than they are with the thoughtlessness of the people expressed in the song. What was thrown off the bridge really isn’t that important,” she added.
The singer noted that people had many guesses about what was thrown off the bridge. “Flowers, a ring, even a baby,” she said, adding that people could "think what they want."
Gentry noted that “the real message of the song, if there must be a message," revolved around "the nonchalant way the family talks about the suicide,” while eating peas and apple pie as their grieving family member sits unnoticed.
According to Rolling Stone, Gentry once explained that she left the story open “so the listener could draw his own conclusion.”
In 1976, Max Baer directed a drama film about the song. The trailer for the “Ode to Billie Joe” movie teased, “What the song didn’t tell you, the movie will show you.” In the movie, Billie Joe (Robby Benson) threw his girlfriend, Bobbie Lee’s (Glynnis O’Connor) rag doll from the bridge before his fatal jump into the dark Mississippi waters.
In addition to the tragic subject matter, Gentry’s own story was rather sad. While she received accolades for the song, she never received producers’ credit on it due to sexism in the industry at that time, Rolling Stone noted.
Gentry, now 83, retired from the music industry and dropped out of the public eye by the early 1980s. Her last public appearance was at the American Country Music Awards on April 29, 1982, per The Boot. After the ceremony, Gentry reportedly canceled all appearances and was never interviewed again.
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