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Rebecca Irene <I>Burns</I> Phillips

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Rebecca Irene Burns Phillips

Birth
Colbert County, Alabama, USA
Death
13 Sep 2012 (aged 87)
Collierville, Shelby County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Sheffield, Colbert County, Alabama, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec 11 Row 3
Memorial ID
View Source
No one who knew Rebecca Burns Phillips could fail to be inspired by her quiet dedication. Although best known for her behind-the-scenes role as wife and mother to America's first rock 'n' roll family (her husband, Sam, was the visionary progenitor of Sun Records, and her sons Knox and Jerry continued the tradition), she possessed a creativity of her own that found expression not only in her pioneering radio work but in the unfailing, nurturing and sustaining role she adopted for her family.
She was a woman of deep-seated religious faith, but it was her sweetness of spirit that communicated itself most to everyone she met, whether family, friends, children, grandchildren or great-grandchildren over the years.
She was a 17-year-old high school student already working in radio with her sister when she met her 19-year-old husband-to-be at station WLAY in her native Sheffield, Ala. He had only recently gone to work there as an announcer in 1942 and as she described it, "He had just come in out of the rain. His hair was windblown and full of raindrops. He wore sandals and a smile unlike any I had ever seen. He sat down on the piano bench and began to talk to me. I told my family that night that I had met the man I wanted to marry."
Becky, Sam said, was the inspiration behind WHER, his first radio station, the first All-Girl Station in the nation, which went on the air Oct. 29, 1955. The idea of giving women a chance they never had was "based on what I knew Becky could do. Becky was the best I ever heard," he declared in a 1998 interview for the Peabody Award-winning Kitchen Sisters' documentary on PBS, WHER: 1000 Beautiful Watts. And what he meant by that had less to do with her exceptional gift for writing, for speaking, for presenting and organizing her thoughts in a cogent and compelling fashion, than what lay behind those thoughts, what Sam would call the innate spirituality of the presentation.
But you didn't have to hear her on radio (where she continued to broadcast until the mid 1980s) to get the benefit of Becky Phillips' unmistakable capacity for kindness and connection. Her on-air slogan "A smile on your face puts a smile in your voice," could just as easily stand for her chosen path in life. There was no better friend, there was no better partner, there was no better spiritual guide than Becky Phillips.
The very qualities that Sam Phillips cited as her special gifts for radio could equally well be cited by her children and grandchildren, more than anyone else the beneficiaries of that indomitable loyalty, that remarkable sense of order and communication not just of words but of deep-rooted emotion that is quietly remarkable and self-effacing woman sent forth into the world.
Survivors include her sons, Jerry Phillips, Knox Phillips and wife, Diane; grandchildren, Halley Phillips-Yeager and husband, Chad, Roxanne Phillips-Tays and husband, Zeth; great-grandchildren, Preston, Noah, Charleigh Anne and River.
Visitation will be noon-2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 17, 2012, at Greenview Funeral Home, with the funeral service beginning at 2 p.m. in Greenview Memorial Chapel. Officiating will be Pastor Jimmy Latimer, of Memphis, Tenn. Burial will follow in Sheffield Oakwood Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Jerry Phillips, Knox Phillips, Chad Yeager, Zeth Tays, Sam W. Phillips, Johnny Phillips and Jud Phillips Jr.
Arrangements by Greenview Funeral Home.
Published in Florence Times Daily on September 16, 2012
*****
COLLIERVILLE, TENN.
Rebecca Irene Burns Phillips, 87, died Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Visitation will be noon-2 p.m. Monday at Greenview Funeral Home. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home chapel, with burial in Sheffield Oakwood Cemetery.
Published in Florence Times Daily on September 15, 2012
No one who knew Rebecca Burns Phillips could fail to be inspired by her quiet dedication. Although best known for her behind-the-scenes role as wife and mother to America's first rock 'n' roll family (her husband, Sam, was the visionary progenitor of Sun Records, and her sons Knox and Jerry continued the tradition), she possessed a creativity of her own that found expression not only in her pioneering radio work but in the unfailing, nurturing and sustaining role she adopted for her family.
She was a woman of deep-seated religious faith, but it was her sweetness of spirit that communicated itself most to everyone she met, whether family, friends, children, grandchildren or great-grandchildren over the years.
She was a 17-year-old high school student already working in radio with her sister when she met her 19-year-old husband-to-be at station WLAY in her native Sheffield, Ala. He had only recently gone to work there as an announcer in 1942 and as she described it, "He had just come in out of the rain. His hair was windblown and full of raindrops. He wore sandals and a smile unlike any I had ever seen. He sat down on the piano bench and began to talk to me. I told my family that night that I had met the man I wanted to marry."
Becky, Sam said, was the inspiration behind WHER, his first radio station, the first All-Girl Station in the nation, which went on the air Oct. 29, 1955. The idea of giving women a chance they never had was "based on what I knew Becky could do. Becky was the best I ever heard," he declared in a 1998 interview for the Peabody Award-winning Kitchen Sisters' documentary on PBS, WHER: 1000 Beautiful Watts. And what he meant by that had less to do with her exceptional gift for writing, for speaking, for presenting and organizing her thoughts in a cogent and compelling fashion, than what lay behind those thoughts, what Sam would call the innate spirituality of the presentation.
But you didn't have to hear her on radio (where she continued to broadcast until the mid 1980s) to get the benefit of Becky Phillips' unmistakable capacity for kindness and connection. Her on-air slogan "A smile on your face puts a smile in your voice," could just as easily stand for her chosen path in life. There was no better friend, there was no better partner, there was no better spiritual guide than Becky Phillips.
The very qualities that Sam Phillips cited as her special gifts for radio could equally well be cited by her children and grandchildren, more than anyone else the beneficiaries of that indomitable loyalty, that remarkable sense of order and communication not just of words but of deep-rooted emotion that is quietly remarkable and self-effacing woman sent forth into the world.
Survivors include her sons, Jerry Phillips, Knox Phillips and wife, Diane; grandchildren, Halley Phillips-Yeager and husband, Chad, Roxanne Phillips-Tays and husband, Zeth; great-grandchildren, Preston, Noah, Charleigh Anne and River.
Visitation will be noon-2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 17, 2012, at Greenview Funeral Home, with the funeral service beginning at 2 p.m. in Greenview Memorial Chapel. Officiating will be Pastor Jimmy Latimer, of Memphis, Tenn. Burial will follow in Sheffield Oakwood Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Jerry Phillips, Knox Phillips, Chad Yeager, Zeth Tays, Sam W. Phillips, Johnny Phillips and Jud Phillips Jr.
Arrangements by Greenview Funeral Home.
Published in Florence Times Daily on September 16, 2012
*****
COLLIERVILLE, TENN.
Rebecca Irene Burns Phillips, 87, died Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Visitation will be noon-2 p.m. Monday at Greenview Funeral Home. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home chapel, with burial in Sheffield Oakwood Cemetery.
Published in Florence Times Daily on September 15, 2012


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