Dolly Parton is mourning Carl Dean, her husband of nearly 60 years, while holding tight to their memories.

Parton opened up more about her beloved husband, who died March 3, in an interview with Knox News, part of the USA TODAY Network. The country legend reminisced on Dean’s secret Dollywood visits and revealed that he “suffered a great deal” before his death.

“I’m doing better than I thought I would,” Parton told the newspaper, nearly two weeks after losing her husband. “I’ve been with him 60 years. So, I’m going to have to relearn some of the things that we’ve done. But I’ll keep him always close.”

Dolly Parton on losing Carl Dean: ‘It’s a hole in my heart’

An 18-year-old Parton met Dean in 1964 outside a laundromat on the very first day she moved to Nashville from Sevierville to start a career in country music. The couple secretly wed in 1966 and had no children together.

“I’m at peace that he’s at peace, but that don’t keep me from missing him and loving him,” Parton said, noting that Dean had “suffered a great deal” but not clarifying from what.

“It’s a hole in my heart, you know, but we’ll fill that up with good stuff and he’ll still always be with me,” Parton continued.

Dolly Parton speaks onstage at Dolly Parton’s Threads: My Songs In Symphony world premiere at Schermerhorn Symphony Center on March 20, 2025, in Nashville, Tennessee.

Dolly Parton says husband Carl Dean would visit Dollywood alone

Dean was a private man who avoided the spotlight. You never saw him on a red carpet or at a premiere. But you might have spotted him at Dollywood a time or two.

Just without Dolly.

“He used to come to the park; he bought his own ticket – stood in line and got his ticket. He didn’t want somebody giving him a ticket ’cause he was Dolly’s husband,” Parton recalled. “Everybody thinks that’s the funniest thing.”

There’s a special exhibit dedicated to Carl Dean as part of the Dolly Parton Experience at Dollywood. Dolly Parton knew he’d said no, but she included him in the museum anyways because he deserved to be honored.

There’s a special exhibit dedicated to Carl Dean as part of the Dolly Parton Experience at Dollywood. Dolly Parton knew he’d said no, but she included him in the museum anyways because he deserved to be honored.

Though Parton often appears at Dollywood for work or to see the progress of ongoing projects, Dean never joined her. He only visited the park by himself while she was off somewhere else working.

“He’d come up to East Tennessee to see some of my family and people that he loved of my people. And so, he’d just think, ‘Well, I think I’ll go to Dollywood, check things out,'” Parton said.

Dean would indulge in some of the food, like funnel cake, but like his wife, he wasn’t a big fan of the roller coasters. Instead, he walked around admiring the popular theme park. But he’d always come back with a few suggestions.

“He would say, ‘You need more bathrooms,'” Parton laughed, imitating her late husband’s voice. “Or he would say, ‘You need to tell them this or that. It’s crowded over in that area. You might want to tell them they ought to do this or that.’

“He wasn’t coming to criticize, but he would notice things and he would say, you might want to bring this to their attention,” she added.

Parton might carry on Dean’s secret trips. “I think I would do like Carl,” Parton told the paper when asked about her perfect day at Dollywood. “I would just walk around, look at everything,” she said.

Dolly Parton makes first appearance after husband Carl Dean’s death

Parton surprised fans, and Dollywood season passholders, on March 14 at the opening celebration for the theme park’s 40th season, making her first public appearance since her husband died.

Dolly Parton makes first appearance after husband Carl Dean’s death: ‘I will always love him’

“I will always love him, and I miss him,” Parton told the crowd at the time, also thanking fans for their flowers, cards and well wishes. It’s tradition for Parton to lead the season’s opening ceremony, but parkgoers would have understood if she had chosen to skip this year’s event. However, Parton wanted to be at Dollywood for the occasion, she said.

“I need to laugh. I need some fun, so I’m probably gonna be stupid. I’ve been crying enough the last week or two,” she said after ignoring the teleprompter several times and cracking jokes while previewing the season with Dollywood President Eugene Naughton.

Devarrick Turner is a trending news reporter. Email [email protected]. On X, formerly known as Twitter, @dturner1208.

This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Dolly Parton on Carl Dean’s death: He ‘suffered a great deal’

Share.
2025 © Network Today. All Rights Reserved.