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About Ben "Cooter" Jones
Along the way he has worked with the likes of James Earl Jones, Anthony Hopkins, Eva Marie Saint, and John Travolta. He has appeared onstage at the Kennedy Center and the prestigious Berkshire Theatre Festival, and appeared in such films as "Primary Colors" and "Meet Joe Black". But "The Dukes of Hazzard" remains his favorite project. "It continues to find a new audience of youngsters," he says, "not only in America but throughout the world. There is something really magic about the show." After the "Dukes," Jones was elected to the United States Congress from the Fourth District of Georgia and served two terms before redistricting took his seat. Although he then returned to his entertainment career, Jones keeps up with his political interests by appearing as a regular "pundit" on shows such as "Crossfire" and "Hardball." He is also a writer, contributing opinion pieces and columns to newspapers and magazines including The Washington Post, USA Today, and The Weekly Standard. Also a singer, Jones and his "Cooter's Garage Band" have appeared throughout the United States at concerts, fairs, and festivals. Their third CD "Oh Cooter, Where Art Thou?" will be released in 2008. His life story has been profiled in The New York Times, People magazine, and Life magazine. Jones and his wife, Alma Viator, are the proprietors of "Cooter's Place," the "Dukes of Hazzard" museum and shop in Gatlinburg and Nashville, Tennessee. They also founded "Dukesfest," a huge annual gathering of "Dukes" fans in Nashville. They reside in a frontier log home built before the American Revolution in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. In June 2008, Ben’s memoir "Redneck Boy in the Promised Land" will be published by Harmony Books of Random House. |
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| Copyright 2006 Cooter's Place | ||||
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