Sorrells Pickard(1939-2003)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Actor, singer and songwriter Sorrells Pickard was born James W.
Bazzell, Jr. on September 20, 1939 in Jacksonville, Florida. He grew up
on his family's peanut farm in Lovedale, Florida. Sorrells began his
music career after graduating from high school; he fronted the
rock'n'roll band Jimmy Bazzell and the Mardells in the late 1950's and
early 1960's. Pickard eventually moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where
he appeared on the Grand Ole Opry, played bass for Tex Ritter and David
Allan Coe, and wrote a large number of songs for such established
country artists as Slim Whitman, Hank Thompson, David Rogers, Roy
Clark, Kitty Wells, Del Reeves, Melba Montgomery, Kenny Price, and the
Statler Brothers. Sorrells penned four songs for and played guitar on
Ringo Starr's acclaimed 1970 country album "Beaucoups of Blues." In
1972 he recorded his self-titled debut album for the Decca record
label. That same year Pickard served time in jail for possession of
marijuana. Sorrells then went to Los Angeles, California to pursue an
acting career. He made his film debut in 1975 with an uncredited minor
part in the movie "W.W. and the Dixie Dance Kings." Pickard acted in
four films for writer/director Mark Griffiths: Excellent as a shrewd
ex-con in the exciting chase thriller "Running Hot;" very engaging as
aging wannabe playboy bachelor Carlton Ashby in the amusing lowbrow
comedies "Hardbodies" and "Hardbodies 2," and a nice bit as a mean
country singer in the nifty thriller "Ultraviolet." In 1999 Sorrells
launched his own hugely successful brand of gourmet peanut butter; said
gourmet peanut butter sold six million jars in eleven states prior to
having production halted for economic reasons. Sorrells Pickard died at
age 63 from a heart attack in his home in Keystone Heights, Florida on
July 5, 2003.