Dolly Parton is stepping up once again to help those in need. The Country Music Hall of Famer appeared at a press conference at a Walmart parking lot in Newport, Tennessee, on Friday (Oct. 4), and revealed that she is donating $1 million of her own money from her personal bank account to aid those impacted by the devastation of Hurricane Helene.
Also, she will add another $1 million donation to relief efforts through her various business enterprises, such as Dollywood and Dolly Parton’s Stampede.
“I’m sure a lot of you wondering where I’ve been,” Parton, 78, said during the event. “Everybody’s saying, ‘Where’s Dolly?’ Well, I’ve been like everybody else trying to absorb everything going on, trying to figure out all the best ways to do this.”
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She added, “I look around and I think, ‘These are my mountains, these are my valleys, these are my rivers…these are my people, and this is my home…I just want you to know, I am totally with you, I am part of you, I love you.”
The total of $2 million donation will be made to the Mountain Ways Foundation. ALso on hand during the event was Walmart U.S. president/CEO John Furner, who said that the company, as well as the Walmart Foundation and Sam’s Club, would be pledging upward of $10 million toward relief efforts.
Parton is no stranger to helping those in need. In 2021, she donated toward relief efforts for those impacted by the catastrophic flooding in Middle Tennessee. In 2020, she donated $1 million toward vaccine research at Vanderbilt University, which aided in funding Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine. In 2016, she launched the My People Fund, aiding families in Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge whose homes were destroyed wildfires.
In 1995, she launched the Imagination Library, which sends one book per month to children from birth through their first year of school (she founded the Imagination Library in honor of her father, who was unable to read).