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MAE AXTON

Mae Axton wrote hundreds of songs during her life, but she will always be best known for one—“Heartbreak Hotel.” That song, which she co-wrote with Tommy Durden, was the first major hit for Elvis Presley, in 1956.


The multitalented, high-energy Mae also worked as a music promoter, disc jockey, and high-school teacher. Mae is further known for being the mother of songwriter, singer, and actor Hoyt Axton.


Early life


Mae was born as Mae Boren on September 14, 1914, in Bardwell, Texas. Her family moved to Oklahoma when she was a child. She obtained a degree in journalism from the University of Oklahoma. (Her brother David later became an Oklahoma governor, U.S. senator, and president of the University of Oklahoma.) After her graduation, Mae worked as a reporter for Life magazine and as a teacher of journalism and English.


In the mid-1930s, Mae married John Axton, who was an officer in the U.S. Navy. The couple had two sons—Hoyt and John (who eventually became an attorney). They moved to Jacksonville, Florida, when the elder John became stationed at the naval base there. Mae worked as a teacher at a Jacksonville high school, where her husband became a football coach. She also began to devote more time to her love of songwriting and music.


Elvis and “Heartbreak Hotel”


By the early to mid-1950s, Mae had developed a number of connections in the music industry. The best-known of these connections was music executive, song publisher, and songwriter Fred Rose (famous for his work with Hank Williams). She also became a songwriting partner with Jacksonville musicians named Tommy Durden and Glen Reeves.


Ernest Tubb and Perry Como were a couple of the artists who recorded early Axton compositions. During this time, she also worked as a teacher. radio disc jockey, and music promoter (including for Hank Snow).


Mae had a keen eye for performing talent, and she saw something special in a young singer named Elvis Presley. The “hillbilly cat” was beginning to attract notice with his recordings for Sun Records and his performances in the South.


Mae and country-music promoter Bob Neal worked together to promote Elvis early in his career, beginning in early 1955. That was before “Colonel” Tom Parker took over Presley’s management later that year. Mae interviewed Elvis on her radio show in mid-1955 and helped him get signed by RCA Victor in late 1955.


Mae and her writing partner Durden made history in mid-1955 when they wrote “Heartbreak Hotel.” Durden started writing the sad song on his own, inspired by a Miami news story about a man who killed himself by jumping out of a hotel window, leaving behind a suicide note that read, “I walk a lonely street.” Durden showed his partially written lyrics to Mae, and she made the song edgier with her additions. She then played a demo of the tune to Elvis, who recorded it—but only after Parker insisted that Presley get co-writing credit. Mae later said that she was happy to split the songwriting royalties with Elvis.


“Heartbreak Hotel” became Elvis’s first single released by RCA, in early 1956, and his first number-one record on both the pop and country charts. Nevertheless, Presley’s former producer, Sam Phillips of Sun Records, was not impressed, judging the record to be a “morbid mess.”


Other songwriting and promotion work


Some of Axton’s other writing credits include “What Do I Know Today” (recorded by Hank Snow in 1956); “Pick Me Up On Your Way Down” (Patsy Cline, 1956); “Honey Bop” (Wanda Jackson, 1958); and


Mae always kept herself very busy within the music industry, and she eventually became known as the “Queen Mother of Nashville.” As her son Hoyt later remembered, “Our house was like Grand Central Station.”


Later life


Mae continued to write songs, as well as teach, into the 1980s. In 1973, she wrote a book of her memories titled Country Singers As I Know ‘Em, published by Sweet Publishing. In 1992, she launched a record label called DPJ.


Her long productive life came to an end on April 9, 1997, when she drowned in the hot tub after suffering a heart attack at her home in Hendersonville, Tennessee. She was 82.


More about Mae


Mae Axton biography from Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame

Mae Axton’s 1955 interview with Elvis Presley


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