
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice Hall, Inc. Wunnerful, Wunnerful!: The Autobiography of Lawrence Welk. *To find out more about another local member of the Lawrence Welk Orchestra, see Hometown Legends: Charlotte Harris. Submitted by Rachel Berlinski, March 2019 Welk’s intent was to provide a wholesome and family-oriented show, famously referring to the cast as his “musical family.” He continued to host The Lawrence Welk Show until 1981. The Lawrence Welk Show became a staple for families to tune in for every Saturday night, featuring popular music numbers and big band hits, always showcasing his signature light and bubbly “Champagne Music” style. In 1955, Welk’s stage show, which he performed weekly at the Aragon Ballroom in Santa Monica, was selected to be broadcast nationwide on ABC. At that time, though Fern was reluctant to leave behind their peaceful home life in River Forest, the family moved to Los Angeles.

He began building a relationship with a broadcast station in California in the late 1940s, and by 1950, he signed on for a show in California. Welk continued to travel frequently throughout the United States during the time that his family resided in River Forest, so he did not spend much time there. In his autobiography Welk explained, “I had selected originally because it was within walking distance of a grammar school, a high school, and Rosary College, but true to her independent spirit, when Shirley reached college age she decided to go to Marquette University instead.” Vincent Ferrer elementary school, where Welk was also a devout church parishioner. His eldest daughter Shirley attended Trinity High School while his two younger children Donna and Larry attended St. In 1940, Welk, with his wife Fern and three children, moved to 1311 Ashland Avenue in River Forest. The band received a big break when they were asked to play the Edgewater Beach Hotel in Chicago and eventually became the regular house band at the Aragon and Trianon Ballrooms.

But the name they finally settled on was Lawrence Welk and his Champagne Music Makers. At the age of 21, he formed a small band that toured mainly throughout the Midwest, calling themselves the Hotsy Totsy Boys and later the Honolulu Fruit Orchestra, after Welk scored them a sponsorship from the Honolulu Fruitgum Company. In 1924 after taking a loan from his father, Lawrence left the farm to pursue a career as a musician, much to the dismay of his reserved family.

Growing up on a farm, he first learned to play the accordion from his father and became consumed with a passion for music. Lawrence Welk was born in 1903 in the predominantly German town of Strasburg, North Dakota.
