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Methodist Dixie

Actress Dixie Carter, age 70, died earlier this month, best known as the tart tongued southern liberal on the popular 1986-1993 sit-com Designing Women. Her real-life politics were considerably different from her fictional character's. Reputedly, whenever the script demanded a liberal tirade from Carter's role as interior designer Julia Sugarbaker, she expected the compensating opportunity to strut her admirable singing voice. Her favorite cameo was her performance of "How Great Thou Art" in an episode when one of the characters pondered the ministry. It was the last performance that Carter's mother viewed before her death.

"She got to see her little girl sing this great Methodist hymn for the whole country," Carter later recalled wistfully.

The wife of actor Hal Holbrook, Carter mixed easily with the Hollywood polloi but retained her mostly conservative southern and Christian roots. She restored and lived in her Western Tennessee childhood home in McLemoresville. And she retained a lifelong affiliation with Methodism. Her funeral, and wedding to Holbrook, were at the McLemoresville United Methodist Church. She once declared she "never saw any reason to change the beliefs I was brought up with." Her cheerful faith eventually persuaded Holbrook to join her as a regular churchgoer during their courtship and marriage. 

"How come we've got to the point where Christians must apologize for being who they are?" Carter once asked. "Why have Christians allowed themselves to get into the position of being the bad guys? That is a very sad turn of events, and we'd better do something about it. Again, the extremists are the ones who get the attention. They're the ones people listen to, but they don't represent the vast majority of sensible, decent people who are too well-mannered to scream their opinions in your face."

Carter's Christianity seems to have informed her mostly traditionalist perspective and her classy, even keel. She once laughed to the unsympathetic cast of The View that she was "the only Republican in show business." She gave some money to Republican candidates and appeared at the 2000 Republican Convention in Philadelphia. There she appeared on The O'Reilly Factor with Pat Boone, another rare Hollywood conservative and openly practicing Christian. Bill O'Reilly pronounced her a "patriot" upon her death.

(Read more about this lady  here  who was not ashamed of her politics or her faith. We need more people in the media and at large  like her. )

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