FOUR SHY GIRLS WALKED ON STAGE — AND AMERICA FORGOT EVERYTHING ELSE ON TELEVISION. On Christmas Eve, 1955, four sisters stepped onto The Lawrence Welk Show. They weren’t flashy. No costumes. No spectacle. Just The Lennon Sisters — Dianne, Peggy, Kathy, and Janet — standing side by side and singing in a soft family harmony. One song was enough. By the end of the night, millions of viewers were already calling them America’s Sweethearts. For the next thirteen years, the country watched the sisters grow up on television — still graceful, still gentle, still singing the same way they might have around a living-room piano. And that’s why people remember them. Not because they were part of television’s flashier shows of the era… but because their harmony sounded like home.
The Night America First Heard the Harmony On Christmas Eve in 1955, four shy sisters stepped onto the stage of The Lawrence Welk Show. They weren’t dressed like stars, and…