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Kentucky roadside attraction has hillbilly art that is so awesomely tacky

  

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Via:  nona62  •  10 years ago  •  6 comments

Kentucky roadside attraction has hillbilly art that is so awesomely tacky

Kentucky roadside attraction has hillbilly art that is so awesomely tacky

There is one place in the world where the Spice Girls jam with Spinal Tap and Elvis and Barbie lie in a manger, along with Santa Claus.

Welcome to Keith Holts strangely compelling Apple Valley Hillbilly Gardens and Toyland roadside tourist attraction outside Paducah, Kentucky.

This is my throwaway society woods. The stuff most people throw away, I nail it to a tree.

The place is an homage to hillbilly pop culture where visitors can see bizarre exhibits like Things Angelina Jolie Touched, and a Hillbilly Day Care Center, complete with barbed wire.

Holt, 52, is a Kentucky native is as much a part of the attraction as his eclectic collection. He told us he spent more than 20 years chasing his dream of becoming an actor in Hollywood. If you ask him, or even if you dont, hell tell you that his career highlight was a speaking part on General Hospital during its heyday.

I was an ugly waiter who served a sandwich, he told me. My line was, Heres your sandwich, sir.

When his mother died in 2006, it seemed like the right time to give up his Hollywood dream and return to the family home he inherited outside Paducah to open a backyard museum exhibiting the thousands of vintage toys hed been collecting and storing in lockers around Los Angeles.

No one expected me to go back to Kentucky, he said, standing inside a small outbuilding next to his home that was once his grandfather, Oral Wallaces 4-seat restaurant, ciderhouse, general store and barbershop, now a museum, filled floor to ceiling with antiques and memorabilia from Holts acting career. I was living the Hollywood dream, hanging out with A-list celebrities. But I wanted to open a toy fantasyland to help people relive their childhoods. That was the initial vision.

But Holts neighbors in this conservative community didnt care for his host of peculiar displays in the yard or his shoulder length hair.

Everyone thought I was a meth dealer, he says.

Holt says he was shot at, had his phone tapped and was investigated by a host of government agencies that was spurred on, he says, by vindictive neighbors. The chilly welcome back to Kentucky inspired him to antagonize his neighbors with hand painted signs along the road (Everybody Hurts- Gossip, Dont Dream It- Conform, and more).

After a protracted court battle with local authorities, Holt says he agreed to buy an entertainment license to legitimize his unusual tourist attraction and made peace with most of his neighbors, who have gotten used to him.

Holts roadside attraction has three components: a small museum with mementos from his acting days, like the Angelina Jolie exhibit and his grandfathers Gulf gas station and original homestead; the Toyland vintage toy and trains museum; and Hillbilly Gardens, Holts eccentric collection of Hillbilly folk art scattered around the property.

Holt led us outside and pointed at a trailer in the yard.

Most of the toys are still in there, he said, My friends in L.A. who said they were going to invest bailed out. Ive only got 20 percent of my collection on display.

Though just one small room, Toyland is sensory overload. There are hundreds, perhaps more than 1,000 vintage toys and dolls artfully displayed, floor to ceiling, with a host of sleek vintage toy trains circling the room. Dolls depicting likenesses of pop culture icons like the Spice Girls and Frank Sinatra round out the surreal scene.

Holt showed us around Hillbilly Gardens, stopping to explain the puns behind each of his displays, which include a hillbilly lawnmower, a hillbilly cemetery, hillbilly shower, hillbilly retirement home and so on. I asked him about a ratty old full size sofa and recliner, with piles of leaves on them nailed midway up a set of tall oak trees.

This is my throwaway society woods, he said. The stuff most people throw away, I nail it to a tree.

There was a bizarre, mad genius charm to the displays, but Holt made it clear that he doesnt take himself very seriously.

I had some artists in Paducah tell me this stuff was folk art and I was like, OK, if you say so, he said.

Surveying his massive collection of assorted collectibles, much of it strewn about the yard, I asked Holt if he was a hoarder.

I consider myself a collector, not a hoarder, he said. I collect so others can enjoy this stuff, but maybe thats my way of covering up hoarding. I guess I do have a hard time throwing things away.

Two hours into our visit, I got the sense that Holt was in no hurry for us to leave. After showing us around, he circled back to the small museum and told us about his grandfather, a traveling musician who tried to settle down here, where he lived and operated a variety of businesses from 1928 until he died of a heart attack in 1964.

His dream now is to find a space to display his complete collection, but he said he has no idea how to make that happen, at least for now.

His only job is to lead tours and, according to dozens of reviews on Trip Advisor, he spends hours with each guest, even though there is no admission fee. The reviews are nearly all glowing, save for a handful of 1 star reviews left by angry neighbors.

People trashed us for homeschooling our kids and living off of peoples donations, he said, clearly still agitated. They werent reviewing the place as a tourist attraction

But Holt says his roadside attraction has kept him in Kentucky. He said that he missed L.A. but couldnt afford to go back, and in some ways hes walking in his grandfathers footsteps.

My grandfather bought this place and kind of got stuck here, he said. He couldnt get out. Now the same thing has happened to me.


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Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

I'll bet there are some really cool things in that collection.

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    10 years ago

All I can say is, Good Gosh.

I've not seen this, but am offended by the use of the word Hillbilly on everything. I can just imagine exactly how his neighbors feel and have two ideas of where this monstrosity is located, and have probably met the original proprietor. I'm going to have to go down to Paducah and take a look.

"Living off people's donations", how nice that his neighbors were so generous to support him. Yet he talks about them as if THEY are the kooks. If he wants to really make it as a "hillbilly" attraction, he needs to move to Pikeville, who embrace the word-- not Paducah, which is a lovely area of the state, filled with culture, as in REAL culture, not this fabricated one... Pikeville has "Hillbilly Days", a festival celebrating the exaggerated version of what people think a hillbilly is.

This is almost as embarrassing as the Creationist Museum. EEEEEK.

 
 
 
Dowser
Sophomore Quiet
link   Dowser    10 years ago

I'll bet there are bunch of utterly wacky things in that collection and it's not worth paying money to see. EEEEEK.

 
 
 
Nona62
Professor Silent
link   seeder  Nona62    10 years ago

but am offended by the use of the word Hillbilly on everything. I don't blame you Dowser!

 
 
 
sixpick
Professor Quiet
link   sixpick    10 years ago

I like it.

 
 
 
A. Macarthur
Professor Guide
link   A. Macarthur    10 years ago

Yee hah!

Whatever that means.

Otherwise, cousins should never marry.

 
 

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