Search results
Dewey Hughes (born 1932) is an African American former radio personality and was Petey Greene's manager.
Dec 21, 2015 · Dewey Hughes’ journey has been a combination of good fortune, opportunity, preparation, and tenacity. “The key was not getting a big head or taking myself too seriously.” He currently lives in Venice Beach, California, where he writes and produces music.
In the summer of 1966, Greene was hired by Dewey Hughes to work as a disc jockey at AM radio station WOL /1450 and to host his own show. Rapping With Petey Greene aired in the Washington Metropolitan Area throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Feb 9, 2009 · Dewey Hughes Remembers Shock Jock Petey Greene Before Don Imus and Howard Stern, Petey Greene rocked the radio airwaves. Greene was a legendary shock jock and TV talk show host, but to black ...
Dec 21, 2015 · Quiet on the Set Magazine interviews Dewey Hughes, the original DJ for Washington D.C.'s WOL Radio Station.Follow us:Twitter.com/QOTSmag Facebook.com/QOTSmag...
Jul 13, 2007 · When program director Dewey Hughes brings an ex-convict to his radio station to work as a new DJ, he withholds the guy's identity until almost airtime.
Jul 13, 2007 · Chiwetel Ejiofor co-stars as Dewey Hughes, the station's straight-laced program director, who is Greene's business partner and, ultimately, friend. Cheadle and...
Jul 13, 2007 · In 1966, when we first meet them, Petey Greene (Don Cheadle) and Dewey Hughes (Chiwetel Ejiofor) present an easy, obvious contrast. Dewey, rising fast in the management ranks of an R&B radio...
Aug 11, 2016 · As Greene achieved more and more acclaim, he was a reluctant guest when his manager Dewey Hughes secured a spot for him on the Johnny Carson show; he stood both Hughes and Carson up.
Jul 12, 2007 · Kasi Lemmons' film Talk to Me, which opens this weekend, centers on the radio DJ, television personality and activist Ralph Waldo "Petey" Greene Jr. (played by Don Cheadle). Greene was a driving force in the black community of Washington D.C.; we talk with Lemmons and with Dewey Hughes, who first hired Greene at the D.C. radio station WOL-AM.