Myron Floren
Living
Category - Inducted 1990
This year's honorees to
the Living Category of the Polka Music Hall of Fame were two
individuals who have both in their own ways made great strides in
the promotion and advancement of polka music.
Myron
Floren is a highly recognized name in the entertainment world besides
his relationship to polka music. He was born and raised on a farm in
Day County, South Dakota. His interest in the accordion began after
hearing a neighbor play at the house parties that the farmers usually
had on Saturday night. While still in school he started in radio on
KSOO in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. At KSOO he played an early morning
show that featured many of the familiar waltzes and polkas of both
Polish and Scandinavian origin. As his career progressed he entertained
in Camp Shows from 1944 to 1945 in World War 11 in the European
Theatre. In 1946 he joined the country group, the Buckeye Four, in St.
Louis and played with them on the Mutual Radio Network from 1946 to
1950. Also in St. Louis in 1948 he started in television on KSD-TV.
HHis most famous association was with the
Lawrence Welk Big Band, which he joined in 1950. He spent a year on the
road doing one-nighters across the country and landed in California in
1951. There they did a few shows on KTLA-TV. The reaction was so great
that they did another four years for them and then went network in
1955. The show was then a weekly edition until June of 1981. There are
still about two hundred stations on PBS carrying the show on a weekly
basis.
TThe Lawrence Welk Show featured Myron
playing many polkas. According to Mr. Floren, "I guess we did one
practically every week. I even remember an instance where we were
saluting Duke Ellington and Lawrence added a polka just in case."
Myron and his wife resided in California at the time he was inducted
into the Polka Hall of Fame.
All of their five daughters are grown, and four have families of
their own. They also had seven grandchildren.
He averaged about 150 shows a year around the country. Many of
the shows were with big bands and he performed with the Jimmy Sturr Band
on a regular basis.
Myron Floren died in 2005.