Kansas City Entertainment

‘Fish Fry’ still sizzling after 40 years on Kansas City public radio

As the clock approached midnight on Saturday, Oct. 5, 1985, Chuck Haddix didn’t realize he was beginning a new era of radio in Kansas City.

“I remember how nervous I was, launching a new program,” Haddix said. “How exciting it was.”

That program, “Fish Fry,” has been on the air at the NPR radio station KCUR ever since, becoming a local institution with Haddix at its helm the entire time. He and KCUR have spent the past month celebrating the show’s 40th anniversary .

Chuck Haddix, using the persona of Chuck Haddock, has hosted the show “Fish Fry” on KCUR radio for 40 years.
Chuck Haddix, using the persona of Chuck Haddock, has hosted the show “Fish Fry” on KCUR radio for 40 years. KCUR

Haddix already was hosting a blues show on KCUR when he conceived of “Fish Fry,” and he adopted the persona of Chuck Haddock to present it.

“I had amassed a pretty significant blues collection,” he said. “But I wanted to do something that was a mix beyond the blues … a mix that included the blues, but also soul, zydeco and other slices of Americana.”

From its humble beginnings with a far-from-primetime time slot, “Fish Fry” has evolved into a twice-weekly four-hour fan favorite at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. He has played thousands of musical tracks, many of them new releases, and has interviewed hundreds of national and local musicians — always live.

And always alone. He’s his own producer and control-room operator.

“It’s me and a stack of CDs and a stack of records,” Haddix said. “I’m an old-school DJ. I go in and do it live and kick it old school, play records and CDs. I don’t do digital files.”

Haddix, 74, served a long stint as director of the Marr Sound Archives at UMKC before retiring Sept. 1. He now concentrates on teaching a class on the history of Kansas City jazz at the Kansas City Art Institute and on “Fish Fry,” which involves about three hours of prep work for each show.

KCUR radio carries “Fish Fry” live at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays.
KCUR radio carries “Fish Fry” live at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays.

His goal is to reach 50 years of “Fish Fry,” but first comes the 40th-year celebration, which included a live show on Saturday.

“It seems like I just sat down in that chair yesterday,” he said. “I never get tired of the ‘Fish Fry.’ I always enjoy going in and doing it. Time goes by like pages in a calendar in an old clock.”

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Dan Kelly
The Kansas City Star
Dan Kelly has been covering entertainment and arts news at The Star since 2009. He previously worked at the Columbia Daily Tribune, The Miami Herald and The Louisville Courier-Journal. He also was on the University of Missouri School of Journalism faculty for six years, and he has written two books, most recently “The Girl with the Agate Eyes: The Untold Story of Mattie Howard, Kansas City’s Queen of the Underworld.”
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