Parton told the crowd it was an "honour and a thrill" to perform at the festival.
"I've been waiting a lifetime for this and of course we want all of you to have the best time," she said.
The crowds chanted Parton's name and clapped and danced as she performed, with some fans dressed up as the glamourous musician in tribute.
All walkways leading to the Pyramid Stage where Parton performed were full, and some festival-goers complained they could not see the diminutive star.
Backstage, Parton was given an award to recognise her selling 100 million albums over a career that has spanned five decades.
Parton's much-anticipated performance marked the final day of the festival, where heavy metal band Metallica played on Saturday.
The 68-year old star performed a song about mud that she wrote for the five-day festival, which is notorious for its ground turning to deep sludge when it rains.
"I thought I had to write a song about the Glastonbury mud, even though the sun's shining today," Parton told a press conference before her performance.
The star said she felt at home at the festival -- which is held on Worthy Farm in the Somerset countryside -- because of her upbringing in rural Tennessee.
"I'm just a country girl and now I feel like a rock star," she said.
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"I've been waiting a lifetime for this and of course we want all of you to have the best time," she said.
The crowds chanted Parton's name and clapped and danced as she performed, with some fans dressed up as the glamourous musician in tribute.
All walkways leading to the Pyramid Stage where Parton performed were full, and some festival-goers complained they could not see the diminutive star.
Backstage, Parton was given an award to recognise her selling 100 million albums over a career that has spanned five decades.
Parton's much-anticipated performance marked the final day of the festival, where heavy metal band Metallica played on Saturday.
The 68-year old star performed a song about mud that she wrote for the five-day festival, which is notorious for its ground turning to deep sludge when it rains.
"I thought I had to write a song about the Glastonbury mud, even though the sun's shining today," Parton told a press conference before her performance.
The star said she felt at home at the festival -- which is held on Worthy Farm in the Somerset countryside -- because of her upbringing in rural Tennessee.
"I'm just a country girl and now I feel like a rock star," she said.
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