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ARTICLES
& INTERVIEWS WITH DONNA SUMMER |
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DONNA
SUMMER: SURVIVING 'THE JOURNEY'
By OSCAR WELLS GABRIEL II
Singer
has overcome suicide attempt, changing times
(from
Associated Press,
October 21, 2003) |
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- In November of 1976, Donna Summer's professional
life was peaking.
Her single "Love To Love You Baby," followed by a slew of
other hits, made her a fixture atop the music charts. But her personal
life was falling apart -- to the point that she tried to jump out the
11th-floor window of a New York hotel room.
The suicide attempt -- one of the few things in life that she failed
to accomplish -- is described in Summer's upcoming autobiography,
"Ordinary Girl: The Journey" (Villard Books). It's being
released along with a greatest hits CD that contains three new songs.
"The book is like holding up a mirror to people and letting them
see things that happened in my life that represent things that happen
in their own lives," Summer told AP Radio in a telephone
interview from her home in Nashville, Tennessee. "Struggles of
different sorts that I've been through that other people go
through."
Despite the title of her book, Summer's experiences have been anything
but ordinary. In addition to the depression that led to her suicide
attempt, she writes about bouts of bed wetting, witnessing a murder on
the streets of Boston as a young girl -- and moving to Germany to
perform in the musical "Hair" in part to escape from those
she helped put in prison for the crime.
While overseas, she performed in European versions of
"Godspell," "The Me Nobody Knows" and "Porgy
and Bess." After settling in Germany, she teamed up with producer
Giorgio Moroder in 1975 on "Love To Love You Baby" (which
has now come full circle, with Beyonce lifting the classic chorus for
"Naughty Girl," off her latest album).
In the book, Summer says the song's famous moans and groans were added
after Moroder decided to expand the song from three and a half to 17
minutes -- without adding any lyrics. The song reached No. 2 on the
Billboard charts and earned her a reputation as a disco-era sex
goddess -- a far cry from her churchgoing upbringing in Boston.
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Today, Summer has no problems with the "disco diva" label.
"They can call me anything they want, as long as they buy my
records," she said. "I'll be laughing all the way to the
bank."
Highlighting 'unsung heroes'
Going to the memory vault for recollections about her life may have
been hard, but Summer had no problem putting it on paper.
Like the suicide attempt.
Upon returning to the States after being in Germany for more than
seven years, Summer was having trouble readjusting to life in America
as a disco star. "I didn't even realize that I was
depressed," she said. "I just felt that I couldn't live like
I was living another minute. And I just went to the window and I stuck
my foot out the window. "
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But in front of the window was a radiator covered by a long curtain.
When Summer tried to get her left foot out to the ledge, she says, it
got tangled in the fabric. At that moment, a housekeeper opened the
door to her room, and Summer came back inside.
After that, Summer got help with her depression.
While many still associate her with "Love To Love You Baby,"
Summer feels the song is atypical of her career -- and her talent.
Take her voice. Trained in the theater, she has a strong voice, in
contrast to the pillow-talk whisper she used on her biggest hit. And
while people think of songs like "Bad Girls" and "She
Works Hard For the Money" as odes to those who sell sex on the
streets, Summer feels these songs honor such women.
"We have a lot of unsung heroes in life. And sometimes the very
person we that look down on is the person that's struggling the
most," she said. "We point our fingers many times in
judgment of people suffering with different circumstances, and think
that's where they want to be, but they don't and so I think it's
important to sing about those things."
One highlight of Summer's career was her duet with Barbra Streisand on
1979's "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)," which ended up as
her final number one hit.
She had just finished a tour and celebrated by partying hard all
night, unaware she had to record with Streisand the following day.
Worn out from lots of celebrating and little sleep, Summer fainted
while trying to hit a high note and fell off her stool.
Streisand pressed on, holding her note to the end. Only after she
finished did she lean over and ask her fallen comrade: "Donna,
are you OK?"
'You are who you are'
Though the hits are less frequent now, Summer is still having fun. She
still cranks out music, not that you'd hear it "On The
Radio."
Does that bother her? Nope.
"I love music and I love what I do, but it isn't the end-all and
the be-all of everything. There are people dying ... in this war and
other things going on that probably should take precedence over a
song, so I don't dwell on it."
Nor is she interested in stoking the publicity machine any more than
she has to.
"Once your name is established, you are who you are. It's not
something you have to keep working at. I don't need to be in the press
24-7 to validate myself for myself."
Speaking of validating herself -- what about THE rumor?
You know the one. About her being a man.
A relative first told her about it, and she realized it had grown legs
while doing an interview in South America. She noticed the interviewer
"started looking at me kind of strange." So she asked:
"Why are you looking at me like that?
The reporter said: "You don't look like a man." He grabbed
her hand: "You don't FEEL like a man."
In fact, she's an Ordinary Girl.
Notice: The article above was posted on several sites,
including: CNN, FOX NEWS, JAM!, HOUSTON CHRONICLE,
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