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Reddy's words resound on new platforms
 
Thursday, Apr 24, 2008 - 12:05 AM 
 
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Former pop star and actress Helen Reddy can't contain her amusement at a recent full-circle turn of events.

"Hear her roar" screamed the cover of a recent Newsweek magazine touting a story on the candidacy of Hillary Rodham Clinton.

The line, of course, comes from her 1972 hit, "I Am Woman," an anthemic pop song with a hook as infectious as a commercial jingle and a polarizing message to which many Americans still can't adjust: "I am woman / Hear me roar."

"I put two phrases into the lexicon, and that blows my mind because I don't think of myself as a writer," said Reddy, 66, in a telephone interview on the other side of the world.

Reddy's memoir, "The Woman I Am" (Tarcher/Penguin, $26.95), plays off the song's title, but the Australian-born entertainer insists her days of singing for a living are far behind her. She retired from the stage permanently at age 60, 55 years after first picking up a mike. Today, she's a licensed clinical hypnotherapist and a genealogist.

In her book, Reddy recounts growing up in an Australian show business family; her'70s pop music career in the United States; a harrowing marriage to a cocaine-addict who doubled as her manager; raising two children; becoming a grandmother; and her current spiritual work.

Reddy became an American citizen in 1974 but now lives in Sydney, Australia.

"I made the decision to leave after the coup in Florida," she said. "At that point I could no longer trust the Supreme Court, and America had become a one-party state. I said, "I'm not going to live under totalitarianism, I'm out." That's why it's very important for me that Hillary wins."

British musician talks about private Elvis visit to England

LONDON -- The King in England? Maybe so.

For decades Elvis Presley's English fans have accepted that the King of Rock'n' Roll's only known visit to Britain was a quick stop at Glasgow Prestwick Airport in Scotland. An Elvis lounge and a plaque commemorates his 1960 stopover there.

Now a prominent theater producer says Presley made a secret visit to London in 1958 to see the sights with popular British rocker Tommy Steele, and he promised never to reveal that they had gone to famous landmarks together.

Bill Kenwright told a BBC radio show that Steele had told him that Presley flew in for a day after calling out of the blue to say he liked the British rocker's music.

Steele, now 71, confirmed the visit in a written note to London's Daily Mail and said he wished the secret had never come out.

"I can only hope he can forgive me," he said of Presley, who died in 1977 at the age of 42. "It was an event shared by two young men sharing the same love of their music and the same thrill of achieving something unimaginable."

The visit was apparently kept secret at the time so that Presley wouldn't be mobbed by fans, but it was not clear why Steele had wanted it kept a secret now.

A message left at Graceland in Memphis, Tenn., early yesterday seeking comment was not immediately returned.

The call to Steele came while Presley was stationed at a U.S. Army base in Germany, Kenwright said.

Presley had been known to visit Paris while stationed in Germany, attracting hundreds of fans, and went to some well-known Parisian nightspots. But there have been no prior reports of him touring England, where he never performed.

The news was not welcomed at Scotland's Glasgow Prestwick Airport, where officials are proud of their Elvis connection.

The bartender at the Elvis-themed lounge hung up the phone Tuesday when asked about the King's visit to London, and airport Chief Executive Mark Rodwell told the British Broadcasting Corp. that he wants photographic proof that Presley was actually in London.

"As far as we are concerned, until it is proved otherwise Prestwick Airport remains the only place in the United Kingdom that Elvis Presley ever set foot," he said.

-- From Wire Reports

 

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