Susan Boyle Biography and pictures Gallery
Background information | |
---|---|
Born | 1 April 1961 |
Origin | Blackburn, West Lothian, Scotland |
Instrument(s) | Vocals |
Voice type(s) | Soprano |
Susan Margaret Boyle (born 1 April 1961) is a Scottish singer who came to international public attention in 2009 after she appeared as a contestant on Britain's Got Talent. Boyle became known when she sang "I Dreamed a Dream" from Les Misérables in the competition's first round, first broadcast in the United Kingdom on 11 April 2009. In the final of the third series of the show, Boyle finished in second place, behind dance troupe Diversity.
Boyle attended Edinburgh Acting School and also took part in the Edinburgh Fringe. Prior to her appearance on Britain's Got Talent, her main experience had come from singing in church and karaoke in the local pubs in her village. She had also tried out several times for My Kind of People.
When she appeared on the Britain's Got Talent stage, the audience and the judges appeared apprehensive and judgmental of her unpolished appearance. Upon finishing her song, she received a standing ovation from the live audience and unanimous praise from the judges. She has been dubbed "The Woman Who Shut Up Simon Cowell". Cowell is reported to be setting up a contract with Boyle with his Syco Music company label, a subsidiary of Sony Music.[8]
The contrast between the audience's first impression of her when she appeared on stage compared to the ovation she received afterwards triggered global interest. Articles about her appeared in newspapers worldwide, while the numbers who watched videos of her audition have set an online record. Within nine days of her televised debut, videos of her audition, subsequent interviews of her, and her 1999 rendition of "Cry Me a River" had been viewed a combined total of over 100 million times on the Internet.
Biography
Early life
Susan Boyle was born 1 April 1961 in Blackburn, West Lothian, Scotland,[11] to Patrick Boyle, a miner, World War II veteran and singer at the Bishop's Blaize, and Bridget, a shorthand typist,[12] who were both immigrants from County Donegal, Ireland.[13] She was the youngest of four brothers and six sisters.[11] Born when her mother was 47,[11][14][15] Boyle was briefly deprived of oxygen during the difficult birth; she was diagnosed as having learning difficulties.[2] She says she was bullied as a child,[11][16] and was nicknamed "Susie Simple" at school.[17]
After leaving school with few qualifications,[11] she was employed for the only time in her life as a trainee cook in the kitchen of West Lothian College for six months,[17] and took part in government training schemes.[12] She visited the theatre from time to time to listen to professional singers,[12] and performed at a number of local venues.[2]
Early singing
Boyle took singing lessons from voice coach Fred O'Neil.[11] She attended Edinburgh Acting School, and took part in the Edinburgh Fringe.[2] Some early video clips of her performances came to light: in 1984, Boyle stood in with "The Way We Were" at Motherwell FC Social Club;[18] at 25 years of age, Boyle was filmed singing "I Don't Know How to Love Him" from Jesus Christ Superstar at her parents' golden wedding party.[19] In 1995, she sang the same song in an audition for Michael Barrymore's My Kind of People[2] at the Olympia Shopping Centre in Glasgow. She said she was too nervous to make a good impression,[12] but her brother Gerald believes they rejected her due to her image.[6] An amateur video shows Barrymore was apparently more interested in mocking her.[20] She also has long participated in her parish church's pilgrimages to the Knock Shrine, County Mayo, Ireland, where she has sung at the Marian basilica.[21]
In 1999 she recorded "Cry Me a River" for a charity CD funded by the local council to commemorate the Millennium[11][22] and produced at a school in Whitburn, West Lothian. Only 1,000 copies of the CD, entitled Music for a Millennium Celebration, Sounds of West Lothian, were pressed.[23] In what is the first known review of Boyle's singing ability, a reviewer for the West Lothian Herald & Post said that Boyle's rendition of "Cry Me a River" was "heartbreaking", and "had been on repeat in my CD player ever since I got this CD..."[24][25] This recording was released onto the web in the week after 11 April 2009, and gained immediate acclaim: the New York Post writing that this showed that Boyle was not a "one trick pony" and predicted the original compilation would be a valuable collector's item.[26] Hello! stated that the recording "cement[ed] her status" as a singing star.[27]
In 1999, Boyle used "all her savings" to pay for a professionally cut demo tape, which she later sent to record companies, radio talent competitions, local and national TV; Boyle gave away a few copies to her close friends. The demo tape consisted of her versions of "Cry Me a River" and "Killing Me Softly with His Song" and was released onto the Internet after her audition.[28]
Boyle won several local singing competitions, and her mother tried to persuade her daughter to enter Britain's Got Talent, urging her to take the risk of singing in front of an audience larger than her parish church.[4] Former coach O'Neil has said Boyle abandoned an audition for The X Factor because she believed people were being chosen for their looks, and that she almost abandoned her plan to enter Britain's Got Talent. O'Neil persuaded her to go to the audition despite her telling him "...she was too old and that it was a young person's game".[29] Boyle said that it was her mother's death which motivated her to go on Britain's Got Talent and seek a musical career to pay tribute to her mother.[11] Her performance on the show was the first time she had sung in public since then.[30][31]
Britain's Got Talent
In August 2008, Boyle applied for an audition for the third series of Britain's Got Talent, and was accepted after a preliminary audition. Boyle auditioned in Glasgow, Scotland. Boyle performed a rendition of "I Dreamed a Dream" from Les Misérables in the first round of the third series of Britain's Got Talent, which was watched by over 10 million viewers when it aired on 11 April 2009.[32] This performance was widely reported, and tens of millions of people viewed a video of her singing on YouTube.[32] Boyle was "absolutely gobsmacked" by the strength of this reaction.[33]
“ | I know what they were thinking, but why should it matter as long as I can sing? It's not a beauty contest. | ” |
– Susan Boyle, The Sunday Times[11] |
Boyle is well aware that the audience on Britain's Got Talent was initially hostile to her because of her appearance, but she has refused to change her image.[11]
When Boyle first appeared on Britain's Got Talent, she said that she aspired to become a musical theatre singer "as successful as" Elaine Paige.[34] Since the appearance, Paige has expressed interest in singing a duet with Boyle,[34] and has called her "a role model for everyone who has a dream".[35] Cameron Mackintosh, the producer of the Les Misérables musical, also praised the performance, as "heart-touching, thrilling and uplifting".[32]
She was one of 40 acts that were put through to the semi-finals.[36] She appeared last on the first semi-final on 24 May 2009, performing "Memory" from Lloyd Webber's Cats in front of a global audience of millions.[37] In the public vote she was the act to receive the highest number of votes and go through to the final, along with dance group Diversity.[38][39] She ended up in second place to Diversity.
On the day following the final show, after consulting her doctor, Boyle was admitted to to a private clinic in London, suffering from exhaustion. Prime Minister Gordon Brown wished the star well stating, "I hope Susan Boyle is okay because she is a really, really nice person."[40]
Media impact
News media
Many British newspapers carried articles on Boyle's performance and subsequent Internet coverage. The Sun writer Colin Robertson gave her the nickname "Paula Potts" in reference to the contest's Series one winner, the opera singer Paul Potts.[41] In the U.S., several commentators also drew parallels between Boyle's performance and that of Paul Potts, an unexpected Britain's Got Talent success story; Forbes magazine predicted Boyle could follow in Potts' footsteps and enjoy a successful and profitable career.[42] ABC News hailed "Britain's newest pop sensation", and its Entertainment section headlined Boyle as "The Woman Who Shut Up Simon Cowell."[1]
International news outlets also carried stories on her, including among others, The Times of India,[43] Germany's Der Spiegel,[44] China's Xinhua News Agency,[45] Brazil's Zero Hora,[46] Israel's Ynet,[47] and the Arabic-language Al Arabiya.[48]
TV shows
Within the week following her performance on Britain's Got Talent, Boyle was a guest on STV's The Five Thirty Show.[49] She was interviewed via satellite on CBS's Early Show,[22] ABC's Good Morning America,[50] NBC's Today and via a telephone interview on FOX's America's Newsroom.[50][51]
Boyle also appeared via satellite on CNN's Larry King Live during which fellow guest Piers Morgan apologised to her for not giving her "anything like the respect" she deserved when she walked out on the BGT stage.[52] Boyle performed an a cappella verse of "My Heart Will Go On" on King's show which stunned Morgan.[53] On 11 May 2009 Boyle appeared via satellite on The Oprah Winfrey Show, with Simon Cowell sitting in with Oprah and commenting on the background of the historical performance by Boyle.
Social media
Websites such as YouTube, Facebook and Twitter have been crucial in facilitating Boyle's rapid rise to fame:[2] The most popular YouTube video submission of her audition garnered nearly 2.5 million views in the first 72 hours.[54] On the day following the performance, the YouTube video was the most popular article on Digg.[55] The same video was judged so popular on Reddit that it was put on the site's main page.[56] Within a week, the audition performance had been viewed more than 66 million times, setting an online record, while on Wikipedia her biographical article attracted nearly half a million page views.[9] A total of 103 million video views on 20 different websites was reached within nine days.[10] The Los Angeles Times wrote that her popularity on YouTube may in part be due to the broad range of emotion packed into a short clip which was "perfect for the Internet".[57]
Social analysis
“ | Modern society is too quick to judge people on their appearances. [...] There is not much you can do about it; it is the way they think; it is the way they are. But maybe this could teach them a lesson, or set an example. | ” |
– Susan Boyle, The Washington Post[4] |
Boyle's sudden fame drew much commentary on why this story was so widely reported and what it implies, while others drew moral lessons from people's reactions to her performance.[58] For instance, writing in The Herald, Collette Douglas-Home described Boyle's story as a modern parable and a rebuke to people's tendency to judge others based on their physical appearance.[59] Similarly, Lisa Schwarzbaum, in an article in Entertainment Weekly, said that Boyle's performance was particularly moving as it was a victory for talent and artistry in a culture obsessed with physical attractiveness and presentation.[60]
Following Boyle's rendition of the song judge Amanda Holden remarked upon the audience's initially cynical attitude, and the subsequent "biggest wake-up call ever" they had received upon hearing her performance.[61] Echoing Holden's comments, The Washington Post's Jeanne McManus said that one of the main sources of drama in talent shows was the collision between performers' sometimes exaggerated sense of self-worth and the opinions and reactions of their audience.[62] In Boyle's case, McManus believed that her initial demeanour and homely appearance caused the judges and audience to be "waiting for her to squawk like a duck".[62] Indeed, New York's Daily News said that it was this stark contrast between the audience's low expectations and the quality of her singing that made Boyle's performance such an engaging piece of television.[63] This article also noted that the idea of an underdog being ridiculed or humiliated but then enjoying an unexpected triumph is a common trope in literature and that this is why, when this theme made its unscripted appearance in reality television, it created an enduring and powerful effect.[63]
Although the audience's reaction was unscripted, it may have been anticipated. Mark Blankenship of the The Huffington Post noted that the producers of the show would have been aware of the potential of this story arc, by deliberately presenting Boyle in a manner that would enhance this initial reaction.[64] He does note, however, that "as fabricated as it is, her on-camera arc is undeniably moving".[64] The fact that Boyle is in her forties has also been cited as contributing to this strong emotional impact. In another Huffington Post article, Letty Cottin Pogrebin wrote that although people may "weep for the years of wasted talent", Boyle's performance was a triumph for "women of a certain age" over a youth culture that often dismisses middle-aged women.[65]
Tanya Gold wrote in The Guardian that the difference between Boyle's hostile reception and the more neutral response to Paul Potts in his first audition reflected society's expectation that women be both good-looking and talented, with no such expectation existing for men.[66] In a similar vein, Mary Elizabeth Williams wrote on Salon.com that Boyle's sudden fame came from her ability to remind her audience that, like them, she was a normal, flawed and vulnerable person, familiar with disappointment and mockery, but who nevertheless has the determination to fight for her dream.[67] R.M. Campbell, music critic for The Gathering Note compared her to Ella Fitzgerald, in that "[... it's] really, really hard to make a career if a woman isn't attractive. [...] The very fact that she is ordinary could help in improving her future success."[68] Los Angeles vocal coach Eric Vetro stated "She's an everywoman as opposed to an untouchable fantasy goddess, so maybe that's why people react to her. [...] They say, 'She's one of us, but look how talented she is.'"[69]
Several media sources have commented that Boyle's success seemed to have particular resonance in the United States. A US entertainment correspondent was quoted in The Scotsman comparing Boyle's story to the American Dream, as representing talent overcoming adversity and poverty.[70] The Associated Press described this as Boyle's "hardscrabble story", dwelling on her modest lifestyle and what they saw as urban deprivation in her home town.[31] Similarly, The Independent New York correspondent David Usborne wrote that America is a country that will always respond to "the fairy tale where the apparently unprepossessing suddenly becomes pretty, from Shrek to My Fair Lady".[71] Piers Morgan, one of the show's judges, also commented on the unusual power this story seemed to have in the US, noting that "Americans can be very moved by this sort of thing", and likening Boyle's rise to fame from poverty and obscurity to that of the fictional boxer Rocky Balboa.[57]
Mark Borkowski said that Boyle/BGT has been a fantastic soap opera for the fame-makers (Cowell and Talkback TV), but that it was the "modern equivalent of a freak show"[72]. Mary Beard, Professor of Classics at the University of Cambridge, compared the Boyle phenomenon to the Hottentot Venus, saying: "The arguments of Baartman’s managers were little different from the arguments of those in ITV who now seek to justify the display of Susan Boyle. This is an opportunity for wealth and fame, they say... the truth is that Susan Boyle is a vulnerable and exploited middle-aged woman. She is not a star in the making, being given a lucky break thanks to BGT."[73]
Cultural references
Boyle's widespread Internet success and her appeal in reaching out to millions of people across the world, has meant that she has become a cultural icon in a relatively short time. For instance, Boyle's rendition of "I Dreamed a Dream" has been credited with causing a surge in ticket sales in the Vancouver production of Les Misérables.[74][75] Boyle has also been portrayed humorously (in drag) by American comedian Jay Leno, who jokingly claimed that they were related through his mother's Scottish heritage.[76]
The American cartoon show South Park made a reference to Susan Boyle in the episode "Fatbeard", which aired on 22 April 2009;[77][78] the Late Night with Jimmy Fallon show aired a comedy sketch showing the "feel good" effect that Susan Boyle's performance has had on people;[79] The Simpsons aired a new commercial for their 20th anniversary show "Springfield's Got Talent", in which Homer Simpson talks about his dreams to be as successful as Boyle. [80][81] A European trailer for the video game The Sims 3 includes a character mocked up as Boyle receiving praises from other in-game characters, wishing her "good luck".[82]
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