As winter digs in and we bid farewell to another year, let’s pause to remember….
THE GIRL OF SUMMER
Summer ended early this year, when Olivia Newton-John left us on August 8th, more than 30 years after first being diagnosed with breast cancer.
Olivia was the ultimate summer girl. We felt it the moment she burst onto the scene in the early 1970s, with a blond beauty and an effervescent personality that both seemed to be made of sunbeams. We knew it after her legendary turn as Sandy, the teen who comes of age at a new school following a summer fling with John Travolta in 1978’s Grease. And we are reminded of it now. Another Grease alum, Stockard Channing, said it best among the countless tributes that poured in from around the globe: “Olivia was the essence of summer – her sunniness, her warmth, and her grace are what always come to mind when I think of her.” So it made sense that when I first learned the sad news, I experienced the same sinking feeling that accompanies the end of summer; a regret for lost time mixed with a fear that I hadn’t made the most of it or properly appreciated and enjoyed it.
I had loved Olivia, but had I properly appreciated her? Had we?
The courts would mostly side
with the label in the lawsuits and countersuits that followed, as the contract
was apparently clear if unfair. But in a
classic example of losing a battle and winning a war, the courts agreed with
Olivia on one critical point. In her
final appeal, she had shrewdly asked the courts to clearly assert the relevance
of a law that is best known for another great Olivia – the so-called de Havilland
Law, which prevents employment contracts from being binding beyond seven years,
but which had never previously been tested with respect to recording contracts. The appeal ruling conceded this almost as an
afterthought, continuing to side with the label on most other points and
asserting that any late albums could likely be made up during the five-year
period noted in the contract. But it did
ultimately affirm the seven-year limitation.
This was all playing
out as Grease was exploding at the box office and its soundtrack flying
out of record stores. By simply invoking
the de Havilland Law, Olivia gave her label what they may have needed most – a healthy dose of fear. They knew it was foolish to continue tormenting
one of their most valuable assets for a couple of more years only to lose her
completely a couple of years after that.
They filed their court victory away but promptly backed off Olivia, giving
her free reign to complete her promotional commitments for Grease (despite
its soundtrack being on another label), and then welcoming her back with open
arms when she ultimately returned a bigger star than ever.
And that she
was. She had already proven herself in
the country and adult contemporary formats, and with Grease she managed
to maintain the retro vibe of 50s-influenced pop while still making the songs
fresh and contemporary. It may have been
a period piece as a movie, but the songs needed to live independently if they
were going to get played on late-70s radio and Olivia gave them that life. And when even Olivia’s star wattage couldn’t salvage
her next film, the now-cult-favorite Xanadu, at the 1980 box office, all was not lost. Unlike other infamous film failures that
similarly doomed their soundtracks, Olivia’s worldwide influence on popular
music was still in full force. “Magic”
and the film’s title song would become two of the biggest international hits of
her career, while adding roller-disco to the list of genres she had conquered.
Her studio recordings
would logically build on the more adult image she had cultivated following Sandy’s
iconic transformation at the end of Grease. Before and after Xanadu, she released
a string of major hits that became increasingly sensual and aggressive, both
lyrically and musically, including “A Little More Love,” “Deeper than the Night,”
“Physical,” “Make a Move on Me,” “Heart Attack,” and “Twist of Fate.” Musically, these songs transitioned Olivia from
a post-disco groove to a harder sound informed by the growing synth-rock trends
of the eighties. Lyrically, there is a
more adult approach to love and sex in these songs than in her previous
material and that Olivia would often try to offset with knowing winks at the
camera during her videos or proclamations of innocence during her interviews
(such as apologetically claiming, with more winks and nods, that she may not
have fully grasped the suggestiveness of the lyrics while she was recording them).
“Physical” was
of course the peak, and not just for Olivia.
The song was essentially to 1980s singles what Michael Jackson’s Thriller
was to 1980’s albums: a decade-defining, lightning-in-a-bottle smash. Its rhythmic appeal was so irresistible that
it even crossed over to become a top 40 hit on the R&B charts, making
Olivia one of the rare white artists at that time to be embraced by urban radio
and perhaps truly leaving no major contemporary music genre in the English language
where she had not scored success. While
the song seems incredibly mild by today’s standards, it was controversial in
1981 and many radio stations initially banned it from their playlists. Olivia astutely countered with a playful
video that framed “Physical” as a workout anthem, and in doing so made the song
safe for conservative listeners who now had a reason to overlook the suggestive
lyrics, embrace the beat, and work out (or at least buy work-out clothes).
What some people still don’t realize is that
Olivia had one more trick up her sleeve when she delivered the video to MTV. Knowing its executives were already
nervous about the song and might still be concerned even with the playful
workout angle, Olivia subversively gave them something she knew they would have
to cut; not unlike a film director who inserts a gratuitous scene in hopes of
distracting the ratings board from the rest of their movie. Olivia added a quick twist in the very final
moment of the video, when two of the men who had been working out with her are
briefly shown holding hands. In truth
the entire video is comically homoerotic, but it was 1981 and there was a fine
line between implications of homosexuality and clear demonstrations of it. For all its focus on youth culture and rock &
roll rebellion, MTV was still in its first year and Olivia knew even they weren’t
likely to cross that line. As
expected, MTV (at the time) snipped off that final moment, claimed a moral
victory, and put the video into heavy rotation which helped launch and sustain
the song’s phenomenal success.
But while fans
loved “Physical” and those other increasingly provocative songs, they kept
hoping the singer would find her way back to being their summer girl; their girl
next door. 1985’s “Soul Kiss” was
perhaps a step too far for what the world could accept from and for Olivia. The single, its video, and the photography that
accompanied the parent album of the same name, created an overload of sonic and
visual imagery that was directly, assertively sexual. Gone were the winks and sly, ironic smiles to
offset the aggression of her other recent hits.
And why not? Why should she have
to continue making excuses for being a complete, fully formed woman in control
of her body and her sexuality? It didn’t
seem to matter to the record-buying public that Olivia was over 35 years old by then and
had earned the right to unapologetically be and do whatever she wanted. Nor did anyone seem to care that by then
Madonna was already pushing the envelope even further; the very envelope Olivia
had first opened. But Madonna never had
to carry the baggage of being ‘both Sandys.’
She was always just the one who shows up in tight leather in the last
five minutes of the movie. Olivia
meanwhile was expected to be everything to everyone all the time, and nobody
can be that. But nobody ever came
closer.
It is
incredibly ironic that the iconic transformation Olivia delivered so vividly onscreen
in Grease, taking Sandy from innocent girl to aggressive woman, was
precisely what the world couldn’t accept for Olivia the real person. In real life, we don’t want the girl next
door to grow up. Because if the girl
next door grows up, that means we’re getting older too. It means summer is ending again, and what could
be more unbearable than that?
There would be
an answer to that question with a first cancer diagnosis in 1992. Sadly, that’s what it took for us to let Olivia
grow up. She became an articulate
spokesperson for cancer awareness and a generous benefactor for its research. Olivia did not like to say that she was
fighting cancer; she spoke of finding balance and being healthy in her choices
and her search for solutions. For
Olivia, this included exploring plant-based remedies and other natural
treatments that were outside the practice of western medicine. These are subjects that can be divisive, eliciting
eyerolls from cynics and non-believers like me.
But nothing Olivia said ever sounded kooky or hippy-dippy. She was so genuine and so sincere
that even I opened an admittedly closed mind about the importance of at least
exploring non-traditional paths forward in cancer research and treatments. Who was I to doubt her anyway? I had endured a far less severe brush with
cancer myself, but she was the one who survived it for more than three decades. And she put her money where her mouth was, endowing
her foundation with millions more of her own fortune in her last will and
testament; which could also be described as the last testament of her
will.
Part of Olivia solving
cancer for so long was her refusal to be defined by it, and so she also
continued to work as an entertainer. She
may not have scaled the towering international heights of Grease or Physical
again, but she continued to have best-selling albums in Australia as
recently as 2016. In the U.S. she made successful
television movies, where she often got to play the mother of the girl next
door. In Sordid Lives, both the
indie film and the subsequent series it spawned, she played as far against type
as possible as a lesbian in a small Texas town with a love of honkey-tonk music
and arson. I’ve always felt Sordid
Lives was one of her last sly winks and knowing nods at the camera, this
time aimed straight at her LGBTQ+ fans. Olivia
had years earlier accepted a small role in It’s My Party, which holds a
special place in the gay cinematic cannon as one of the first feature films to portray
an AIDS patient dying with dignity, and she also performed at several Pride
events throughout the world. While
mainly and understandably focusing her public platform on cancer awareness, she
was also an ally who openly embraced what she knew to be a loyal fanbase.
After all, Olivia
also knew what it was like to be an outsider; to not fit neatly in a box or on a
chart. Others can debate who belongs
where on the diva diagram, who is the queen of this or the princess of that, or
whatever other hyperbolic honorifics get invented to deify female stars. We could never figure out where to put Olivia
above us because she was always among us, and that’s exactly how she wanted it. It’s what makes her so easy to overlook but so important to remember. Olivia
was the outsider who went about as far as anyone can go, but who also never
left anyone behind. It still hurts when
summer ends. But somewhere inside of us
is the emotional knowledge that it will come back around if we just hold on. And Olivia’s loss reminded me that her tremendous
musical and personal legacy is still there to help me do just that. Olivia’s
voice on the radio is more like the distant crash of a wave on the shore; Her
videos and films more like moving photographs from an old yearbook. She is both nostalgia and promise.
Olivia
Newton-John lives on in a special place in the subconscious of my entire
generation, alongside our memories of every sun-kissed vacation, every
hand-held walk on the beach, every secret love, and every sad goodbye. Olivia left us in summer because that is precisely, and eternally, where she belongs.
Very well put, Olivia was the pin up girl of our generation ,her voice so familiar and unique on the airwaves. She leaves a valuabe legacy of her music and films dor us to enjoy for generations to come
ReplyDeleteBeautiful tribute! I am adding Sordid Lives to my list! Olivia Newton John as a lesbian?! YES please!
ReplyDelete