Olivia Newton-John
was born in Cambridge, England on September 26th 1948; her family moved
to Australia when she was 5. Her mother was German, daughter of the physicist
Max Born, her father was Welsh, a professor of German at Cambridge and
Melbourne. Despite the academic background, early on Olivia showed an
interest in singing, forming a band called the Sol Four with some schoolfriends,
and later on singing at her brother in law's coffee bar in Australia.
She also starred in a movie "Funny Things Happen Down Under"
which was forgettable apart from some early promise shown in Olivia's
delightful rendition of "Christmas Down Under". England did not make
Olivia entirely happy - she missed Australia and her then boyfriend, Ian
Turpie. In one interview she reports how she attempted to book her return
flight without telling her mother, who had accompanied her to the UK.
Fortunately for Olivia's fans and her future career her mother was not
having her daughter waste this opportunity to broaden her horizons and
Olivia's plans were thwarted. Pat's visa ran out
in December 1969 and she returned home. For Olivia, movie stardom beckoned
as she was invited to join the band Toomorrow, which was to be Britain's
answer to the Monkees. This manufactured group issued an eponymous album
in 1970 to go with the film of the same name, but the public were not
impressed and the movie closed quickly, leaving Olivia to concentrate
on her solo music career. The early Seventies
was a prolific period for Olivia - her association with Cliff Richard
and the Shadows brought her music to a wide audience, and she released
the albums Olivia Newton-John (1971), and Olivia (1972), Music Makes My
Day (1973) Olivia reached a
turning point in her career with the release of Let Me Be There which
charted at #6 in America. No longer engaged to Bruce Welch, John Farrar,
another member of the Shadows, took up songwriting and arrangement for
her and this was a successful team which was soon to take the United States
by storm. John Farrar had known Olivia from the early days and he later
married Pat Carroll, Olivia's erstwhile singing partner and future business
partner. Just before she moved
to the United States to build on her burgeoning success there, Olivia
represented the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974. Both song and
Olivia's costume on the night were selected by a poll of TV viewers, and
the whole mess showed just what was wrong with vox pop artistic taste.
A truly awful oompah - oompah song, Long Live Love was chosen, together
with a long flowing baby-blue dress for the actual performance. America beckoned
and Olivia left England in 1975 to a rapturous welcome for her next album
"Have You Never Been Mellow". The title song charted at #1 and
her next single from the album, Please Mr Please, reached #3. This was
the start of a roll which continued throughout the 70s with a string of
gold albums in the US. Olivia was to become a regular on shows like the
Midnight Special, and in 1976 she had her own TV special by ABC - A Very
Special Olivia Newton-John. Olivia captured hearts
in Japan with her singing as well as in the US - she toured Japan in 1976
with the album Don't Stop Believin'. Japanese listeners had loved her
ever since her performance in the 1971 Tokyo Music Fair, and the 1976
concert was released as a live album in Japan titled 'Love Performance'.
She won a string of Grammys for her work, and settled in Malibu, near
Los Angeles, with a ranch in the mountains. Musically, it seemed
as if Olivia was at the peak of her career, gathering awards effortlessly.
In Los Angeles, a producer was looking for a female lead to play opposite
John Travolta in his forthcoming movie adaptation of the stage musical
Grease. Olivia was not totally sure about playing in another movie and
requested a screen test after she was asked to star. The scene was the
drive-in and Olivia wowed Allan Carr. Released in June 1978, Grease went
on to become one of the biggest selling musicals of all time and the soundtrack
album stormed the charts on both sides of the Atlantic. Her album, Totally
Hot, also released in 1978 showed a new musical direction away from her
early ballads to more upbeat rock. The album was a great success and Olivia
toured America, Japan and Europe with it. In 1981 Olivia released
the album Physical. The million-selling title track took up residence
at #1 on the US charts for weeks - the second-longest run in the top spot.
She had some trepidation about how her fans would like the new direction
but she needn't have worried - they loved it! After reaching the
pinnacle of her career with Physical, Olivia wanted to take things easier.
She was starting to think about other directions - one of them was starting
a store with Australian novelties, which was later to turn into the "Koala
Blue" fashion chain. Olivia married her
young live-in boyfriend Matt Lattanzi, around Christmas 1984, after they
had lived together for four years. The couple enjoyed a fairytale honeymoon
in Paris. Chloe was born early
1986, and this marked a hiatus in Olivia's music. The period 1986 to 1992
was a lean period in her entertainment career, as she dedicated herself
to motherhood, and to developing her business venture, the Koala Blue
chain of stores. Music was not totally
neglected - in 1988, Olivia brought out "The Rumour", with the
title track penned by Elton John. 1988 was also the year of the Australian
Bicentennial, and Olivia made a videogram for the Rumour, in which she
performed the songs in some stunning Australian settings. The Australian
version of the album features the song "It's Always Australia For
Me" which is absent from international versions. Gaia, One Woman's Journey, an intensely personal and upbeat album, was one of the fruits of Olivia's time in Australia out of the limelight. The album was not released in the United States but was widely issued on independent labels elsewhere. Olivia chose to talk about her experiences with breast cancer, so that other women in a similar position could see that survival was possible, and early detection was important. After her recovery, there were reports of difficulty in Olivia's marriage, which came to a head in 1995 with the announcement that Olivia and husband Matt Lattanzi, were to go their separate ways and eventually divorce. For the next two years Olivia's career was a medley of different directions, with her participating in beauty ads for Home Shopping, a bit part in a US sitcom, an Australian wildlife show titled "Human Nature", appearing in an Aussie TV series "Snowy River" and acting in the movie "It's My Party" directed by Grease director Randal Kleiser. After two years of
wandering in the wilderness professionally, Olivia began to feel her way
musically once again, with some fine singing for the US Christmas movie
"Snowden on Ice", and some private performances at events for
CHEC, a charity dear to Olivia's heart. In July 1997 MCA-Nashville signed
Olivia for a pop country album, and she recorded a duet with the Raybon
Bros "Falling" on their eponymous album. Meanwhile, a new look
and a new direction called, with an acting role in Del Shores independent
production of the stage play "Sordid Lives" 2001 brought another
tour of the United States in celebration of 30 years of music. Also filmed
in Queensland, Australia was her next TV movie Wilde Girls. This also
starred her daughter Chloe and premiered in November 2001 on Showtime
channel. Olivia released "Magic" - a best of compilation and
her first Christmas album entitled simply "The Christmas Collection." In 2003 Olivia goes full-out touring the world - including USA, Japan and Australia. This continues in 2004 in February and the Fall.
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