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Olivia Newton-John (born September 26, 1948, Cambridge) is a British-born
Australian singer and actress.
Olivia Newton-John, OBE is the granddaughter of Max Born, a German Jewish
Nobel prize-winning physicist (although Olivia herself is a Christian) who
fled from 1930s Germany with his wife in order to avoid persecution due to
their Jewish heritage.
Olivia's father, Brin Newton-John, was originally from Wales, Great Britain.
Brin was the MI5 officer who took Rudolf Hess into custody when he
parachuted into Scotland in May 1941. Brin was attached to the Enigma
machine project at Bletchley Park. After World War II, he became a professor
of German at the UNSW annex at Tighes Hill.
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In 1954, at the age of five, Olivia, her parents, Brin and Irene Newton-John,
and her older siblings, Hugh and Rona, relocated to Melbourne, Australia.
Her father had taken a job at Melbourne University as the Dean of Ormond
College. Her parents divorced when Olivia was eleven years old.
Newton-John magazine pin-up, early 1970sBy the age of 15, Newton-John had
formed an all-girl band, Sol Four, and soon was a regular on local
television (such as The Happy Tarex Show as Lovely Livvy) and radio shows in
Australia. She entered a talent contest on the television programme Sing,
Sing, Sing, hosted by 1960s Australian icon Johnny O'Keefe, and performed
the songs "Anyone Who Had A Heart" and "Everything's Coming Up Roses". She
won the contest and received a trip to England as the prize. Initially, she
did not want to go, but her mother encouraged her to broaden her horizons.
By 1963, Newton-John was appearing on the local daytime TV shows and weekly
pop programs in Australia. It was on the Go Show, where she met her lifelong
friends, Pat Carroll and John Farrar. (Carroll and Farrar eventually
married.)
When she was 16 years old, Newton-John returned to England to live with her
mother. Newton-John was homesick in England as she missed Australia and her
then boyfriend, Ian Turpie. This changed when friend Pat Carroll also moved
to England. The two formed a duo and toured nightclubs in Europe. After
Carroll's visa expired, and she had to return to Australia, Newton-John cut
her first solo single, "Till You Say You'll Be Mine", backed with "For
Ever," for Decca Records in England in 1966.
Newton-John's first album was titled Toomorrow [sic], which was also the
name of her musical group at the time. They were the brainchild of American
producer Don Kirshner, creator of The Monkees. The group also starred in the
movie Toomorrow.
Although the band and film were commercially unsuccessful, Newton-John's
solo career started to take off with her first solo album titled Olivia
Newton-John, which was released in the United Kingdom on Pye Records.
Newton-John quickly became one of Britain's most popular singers. She was
voted Best British Female Vocalist two years in a row by the magazine Record
Mirror. In 1968 she met The Shadows' guitarist Bruce Welch, to whom she
became engaged until 1972. They made appearances on Cliff Richard's weekly
show It's Cliff Richard and she starred with Cliff in the telefilm The Case.
Newton-John's first international hit was a song written by Bob Dylan called
"If Not For You," which was produced by Bruce Welch and her friend John
Farrar and released in 1971. She represented the United Kingdom in the
Eurovision Song Contest in 1974 and came in at fourth place. Later in the
year, the single "I Honestly Love You" was released in the United States and
became her first single to chart at #1 across the Atlantic.
In 1975, encouraged by expatriate Australian singer Helen Reddy, Newton-John
left England and moved to the United States, where she became a popular
singer in both country and popular music. She had five #1 hits, including
the song Physical, which stayed at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for ten
weeks. She has received four Grammys in her career. She received an OBE
(Officer of the Order of the British Empire) from Queen Elizabeth II in
1979.
In the country music field, she was respected and loved by fans as much as
she was reviled by country purists who believed her brand of music had no
place on country radio. In 1974, she won the Country Music Association
Female Vocalist of the Year award, beating out such country heavyweights as
Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, Anne Murray and Tanya Tucker Another country
icon, Tammy Wynette, was not even nominated. Newton-John's win angered many
pure country artists and fans, and perhaps as a direct result, some country
artists and other influential personalities became members of a newly formed
organization called the Association of Country Entertainers.
Grease DVD coverNewton-John's film breakthrough came when she was offered
the female lead in Grease (1978), after a chance meeting with producer Allan
Carr at a party at Helen Reddy's house in Los Angeles. John Travolta,
already chosen as the male lead in the movie, wanted Newton-John to be his
co-star in the film, and he let his wishes be known to Carr and director
Randal Kleiser before either of them met Newton-John. Concerned that she was
either too old or not confident enough to play the part, Newton-John
insisted on a screen test with Travolta. She liked what she saw when she
viewed the test and then happily signed on for the project, shot in the
summer of 1977.
The film was the biggest box office hit of 1978 and remained popular enough
that it was re-released in theaters in the United States on its 20th
anniversary. Two songs from the movie soundtrack, "You're The One That I
Want" and "Summer Nights," went to #1 on US and international charts and
stood at the #1 position for nine and seven weeks respectively on the UK
charts. Newton-John's solo number "Hopelessly Devoted To You" was also a
hit. The album was also a huge hit in Australia and Newton-John attended the
premiere of the film in both Sydney and her hometown Melbourne. She was
nominated for a Golden Globe as Best Actress in a Musical for her role in
"Grease".
To follow this success, Newton-John released the album Totally Hot in 1978
with extensive promotion. The release was another critical and commercial
success. It spawned the smash hit "A Little More Love," # 11 single "Deeper
Than The Night," and the # 52 title track "Totally Hot." A more ambitious
album than some of Newton-John's earlier releases, the record included both
sexy up-tempo numbers (including a spirited remake of the Spencer Davis
Group's "Gimme Some Lovin"), alongside characteristically beautiful ballads.
With this, Newton-John further established herself as one of the most
versatile and appealing female pop vocalists of her generation. The album
also cemented Newton-John's transformation into a sex symbol.
In 1980, she took the lead with Gene Kelly and Michael Beck in the musical
feature film, Xanadu. While at the time, the movie was considered a critical
and commercial failure, over the years, it has gained a considerable cult
following. The Xanadu soundtrack had several commercially successful
singles. Its production was a collaborative effort with Electric Light
Orchestra. In 1981, Newton-John received a star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame in recognition of her outstanding career.
In 1983, she re-teamed with John Travolta in the critically and commercially
unsuccessful Two of a Kind, redeemed by fans as the source of a successful
soundtrack including "Twist of Fate" and a new duet with Travolta, "Take a
Chance". She also appeared in a dramatically different role in Del Shore's
Sordid Lives as Bitsy Mae Harling, a lesbian ex-con country and western
singer (a long way from her role as Sandy in Grease).
Newton-John has done a body of television work as well. She starred in the
television movies A Mom For Christmas and A Christmas Romance. She has also
guest-starred in sitcoms (mostly as herself) such as Murphy Brown, Bette,
and Ned and Stacey and the made for TV film The Wilde Girls, which featured
her daughter Chloe Rose Lattanzi.
Newton-John has also hosted Wild Life, a show about animals and nature, two
major preoccupations for Newton-John. She was a guest star in two episodes
of the Australian series The Man From Snowy River as Joanna.
John Farnham, Olivia Newton-John and Anthony Warlow in their concert tour
"The Main Event". (CD)In 1983, Newton-John and longtime friend Pat Farrar
founded Koala Blue, a chain of women's clothing boutiques, with the designs
of the apparel based on the unique style and colours of Australia. The chain
was successful for some time but eventually went out of business. However,
Newton-John and Farrar have licensed the brand name for a line of Australian
produced wines, confections, and other items.
In 1992 Newton-John underwent breast cancer surgery, from which she
recovered. She now actively promotes public awareness of the importance of
early detection of the disease. In October 2005, she released Stronger Than
Before, an album promoting breast cancer awareness, sold exclusively through
Hallmark Gold CrownŽ stores.
In 1998 Newton-John, John Farnham and Anthony Warlow formed a powerful trio
on the Main Event tour which travelled to all major Australian capital
cities and spawned a Top 10 CD which won an ARIA Award for Highest Selling
Australian CD. In 2002, Newton-John was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.
She sang the duet "Dare to Dream" with John Farnham at the Opening Ceremony
of the 2000 Sydney Olympics. She was also an Olympic torch bearer, running
the route around the Sydney Opera House on the eve of the opening ceremony.
In 2002, Newton-John released 2, a duets album featuring singers such as
Darren Hayes, Tina Arena, Jimmy Little and Billy Thorpe as well as heartfelt
duet-tributes with Peter Allen and Johnny O'Keefe. The album went in the Top
5 in Australia, followed by a successful Australian tour playing in
Australia's main cities' entertainment centres and theatres.
2004 saw the death of her mother Irene and the release of Indigo: Women of
Song, a tribute album covering songs by The Carpenters, Minnie Riperton,
Doris Day, Nina Simone, Joan Baez, and others. Newton-John dedicated the
album to her mother and the record went gold in Australia.
Newton-John continued with her U.S. tour in 2005 to support her new album
Stronger Than Before. She chose the song "Serenity," a cut from this album
which is based on a popular prayer, to end the show, instead of her
signature closer, "I Honestly Love You." In November 2005, she attended the
Country Music Awards in New York City accompanied by long time friend Cliff
Richard. She is scheduled to perform in Japan, New Zealand, and Australia in
early 2006.
Newton-John was married to Matt Lattanzi from 1984 to 1995. There is one
child from this marriage, Chloe Rose Lattanzi, born in 1986. Chloe has plans
to launch herself as a pop singer with a new album almost ready for release
tentatively titled Lonely Nights in Paradise.
From 1996, Newton-John lived together with gaffer/cameraman Patrick
McDermott. However, in the summer of 2005, directly before her new album
Stronger Than Before hit stores, McDermott went missing following a June 30
fishing trip off the California coast. The Coast Guard has not ruled out the
possibility of foul play but concede they have few leads. Olivia Newton-John
is not considered a suspect in the case. |
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OLIVIA NEWTON JOHN PICTURES |
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