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Amy Winehouse puts rehab in spotlight
Sue Zeidler
LOS ANGELES—Rehab has never been hotter in Hollywood, and nowhere was
that more apparent than on Sunday at the Grammy awards with British
singer Amy Winehouse’s five big wins, more than any other artist. After
months of headlines about drug and alcohol treatment for troubled
Hollywood stars like Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan, soul singer
Winehouse became the latest celebrity to shake-off the stigma of rehab
and look like a winner.
Yet, while some Grammy attendees said Winehouse would have been well
looked after by handlers had she attended the U.S. music industry’s top
awards, mental health professionals said the stress of performing
coupled with Hollywood glamour could have derailed the singer’s
recovery. Why wasn’t the beehive-coiffed and tattooed Winehouse not in
Los Angeles to accept her five Grammys? She was in rehab.
Winehouse scored a key victory for best song with hit single “Rehab,” in
which she recounts her reluctance to seek help for excessive drinking.
The singer won best new artist, record of the year and best female pop
vocal solo performance for “Rehab,” as well as best pop vocal album for
he breakthrough release, “Back to Black.”
She accepted her Grammys and performed “Rehab” and another tune, “You
Know I’m No Good,” from a studio in England via satellite during the
awards’ telecast. “Thanks very much. It’s an honour to be here,” said a
visibly moved Winehouse via satellite, appearing healthier than she did
a few weeks ago when she was admitted.
Her involvement in the Grammys had been in doubt due to her arrest for
possession of marijuana in Norway, and she had been in rehab at least
twice in 2007, according to British media.
“Had she come to the Grammys, it would have been a wonderful experience
for her and for everyone,” said Mike Melvoin, a past president of the
Recording Academy that hosts the Grammys and a key backer of
Grammy-endorsed program, MusiCares, which supports musicians in need.
But if Winehouse stumbled, as did pop princess Britney Spears in her
much-maligned appearance at September’s MTV Video Music Awards,
Winehouse’s recovery could have reversed course.
“To expect people to come back to perform after a few weeks in
rehabilitation is not even physiologically possible,” said Susan Blank,
director of psychiatric and psychological services at the non-profit
Caron group, which runs rehab programs. Blank noted it takes weeks for
the brain to heal from substance abuse, and interrupting that process
can increase the chances of a relapse.
Industry experts and mental health professionals debate about whether
heavy media-coverage of high-profile stars leads to drug abuse and
self-destructive behaviour. Last month, young actors Brad Renfro and
Heath Ledger both died drug-related deaths, joining a long list of
talented young casualties from Janis Joplin to Kurt Cobain, to name a
few.
“(It) is more related to the personality and biological makeup of a
performer and less to stress and pressure on them to perform,” said Stan
Greenwald, director of the Centre for Stress Reduction in Goshen, New
York. |