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Fame can bring a lot of emptiness: Alicia Keys
Showbiz Desk
LONDON—From the age of seven, all Alicia Keys ever wanted was to get the
chance to sing her songs. But 28 million albums, 11 Grammys and a
fortune in the bank later, she admits living the dream isn’t all it is
cracked up to be. The singer is only just getting over what came close
to a work-induced breakdown, but has never been busier and doesn’t seem
to know how to stop. There’s the short tour of the UK, postponed dates
from earlier this year when she developed tonsillitis, the British
launch of her Aids charity, a series of Disney TV shows, promotion of
her latest film and she has just been named as the singer of the latest
Bond film Quantum Of Solace with Jack White.
What is my life?
“Fame can bring a lot of emptiness,” she admits. “I think about this a
lot as I get older. You are so driven and focused on achieving this
particular destination that you work 20 hours a day, you get four hours
of sleep, you do all that for ten years straight and you keep on and on.
“Then, all of a sudden, you think: ‘Oh, what is my life, honestly?” Yes,
I’m a singer and, yes, I’m a songwriter and, yes, I perform, but what
else is in my life? Do I have a family? Am I growing inside? Am I always
too busy to see my mother and the people I love?”
“You are around people, but they are not your family. You are in a
different place every day, you don’t have any stability. You can get
anything you want at any time, somebody will always get it for you. When
you are around people who never say no, anything goes. It can change you
and that is not the type of person I want to be. People always want
something from you, you become like a ghost of yourself or of the person
you could be.”
Openly introspective
Coming from someone notoriously private, that is quite an outburst. But
the 27-yearold singer has clearly become more openly introspective since
coming close to burnout last year. The huge success of her live album
Unplugged coincided with the death of her paternal grandmother, who
helped bring the singer up. When she became ill, Alicia gave up work to
nurse her.
“I was with her the night she died. We were so close and I even look and
act like her. Losing her made me realise how close I came to the edge.
It took a while before I could even say the word ‘grandmother’ because I
was so upset.’ Her death led Alicia to some serious soulsearching, and
she went off on her own to Egypt to recover and think about her future.
She insists that she has reassessed her life.
“Now I know there is so much more to me than work,” she says. But her
workload appears to tell a different story.
Rocking with Jack
As well as a new single, Superwoman, out next month, she will have the
Bond tune to promote. Many have raised their eyebrows at the match of
Alicia and White Stripes star Jack, but she says that the opportunity
was simply something she couldn’t turn down. “Rocking with Jack White is
something that has absolutely been an unforgettable experience,” she
says. “Mixing rock and soul for the Bond movie theme gives it a
mysterious unexpected strong and sexy vibe that I love.”
A budding actress who has appeared in The Nanny Diaries and Smokin’
Aces, she will also be promoting her own movie, an adaptation of the
best-selling book The Secret Life Of Bees which is out in the autumn.
Mixed race classical
Then she starts rehearsals for a new role, playing 1940s mixed race
classical pianist Philippa Schuyler. Alicia has also signed a contract
to work on live action and animated projects with Disney and is
providing a cartoon voice-over for them. As if that was not enough, she
has in production a TV show based loosely on her tough childhood in New
York. It’s no wonder that she sadly admits her status as single. While
lesbian rumours have always swirled around her, and she has always
denied them, she now also denies that she is in a relationship with her
songwriting partner Kerry Brothers, who American magazines claimed she
was going to marry last month. She insists their relationship is
platonic: “We have a great relationship and we will always make
incredible music, so he is my partner, but we are not together like
that.”
Show off your body
The R&B and hip-hop world Alicia comes from may be known for its blatant
sexuality and often violent lyrics, but the singer says she disapproves
of the almost pornographic images used in many music videos and
disagrees with teenage girls losing their virginity too quickly. “What
bothers me most about the highly sexualised stereotypes you see in a lot
of music is that people are not given enough options,” she says. “It is
standard to show off your body and even I feel that if I am doing a
video, I have to look a certain way. Women should be able to see more
options and be inspired.
You are not beautiful because you have a short skirt on. You are
beautiful because you are smart, because you are kind, because of the
way you hold yourself. “Many teenagers are pressured to have sex. You
should make the person wait, because if they really care about you they
will wait up to a year or more, until you are ready. I would do that
myself. I don’t have a problem with making somebody wait, they have to
prove themselves.” |