Helen Maxine Lamond Reddy was born on October 25th, 1941, in Melbourne, Australia, the only child of Max Reddy, a writer, producer and actor; and Stella (Lamond) Reddy, an actor whose stage name was Stella Campbell. Her father was in New Guinea, serving in the Australian army, when she was born. The Reddy’s performed on the Australian vaudeville circuit, and Helen began joining them onstage when she was 4.
At 12, she rebelled by quitting showbusiness and going to live with an aunt while her parents toured. But her financial situation – after an early marriage, parenthood and divorce – persuaded her to return. Reddy had a solid reputation in Australian television and radio when she won a 1966 talent contest sponsored by Bandstand, a Sydney pop-music television show. The prize was a trip to New York City and a record-company audition there. The audition did not pan out, and her career got off to a slow, discouraging start.
Before Capitol Records signed her in 1970, at least 27 record labels rejected her, and she and her new husband, Jeff Wald, who was now her manager, moved – first to Chicago, then to Los Angeles.
Reddy’s first hit was a 1971 cover of I Don’t Know How to Love Him, a hit from the award-winning stage show Jesus Christ Superstar. During the 1970s, three of Reddy’s songs – including Delta Dawn and Angie Baby – went to No 1 on the Billboard chart. Three others – Ain’t No Way to Treat a Lady, You and Me Against the World and Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress) – made the Top 10.
I Am Woman, which sold more than 25 million copies in the US alone, reached No 1 on the Billboard charts at the end of 1972 (a good six months after it was released and earned her the Grammy Award for best female pop vocal performance. She was the first Australian-born artist to win a Grammy and the first to make the Billboard 100 record charts. She was a frequent guest in the early 1970s on variety, music and talk shows . The Helen Reddy Show (1973) was an eight-episode summer replacement series on NBC.
She made her big-screen debut in the disaster movie Airport 1975 (released in 1974) as a guitar-playing nun who comforts a sick little girl (Linda Blair) on an almost certainly doomed 747. Reddy always liked to point out that Gloria Swanson and Myrna Loy were also in the cast. That was followed by a starring role in the Disney movie Pete’s Dragon (1977), as a sceptical New England lighthouse keeper who doubts an orphaned boy’s stories about his animated fire-breathing pet.
Helen with Jeff Wald |
By the 1980s, her glory days were largely in the past, and she was bored. “I remember the Vegas days when it was two shows a night, seven nights a week,” she told The Chicago Tribune in 2013, “and it became so rote that I’d be thinking about wallpaper while I was singing.” She had a busy stage career, starring in productions of Anything Goes, Call Me Madam and Shirley Valentine in England and the US. The last Helen Reddy song to make the American charts was I Can’t Say Goodbye to You (1981), and Imagination (1983) was her last album. Her final screen appearance was in The Perfect Host (2010), a crime comedy with David Hyde Pierce.
When Reddy retired in 2002, she meant business, going back to school, getting a degree in clinical hypnotherapy and practising as a therapist and motivational speaker. In 2006, Reddy was inducted in to the Australian Recording Industry Association Hall of Fame. In 2012, she announced a comeback and made several concert appearances in the United States before retiring again. In a 2013 interview, Reddy seemed philosophical. “I am at the age where I can just kick back and say what a wonderful life I’ve had,” she told The Sydney Morning Herald. And she laughed when one very familiar question came up: whether she was nervous the first time she went onstage. “I don’t remember the first time I went onstage,” she said.
Reddy married and divorced three times. In 1961, she married Kenneth Claude Weate, an older musician who was a family friend. They had a daughter and divorced in 1966. In 1968, she married Wald, and they had a son. They separated in 1981, when he checked into a treatment facility for cocaine addiction, and divorced two years later. That same year, she married Milton Ruth, a drummer in her band. They divorced in 1995.
It was reported in 2015 that Reddy was suffering from Addison’s disease and dementia and was being cared for at the Motion Picture and Television Fund’s Samuel Goldwyn Center for Behavioral Health in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, where she died on 29 September 2020.
(Edited from The Irish Times & Variety)
For”Helen Reddy – The Very Best Of Helen Reddy (EMI 1993)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://krakenfiles.com/view/kfwFgwqbVe/file.html
1) Angie Baby (3.31)
2) Raised On Rock (3.15)
3) Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress) (3.27)
4) Delta Dawn (3.09)
5) Peaceful (2.52)
6) Our House (3.01)
7) Emotion (2.55)
8) I Don't Know How to Love Him (3.19)
9) Crazy Love (3.20)
10) How (3.35)
11) Lady of the Night (3.21)
12) Keep On Singing (3.05)
13) Somewhere in the Night (3.30)
14) Bluebird (2.53)
15) Come On John (4.22)
16) Don't Mess With A Woman (3.07)
17) Candle On The Water (Live Version) (2.57)
18) You're My World (2.46)
19) I Can't Hear You No More (2.49)
20) You and Me Against the World (3.12)
21) Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady (3.28)
22) I Am Woman (Single Version) (3.22)
A big thank you goes to Qzzieguy @ the wonderful “Music That We Adore” blog for the loan of this album.
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Here’s my contribution:
For” Helen Reddy – I Am Woman: The Essential Helen Reddy Collection (Razor & Tie 1998)” go here:
https://krakenfiles.com/view/HSGldJZHl7/file.html
1. I Am Woman (3.24)
2. Best Friend (2.17)
3. I Don't Know How to Love Him (3.15)
4. Crazy Love (3.16)
5. More Than You Could Take (2.41)
6. Peaceful (2.50)
7. Delta Dawn (3.08)
8. Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress) (3.26)
9. Keep on Singing (3.03)
10. The West Wind Circus (4.25)
11. You and Me Against the World (3.08)
12. Angie Baby (3.29)
13. I Think I'll Write a Song (2.22)
14. Emotion (4.10)
15. Bluebird (2.46)
16. Somewhere in the Night (3.31)
17. Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady (3.26)
18. I Can't Hear You No More (2.48)
19. The Fool on the Hill (3.49)
20. You're My World (2.45)
21. Candle on The Water - from the Movie "Pete's Dragon" (3.10)
22. I Can't Say Goodbye to You (3.46)
23. Never Say Goodbye - (Theme from "Continental Divide") (3.08)
On Allmusic Charles Donovan asserts that this collection "is a compilation that lives up to its name -- everything anyone could possibly need to know about Helen Reddy's heyday is included, and more. This dwells largely on her years at Capitol, and concentrates almost exclusively on her single releases.
New link given to "The Very Best Of" as last few tracks of Ozzieguy's download were wrongly titled and out of sync with the track-listing. Now all sorted out (hopefully).
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