Friday, November 9, 2012

Posted in the Daily Record

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Susan Boyle: I fear my stardom will end as quickly as it began

THE Scots singing sensation says she is tormented by her inner demons which have led to tantrums and meltdowns.



Susan Boyle
Susan Boyle

SINGER Susan Boyle is tormented by fears that her success and fame will end, she revealed yesterday.
On the eve of the release of her fourth album, Standing Ovation, the Scots star spoke frankly of the inner demons behind her much-publicised tantrums and meltdowns.
Susan, 51, was catapulted from obscurity to global stardom in 2009 when her sensational Britain’s Got Talent audition video – of her singing I Dreamed A Dream – was viewed by millions round the world.
And even No1 albums on both sides of the Atlantic, her own musical and a personal fortune of £22million can’t convince SuBo that her rags to riches story might not end in tears.
Susan admitted: “You worry that everything will end and you’ll be back to obscurity.
“Because everything happened in such a whirlwind fashion, I worry it will end as quickly.
“What I have learned to understand is that it’s down to me to stop constantly fretting and that the only person who will cause it all to end is me.
“I’ve got better over the years but every so often I do panic that it will all be over. You worry people will stop liking you or they won’t buy your albums or they won’t think you are good enough. I’d like to continue for a wee while longer.”
Susan added: “I have to accept that in life you are forever learning new things. Maybe that’s where some of the frustrations lay. I’d beat myself up if I couldn’t do something right the first time or if I feel that I could do better.
“But I’ve got to accept I’m human, not perfect and this life that is mine now is a continual learning curve.”
Susan believes she has now become more patient with people and has also lost the fear of flying which plagued her before.
She said: “I don’t get quite so anxious. In fact I enjoy the long-haul flights. It gives me a bit of time to switch off and watch movies without the guilt of thinking I should be doing this or that.”
She added: “I’ve grown up a bit. I’ve matured. I feel less scared. I found with singing, I could communicate when words would often fail me and I’d get frustrated.
“Singing removed me from the life I was living and I could become someone totally different,
untouchable. Instead of laughing at me, people would applaud me and be positive.”           


Susan Boyle
Susan Boyle

The new album is a selection of her versions of big musical numbers including Somewhere Over The Rainbow and Memory.
But one of the songs had particular resonance for Susan, from Blackburn, West Lothian.
Out Here On My Own took her back to her unhappy childhood of “very few friends, taunted and bullied. Cigarettes stubbed out on my arm”.
But she reveals: “I’ve forgiven the people who tormented me. They still live around Blackburn and it’s not healthy to hold grudges, now is it?”
Which is just as well because, despite her riches and buying a new house, Susan is happiest in her parents’ home where she grew up.
She said: “This is my home. It keeps me grounded. My roots are here, so are my friends and family and I’d never want to move away. I’m also incredibly proud of my hometown and the values we have here.
“We are a good bunch, a great community and now I feel like I fit in more. I’d never want to leave.”
This year, as well as singing to the Queen as part of her Jubilee celebrations and to 60,000 at Celtic Park, Susan sang with her childhood hero Donny Osmond.
Given she once skipped school at 13 to see the Osmonds, meeting Donny was massive for Susan.
But her self-doubt emerges again when she recalls the performance.
She said: “I was a little nervous to be performing with him. I didn’t think for a second I was good enough to be performing alongside someone of Donny’s calibre.
“He’s a legend and I only see myself as semi-professional these days so it felt a tad odd. I was cross with myself for being shy around him.”
Having met and sung for the Pope and the Queen, most of Susan’s dreams have been fulfilled.
But she’d still like to work with Rod Stewart, Mumford & Sons and even Jay-Z. She laughed: “I think I could do that. He could rap, I could sing.”
What she wouldn’t do is a reality show. With I’m a Celebrity back this weekend, Susan is sure she wouldn't be tempted by any of them.
She laughed: “I’m like a baby elephant with two left feet so I couldn’t do Strictly Come Dancing. As for Dancing on Ice, you’d have to strap two cushions to my backside as that’s where I’d constantly be.
“I got asked to be in a diving show recently, which is hilarious because I can’t swim and I’m utterly terrified of water.”

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