A day in the life of Susan Boyle: Singer claims she's happiest when she's at home in West Lothian
THE Scots singer opens her doors as she reveals she feels safest in Scotland and enjoys just blending in with those who know her best.
IT'S 10 past 12, it’s lashing down in West Lothian and I’m in a bus shelter with the world’s most famous Scotswoman.
The number 21 she travels on to get her messages is running a couple of minutes late, but Susan Boyle isn’t worried. Oh no, she’s literally singing in the rain Gene Kelly style, umbrella in the air, wellies sloshing through the puddles and a megawatt smile lighting up that instantly recognisable face.
A millionaire several times over, she could live in New York, LA, Paris, London, or all four if she wanted with just the small change from her earnings.
But it’s here in her home village of Blackburn where she’s happiest – and where Susan will stay.
“Although I could live anywhere in the world,” she says as the wind whips in while we wait for the bus, “I like to come home and feel safe.
“I’ve known the neighbours here all my life.
“They don’t treat me any differently, they just treat me like their neighbour.
“It gives you a sense of identity, and lets you know who you are and where your roots are.
“If you lose that, then forget it. Here, I’m just an ordinary person. I just blend in.”
And today, to prove the point, we’re out with Susan, 51, as she goes about her errands.
We begin at the house she grew up in, with her mother, father and her eight brothers and sisters, the house where she still lives because the fancy villa she bought down the road just doesn’t feel the same.
“Like they say in the Wizard of Oz, there’s no place like home,” she says as she shows me into the lounge.
“I love my life, and my work and all the travel.
“My favourite exotic place to travel to has been Japan.It was great. I managed to teach a Japanese person to say ‘nae bother’. I was very proud.
“But it also makes me appreciate my home life even more, it’s a bit like a cat with a basket. They go in their basket and curl up to feel safe, that’s what it feels like.”
The SuBo story has become so well-known that we almost take it for granted.
But take a step back and it really is one of most amazing tales in showbiz.
To be sat in her modest lounge just underlines how defiantly unchanged by it all she is.
Our morning starts with me sitting next to Susan while she and pals watch her pre-recorded singing performance on a daytime TV show.
Her version of Somewhere Over the Rainbow, from her new musical-inspired album Standing Ovation, sounds note perfect.
But Susan grimaces and winces when her pals erupt in claps of approval. She blushes and complains: “I could hear all the mistakes.”
She must have been the only viewer in the UK to notice but then she’s something of a perfectionist.
“I’m used to seeing myself on telly now, but I hate watching it because I can hear all the mistakes.
“There’s room for improvement and I always want to do better.
“When you record, if you make a mistake you can go over it. If you’re on stage, you are there.”
Despite being her own harshest critic, in the recording process for her new album – which she made in Glasgow, allowing a nightly commute home – she was close to flawless, according to record label staff.
Her sessions finished an incredible six weeks early because she seemed able to get most of the tracks down first time.
She said: “I found I could go in and sing through the song, instead of recording line by line.
“This was the most fun album to record because the songs were all from musicals, which is what I always loved.
“The previous album was more of a reflective album.
“This is my preference. It was a good laugh.
“In the studio you’re in a bubble. Nobody can get near you, and on stage you are more exposed.
“When I first started, I’d be lucky to get an audience of 200 and now it’s a bit more than that.”
Susan’s recent trip to Las Vegas, to sing with childhood hero Donny Osmond, has whetted her appetite for that kind of prestigious show and she would jump at the chance to headline her own Vegas revue.
She said: “I first met him in the studios in August (where he joined her on a version of This is My Moment for her new album) and he is a real practical joker.
“He played me back the recording he had already done, but at a different speed, and it was like, oh wow.
“I was nearly on the floor laughing. He is very approachable and very helpful. We had a great chemistry together.
“The show was out of this world. You go up to the stage through a long bit in the middle and then see the audience on either side.
“At first I thought, ‘Oh my God, what’s this?’ But you get used to it.
“You’ve got to concentrate on the song. Once you do that, it’s fine.
“I do still find it a bit surreal and wonder who would want to sing with someone from Blackburn.
“At a concert recently, I met Elton John backstage and he was really nice and friendly.
“He invited me to stay in his hotel suites in Vegas.
“I never took him up on the offer, but he said that any time I ever go there, I can stay in his place at Caesar’s Palace. That was some invite to get.
“I’d love to play there myself, but I’m a long way off that.”
She’s far too modest of course.
In truth, there’s not a venue in the world which wee Susan from Blackburn couldn’t sell out.
But today we’ve got other important business to attend to.
Susan has a pal’s birthday coming up and we’re off to catch the bus down to the post office to buy a card.
Other stars of her stature would be hailing a limo, but that’s not her way.
Behind the counter, assistant Anne Fairlie greets Susan like a long-lost friend. “How are you?” she yells.
Anne tells me later: “It’s always lovely to see Susan pop in. She is everybody’s pal, the same Susan as before.”
Card bought, we’re on the move again. And Susan’s back in reflective mood, chuckling when we talk about her remarkable career – three blockbuster albums already under her belt and her fourth on course to become one too.
“It’s early days yet and I believe in taking baby steps,” she says cautiously.
Then she adds with a chuckle and that huge grin again: “Sometimes I feel like a veteran but it’s only been three years.”
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/entertainment/celebrity/a-day-in-the-life-of-susan-boyle-singer-1460156
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