Sunday, November 25, 2012

Posted in the Telegraph



Boyle's dream duets coming true

BY ANYONE's measure Susan Boyle's journey over the past four years has been nothing short of extraordinary.
Catapulted from being an unknown singer in a small Scottish town to a global superstar after her surprise success on reality TV show Britain's Got Talent, the 51-year-old's life has been like a rollercoaster ride.
She has released three top-selling albums, had a musical based on her life, performed for the Pope, the Queen and the US President, and was named by Time Magazine as the seventh-most influential person in the world in 2010.
But of all those accolades and experiences, nothing could quite come close to meeting - and singing with - her teen idol Donny Osmond.
"I was a Donny Osmond fan through and through so it was really a dream come true when I finally got to make a record with my idol," she says. 
After being told repeatedly she'd never amount to much, Boyle now has the clout to make her dreams into reality, and her new album, Standing Ovation: The Greatest Songs From the Stage, features two duets with Osmond and another with Phantom Of the Opera star Michael Crawford.
Music, and musical theatre in particular, has always been an escape for Boyle. From the years she was bullied at school and through her time at Edinburgh Acting School and beyond, the soaring songs would take her far from her ordinary, suburban life.
"Everybody needs a form of escape and musical theatre was my form of escape," she says. "I could imagine myself in another world when I saw the actors on stage.
"People bullied me because they didn't think I could do very much. But when I got up there and sang I felt like some of those bullies actually began to respect me." The song that made the world sit up and take notice of Boyle was I Dreamed a Dream, from Les Miserables, which instantly became an internet sensation.
Despite her many rejections along the way, it was the desire to make her mother proud - and the satisfaction of proving her doubters wrong - that motivated her.
Given her love of musical theatre, it seems fitting that the Boyle fairytale has been adapted for the stage.
The production I Dreamed a Dream opened in the UK in March this year to rave reviews and will tour Sydney and Melbourne next year.
Boyle says she was humbled, but wary, when producers approached her with the idea but soon embraced it. She spent months with the actress chosen to play her, fellow Scot Elaine C. Smith.
"I didn't think they would have enough material," Boyle says with a laugh.
The musical tells the story of her life, from her humble beginnings sharing a three-bedroom council house with a family of 10 to the present day.
Boyle says it was initially unnerving watching actors portray her and her family, but says it's "100 per cent accurate - and very good".
Most of the memories the musical brought back, she says, were good ones. 
Boyle is planning to come out for the premiere and has fond memories of her whirlwind trip to Australia before Christmas last year.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/insider/boyles-dream-duets-coming-true/story-e6frewt9-1226523389875?sf7449685=1

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