Boyle brings 'Miracle Hymn' and more to Lakewood
Scott Campbell/Contributor
Susan Boyle predicts her performances Sunday at Lakewood Church will be "very emotional because … I've been doing church singing all my life."
When Susan Boyle sings Sunday morning during services at Lakewood Church, she'll be making her first visit to Texas. But the Scottish vocalist who redefined overnight fame will still be close to where she began.
Long before Boyle's 2009 audition for the "Britain's Got Talent" television show made her an Internet sensation, she first shared her voice with others in her hometown church. The memories may return, Boyle says, when she steps to the microphone at Lakewood.
"It will be very emotional because of the setting and the fact that I've been doing church singing all my life," Boyle says in a telephone interview.
Boyle began within the safety of the church choir, where other voices enveloped hers. When she was a teenager, she says, she got the nerve to try a solo.
"I remember feeling very self-conscious and very nervous," Boyle says. "So I'll probably be a wee bit nervous when I'm there (at Lakewood). I have more confidence now. … It comes with experience."
Boyle would never have gotten most of that experience if she hadn't competed on the British version of "America's Got Talent" nearly five years ago. In an appearance that became a lesson in the danger of judging by appearances, the unglamorous Boyle startled judges and audiences alike with a stirring performance of "I Dreamed a Dream" from the musical "Les Misérables."
Within days, the video racked up tens of millions of views on YouTube. Even though another act took first prize in the contest, Boyle made her mark on legions of viewers - including Lakewood's pastors.
"Victoria and I, like all of America, fell in love with Susan Boyle the first time we saw her," Joel Osteen said in a statement.
Boyle will sing Sunday during Lakewood's 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. services. Her visit coincides with the unveiling of her first feature-film appearance: a supporting role in "The Christmas Candle," an inspirational movie opening Friday in Houston at the Edwards Greenway Palace Stadium 24.
"The Christmas Candle," based on the novel of the same name by Max Lucado, pastor at Oak Hills Church in San Antonio, is set in 1890 in a British village. According to local tradition, an angel visits the local candle maker every 25 years to bless a candle, and whoever lights the candle receives a miracle on Christmas Eve. As Christmas 1890 approaches, the town fears it won't receive its miracle.
Boyle was cast as Mrs. Hopewell, the wife of a village church leader. For her first attempt at acting, Boyle says, she collected advice, then took the plunge before the cameras. She remembers the first time filmmakers showed her footage of her efforts.
"I was laughing when I saw myself," she says, breaking into laughter again. "I looked so serious!"
As Mrs. Hopewell, Boyle performs a song written for the movie, "Miracle Hymn." She'll also sing it at Lakewood.
"It's about hope. It's about the Christmas story," Boyle says. "It's very magical, very quaint."
The film was among a host of opportunities that have come to Boyle since "Britain's Got Talent." She sang for Pope Benedict XVI when he visited England in 2010, and she performed in a gala concert for Queen Elizabeth II's jubilee. Theater producers turned her story into a musical, which climaxed with the real-life Boyle singing "I Dreamed a Dream."
Her CDs have sold more than 20 million copies, and her newest, "Home for Christmas," recently went on sale.
Boyle takes satisfaction in handling the pressure she faces from the likes of performances for the pope. But she insists that she has help.
"My religious faith is the backbone of my life," Boyle says. "Without it, I couldn't really do anything."
The concerts, telecasts and CDs have showcased talents that stayed largely under wraps for years as Boyle stayed home in Scotland tending to her ailing mother. After Bridget Boyle died in 2007, Susan decided that her mother would want her to go public with her singing.
"I can see a miracle in the whole process - from the audition to where I am now," Boyle says.
"I think my mother would've wanted me to continue something like this. And she has made all these opportunities come to me. It's a very humbling feeling. It's a feeling that she's always with me."
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