In Bluffton Today:
A joyful evening with Susan Boyle
Posted: November 19, 2014 - 12:31am
Backlit in dazzling spotlights, she stood center stage in her pale pink gown with arms opened wide.
And the crowd roared a welcome.
Susan Boyle, christened Susan Magdalane 53 years ago in Blackburn, West Lothian, Scotland, had come to Jacksonville, Fla., and her fans filled the Moran Theater of the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts.
There probably wasn’t a one of us who hadn’t heard of or watched the 2009 television show “Britain’s Got Talent,” when on stage in her simple dress, a plain woman with bushy eyebrows, when she calmly opened her mouth and the first rich notes of Les Miserables’ “I Dreamed A Dream” came pouring out slick as silk.
A jaw-dropping surprise for Simon Cowell and his panel of judges and an audience whose faces reflected their reactions from distain to utter amazement at the unexpected glory of a mezzo soprano completely at odds with Susan Boyle’s frumpy appearance.
With international recognition of her talent, she has remained a simple woman who has fulfilled some of her dreams by singing both for Pope Benedict XVI and for Queen Elizabeth on the occasion of her Diamond Jubilee.
This night, she would sing for us.
“Hello Jacksonville,” she called out and confessed that she still wasn’t used to being all dressed up, that they had slathered on makeup and put a wig on her that felt like she had a cat sitting on her head, tail and all.
She was sure it would scare her cats at home.
“And I have Simon to thank for all of it,” she said.
And then she sang.
Her voice was what a voice would be after 26 concerts in six weeks, raspy and struggling for the falsetto.
We didn’t care.
She sang her heart out, one song after the other, backed sometimes with the Jacksonville Men’s Chorus, the Providence Chorale and a pair of female singers.
Kennedy Aitchison, her pianist, was yang to her yin and the small cadre of musicians was comfortable with each other. Lance Ellington, a charmer, paired up for a duet and took to the microphone for a few tunes, but it was Susan who carried the show.
This woman from a small town in Scotland, who defied the diagnoses of Asperger Syndrome to become an inspiration to all afflicted with this insidious ailment, gave us a night of musical entertainment to remember.
“Cry Me A River,” “Wild Horses,” “Memory,” “The Winner Takes It All,” “In the Arms of the Angels,” “Oh Happy Day,” “The Way We Were.”
Come back to visit any time, Susan Boyle.
You were a joy.
Annelore Harrell lives in Bluffton and can be reached at anneloreh@aol.com
Article on link below:
http://www.blufftontoday.com/bluffton-sun-city/2014-11-19/joyful-evening-susan-boyle#.VGy3z_nF8r8
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