Bette Midler confirms UK 2015 tour! Birmingham, London, Leeds, Glasgow dates
Bette Midler has confirmed that she will
return to British stages for the first time in 35 years. Her new tour, The
Divine Miss M will see tickets going on sale this Friday, 21-November and fans
who purchase their tickets online may also able to add a copy of Bette Midler’s
new album “It’s The Girls!” to their transaction.
The tour follows Bette Midler’s previously
announced North American tour and will feature material from her iconic career
and material from her new album, “It’s The Girls!” – a glorious tribute to girl
groups through the ages. “It’s The Girls!” features the swinging sounds of
WWII-era Andrews Sisters, to 60’s super-groups like the Supremes and the
Shirelles, to 90’s hit makers TLC.The album is out now on Warner Music UK.
“It’s The Girls!” reunites Bette Midler
with long-time collaborator and Award-winning composer Marc Shaiman who
produced the album, along with Scott M. Riesett. The album effortlessly
showcases Midler’s distinctive and versatile vocal range while honoring
timeless classic melodic harmonies.
One of the world’s best-loved and most
versatile entertainers, Bette Midler has garnered accolades in all quarters of
show business. She’s earned four Grammy Awards including Song of the Year
(1989: Wind Beneath My Wings; 1990: From A Distance) and Record of the Year
(1989: Wind Beneath My Wings); two Academy Award nominations, three Emmy
Awards, one Tony Award, three Golden Globe Awards, and nine American Comedy
Awards. Bette Midler has sold over 30 million albums worldwide.
Tickets for Bette Midler’s UK performances
will go on sale Friday, 21-November at 9:00 am. Tickets starting at £50 (£56 in
London) will be available from www.livenation.co.uk or www.ticketmaster.co.uk.
Fans who purchase their tickets online may also able to add a copy of Bette
Midler’s new album “It’s The Girls!” to their transaction.
Bette Midler – July 2015
Thursday 9th Barclaycard Arena Birmingham
Saturday 11th Manchester Arena
Monday 13th The SSE Hydro Glasgow
Wednesday 15th first direct arena Leeds
Saturday 18th The O2 London
With her new album IT’S THE GIRLS debuting
at No. 3, Bette Midler can now mark her fifth consecutive decade of top 10
albums on the Billboard 200. According to Billboard, she is only the second
woman to do so, after Barbra Streisand.
IT’S THE GIRLS is Midler’s second-highest
charting album ever; the 1989 soundtrack to BEACHES (with all-Midler tunes,
including “Wind Beneath My Wings“) reached No. 2.
Before that, her 1972 debut album THE
DIVINE MISS M hit No. 9, followed by her No. 6 self-titled album in 1974 and
SOME PEOPLE’S LIVES in 1991, and finally BETTE MIDLER SINGS THE PEGGY LEE
SONGBOOK, which peaked at No. 10 in 2005.
Midler’s tribute to girl groups — which features covers of such tunes as TLC’s “Waterfalls” and The Supremes’ “You Can’t Hurry Love” — bows with 40,000 sold. The Warner Bros. Records release is Midler’s highest debut ever. It’s the Girls is Midler’s first album since 2008’s greatest hits set Jackpot! The Best Bette, and first album of new material since the 2006 Christmas effort Cool Yule.
Midler also recently announced on her
official site that she will be touring the country beginning May 2015 in
support of the new solo recording.
The actress finished her Broadway run of
I’LL EAT YOU LAST this spring, starring as the legendary Hollywood agent
Mengers in her first Broadway appearance in almost 40 years. Written by John
Logan, I’LL EAT YOU LAST was directed on Broadway by Joe Mantello.
Midler began her legendary career as an
entertainer in 1965, in New York, where she developed the trademark act that
would make her one of the most renowned talents of her generation. Her debut
album, 1972’s The Divine Miss M set her on the path that has led her to earn
Grammys, Emmys, Golden Globes and Academy Award nominations in a career that
has spanned over 40 years. She has toured the world, sold millions of albums,
published two books and appeared in over two dozen films, including The Rose,
Beaches, Ruthless People, Hocus Pocus, First Wives Club and For The Boys.
It's The Girls was released yesterday in the UK on both CD and LP (note that the US Target version of the CD has two bonus tracks, which is of course the version I bought). And there is also this lovely 7" single:
Here are her recent/upcoming UK promo apperances:
*The Divine Miss M - documentary (watch here)
Here are her recent/upcoming UK promo apperances:
*The Divine Miss M - documentary (watch here)
* One Night Only: Bette Midler TV Special (Filmed November 16th…to air in December on ITV)
* The One Show – Tuesday, November 17th
* Loose Women – November 19, 2014
* Alan Carr-Chatty Man – November 21, 2014
* Moira Stuart ‘But Beautiful’ Radio Show,
November 23rd
She will also appear on the Royal Variety Show in December, singing "Be My Baby".
Here are some of her recent US TV apperances:
She will also appear on the Royal Variety Show in December, singing "Be My Baby".
Here are some of her recent US TV apperances:
Divine Intervention: Bette Midler Talks
Early Gay Support, ‘Diva’ Degradation & Twerking (‘Girls, Please’)
‘If Your Panties Fall Down … Step Out Of
Them & Keep On Singing’
BY CHRIS AZZOPARDI
Originally printed 11/13/2014 (Issue 2246 –
Between The Lines News)
Before the whole world knew her as “The
Divine Miss M,” Bette Milder was ours. In the early ’70s, bawdy, belt-y Bette
was performing for the NYC bathhouse boys, and don’t think she’s forgotten it,
either. “I mean, if I had a nickel for everybody that said they saw me at the
baths,” says Midler in our recent interview, “I would be Joe Billionaire by
now!”
Midler would go on to global fame, reaching
beyond music to become a celebrated name in film, television and on the stage,
winning Grammys, Golden Globes, Emmys and a special Tony Award. And now, the
eagerly awaited return of one of show business’s most versatile performers has
arrived with the release of her first album in eight years, “It’s the Girls,” a
tribute to some of the greatest female harmonies in history.
Midler talked about the anticipated tour
she’s about to launch in support of this latest effort – and the truck full of
hairpieces she’s schlepping along (“Cher has 55 wigs; why can’t I?!”). She also
touched on her early support of the LGBT community, the degradation of the word
“diva” and her plan to avenge Mae West for sending her a cease and desist.
You know how much we gays love our girls.
How much do you keep your gay following in mind when you make music,
particularly with “It’s The Girls”?
To tell you the truth, it really didn’t
cross my mind. The music I chose is music I had a lot of affection for. Some of
these songs I’ve known since I was a little girl. I feel like if I have a
strong feeling for this music, people will also have a strong feeling for it.
The truth is, you cannot pander. You have to go with your gut and your heart
and be true to yourself, and hope that people like it. They generally do.
You were welcoming to the gay community at
a time when many weren’t. When you look back at your early support for the LGBT
community, what do you recall as being the moment that galvanized you to stand
up as an ally?
I had been in the theater for a long time,
from the time I was a young person, and I’d always known gay people – and they
were just, like, gay people! Just ordinary friends. People that you knew, and
that you never thought twice about. You didn’t think of them as being
different, although looking back on my high school years, I think there were a
lot of people in my high school – this is so many years ago; this is 50 years
ago – who probably were gay and didn’t ever talk about it. As a matter of fact,
one of the kids that I went to school with, an enormously popular guy – really
funny, really wonderful – who was in my Latin class, wrote me before he passed
away from AIDS to tell me that he had been gay and that he had contracted AIDS.
So, I mean, what was the moment when I said
that it was time to stand up? Oh my god – it never occurred to me not to. These
were friends of mine – people that I had worked with, people that I had danced
with, people I had broken bread with my whole life – so it never occurred to me
not to. You do what you do because there’s nothing else to do. There’s no other
option.
But to stand up for people who were seen as
pariahs – that was taboo then. Did you experience any backlash for supporting
gay people at the time?
You know, I might have, but I was very
well-protected in those days. I actually did not feel it. I remember the first
big benefit that anyone had done for gay rights (“A Star Spangled Night for
Rights” in 1977). I remember the poster, and it was at the Hollywood Bowl. Lily
(Tomlin), Richard Pryor and Tom Waits were on the program, but nobody ever said
LGBT then. That didn’t exist.
So that night, Tom Waits sang “Standin’ on
the Corner” and then Richard Pryor came out and Richard Pryor started off
great. I don’t even know if this is in your history books or anything, but he
started off great and then worked himself up into a real frenzy as only he
could. He said that the gay community had never supported civil rights and,
“Where were you when we were riding and they were kicking us to the curb and we
were being fire hosed?” Then he said, “You all can kiss my rich, black ass!”
and he stomped off the stage. And I had to follow him! I mean, I’m just
stripping it bare, but imagine what happened. So I went out and said, “You all
can kiss my rich, white ass,” and of course then everything was much better,
but it was such a curious evening.
I think Stonewall, in the middle ’60s, was
the first time (the gay community) fought back, but, you know, in history
everyone says “I was there.” I mean, if I had a nickel for everybody that said
they saw me at the baths, I would be Joe Billionaire by now! I would be playing
at Madison Square Garden instead of a rickety-tickety little bathhouse on 73rd
Street! OK, let’s move on. I really do think that this big fundraiser in the
late ’70s was a little shot across the bow too, and then not long after that, in
the middle ’80s, AIDS came down and it was so horrible and, even though he knew
so many gay people, Ronald Reagan did nothing. Nothing!
Right – he wouldn’t even publicly
acknowledge it was an issue until years later. And hey, Bette, I don’t mean to
cut you off, but we’re on a time limit.
Oh! I’m sorry. I’m waxing poetic. Anyway,
enough about you; let’s talk about me.
If a gay fan approaches you, which of your
projects would they most likely mention?
You wanna know the truth? “Hocus Pocus.”
Honestly, I cannot believe what happened with “Hocus Pocus.” I’m just
dumbfounded by the number of people who mention “Hocus Pocus” – and they’re
young people!
Was your Halloween costume from this year –
when you went as your “Hocus Pocus” character, Winifred Sanderson – the closest
we’ll ever get to a sequel?
I tell them all you must write the Walt
Disney Company because I don’t have anything to say about it – but they do! (To
contact Walt Disney, head here.)
But you’d be up for it?
Oh yeah. The girls and I have talked about
it, and we all laugh and say, “Yeah, we’ll wait for that phone call.” But sure,
we would all do it. We had a wonderful time.
“It’s the Girls” celebrates and honors
female performers who branded a very particular image. I mean, they definitely
were not twerking.
Ugh. I don’t know what to tell you. I just
saw that Jennifer Lopez video with Iggy Azalea – “Booty booty booty…” – and oh,
girls, please! What can you say? Girls… please.
How do you compare the girl groups from the
era you’re channeling to what you’re seeing now?
It was a really wholesome era in
retrospect. It was sexy, but it was not blatant. It was intriguing and it was
mysterious because it wasn’t flat out in your face. It was also supremely
elegant. You know, I talk about this with my girlfriend Toni Basil, another gay
icon: Those voices, the black voices, were not familiar to white ears. They
simply never heard those voices singing harmony before. You never really heard
those really strong, vibrant black girls singing until The Shirelles, The
Crystals, The Chiffons, and then the Motown girls, and the girls who came
after: Sister Sledge, the Emotions and down the line. The Honeycombs? Is there
a group called The Honeycombs? I personally wanted to cover (the Weather
Girls‘) “Two Tons o’ Fun” but everyone said, “No, no, you can’t cut that,” so I
didn’t.
You cover TLC’s ’90s pop hit “Waterfalls,”
which famously dealt with HIV/AIDS and safe sex. What significance does that
song have for you?
The first time I heard it I was really
struck by it because it seemed like such an important song. To me, it was one
of the saddest songs I’d ever heard on pop radio. So, I wanted to do a
stripped-down version of it because I really wanted the story to be clear. I
had thought about it for a long time, and when I first heard it, I was so moved
by it. I shed a tear myself, and I always use that as a kind of litmus test. If
it really moves me, I can bring something to it; I can make it my own.
What about the song in particular hit you?
Did you know the original song was inspired by the AIDS-stricken and promoted
safe sex?
I do remember that, but it was a dance
song. It was for the dance halls. It was for the discos, and yet it really is a
song about the mother who can’t do anything, who’s completely helpless in the
face of this. I felt that, and that’s the way I wanted to interpret it. I think
it worked out wonderfully.
You’ve been a self-proclaimed diva. In
fact, your 1997 HBO special was called “Diva Las Vegas,” and during your Las
Vegas spectacle at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace, “The Showgirl Must Go On,”
you said you were the “People’s Diva.” At this point, has the meaning of the
word “diva” changed so much that you no longer identify with it?
It’s a word that is just so overused that
it’s really lost all currency. It no longer has any meaning at all. Any old
slob on the Internet can say, “Well, I’m a ‘diva,'” and have some people
believing it, but not me. In the old, old, old, old days – you know, during the
Civil War when I was just a child – it meant “the star.” It was an opera term,
and it meant a female opera singer who really could carry the whole opera, and
it has been so degraded now. It’s a shame because it really was a wonderful
word.
What does “diva” mean to you now?
It means nothing. It has absolutely no
meaning at all. “Divine” still has meaning because there’s still a church, but
“diva” has absolutely no meaning at all.
When you hit the road for your first tour
in 10 years, how many wigs are you bringing along with you?
Oh my god – I have a truck! I have a whole
truck. Well, Cher always does. Cher has 55 wigs; why can’t I? To tell you the
truth, I have been wearing wigs since, let’s see, the very, very old days.
Since I first started making motion pictures – movies! – I’ve always worn wigs.
Always, always, always. It really does spare you. It really is a time-saver,
and I really enjoy them. And I love makeup and hair. I just love it, love it,
love it! I love becoming somebody that I’m not. As they used to say about Mae
West: “A little old lady used to come in onto the set and go into the trailer,
and four hours later Mae West would come out.” It’s really kind of like that.
A lot of drag queens would agree with you
and Mae. What advice do you have for a guy who wants to dress in Bette drag?
A good pair of shoes – a really good pair
of shoes – because you’ll really hurt yourself. You’ll hurt your joints. And a
serious undergarment. And if your panties fall down all around your feet, step
out of them and keep on singing.
That’s good advice even if you’re not a
drag queen.
(Laughs) Well, I’ve been accused of (being
a drag queen) many times! But I take it with a grain of salt. To me, it’s a
supreme compliment.
Any chance you’ll revisit songs by The
Sanderson Sisters or the ladies of “The First Wives Club”? They are, after all,
girl groups.
I really do have to think about this. If I
go out around Halloween, I’ll have to put some effort into it. I’ve got some
surprises up my sleeve.
You mentioned Mae West, and it was
announced in late 2013 that you were cast as Mae in an upcoming HBO biopic.
How’s that project coming along?
I’ll tell you something: The script just
came in, but I haven’t seen it. I’m waiting for the director, Billy Friedkin
(director of “The Exorcist”), to make his notes, and then he’s gonna hand it
off to me and we’ll see what happens.
I’m really looking forward to it because
I’ve been reading and doing my due diligence. She’s such a fabulous – she’s so
fucking nuts! I mean, she was so insane. And you know, when I started my career
all those many moons ago, I used to do an impersonation of Mae West, and I did
it on “The Johnny Carson Show” – my very first “Johnny Carson Show” – and she
sent me a letter telling me to cease and desist, which I swear to god I still
have.
I didn’t understand it at the time. I
thought, “What’s wrong with her?” Now that I’ve done all the reading and am of
a certain age, I totally get it. She was protecting what she had made. She was
protecting her creation. That was practically a trademark and she didn’t want
anyone to mishandle her creation. Ultimately, she was right. So I bowed to her
wishes; I ceased and desisted. And I think it’s so amusing. (Laughs) After all
that, if the script actually comes to the point of doing it, it certainly would
be revenge. Take that, Mae!
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2015: The Year of Bette Midler!
Jx
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