Olivia Newton-John, star of Grease, dies aged 73
Pop star best known for her role in the film musical
devoted her later life to activism in support of cancer research
Olivia Newton-John was that rare thing: a wonderfully
unselfconscious star
Catherine
Shoard
@catherineshoard
Mon 8 Aug
2022 20.40 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/aug/08/olivia-newton-john-star-of-grease-dies-aged-73
Olivia
Newton-John, the musical star who found enduring fame for her leading role in
the film Grease, has died aged 73. The news was confirmed by her husband.
In a
statement posted on social media, Olivia Newton-John’s widower John Easterling
said: “Dame Olivia Newton-John (73) passed away peacefully at her Ranch in
Southern California this morning, surrounded by family and friends. We ask that
everyone please respect the family’s privacy during this very difficult time.
“Her
healing inspiration and pioneering experience with plant medicine continues
with the Olivia Newton-John Foundation Fund, dedicated to researching plant
medicine and cancer.”
In 2017,
Newton-John revealed the breast cancer she had first suffered in 1992 had
returned and had spread to her spine. She also revealed she’d had a second
cancer diagnosis in 2013 but had kept it quiet. She said she believed she would
“win over it” and called upon her native Australia to adopt the laws of the US
state where she then lived, California, to allow the medicinal use of
marijuana.
“My dream
is that, in Australia soon, it will be available to all the cancer patients and
people going through cancer that causes pain,” she said, adding that though she
had moments of despair, she had had “an incredible career” and “nothing to
complain about”.
A cause of
death has not yet been confirmed.
Tributes to
Newton-John began appearing shortly after her family’s statement.
Travolta
posted a heartfelt message on social media, writing: “My dearest Olivia, you
made all of our lives so much better. Your impact was incredible. I love you so
much. We will see you down the road and we will all be together again. Yours
from the moment I saw you and forever! Your Danny, your John!”
Newton-John’s
daughter, Chloe Lattanzi, paid tribute to her mother with a selection of images
on Instagram, including pictures of Lattanzi as a baby.
After her
first cancer diagnosis, Newton-John became a prominent campaigner, setting up
the Olivia Newton-John Cancer and Wellness Research Centre in Melbourne. Her
prominence as an activist for research and better treatment will likely remain
as key an element of her legacy as her showbiz career, which included four
Grammy wins and the sale of more than 100m records.
But it was
Grease, the perky 1978 adaptation of the Broadway musical for which she will be
most fondly remembered. Offered the lead role of Sandy, sweet summer squeeze of
cool cat John Travolta, after meeting the producer at a dinner party, the then
29-year-old Newton-John had to be persuaded to take the part, worried she was too
old to play a high-school senior. The role was also altered to accommodate her
Australian accent.
Grease was
the biggest box-office hit of the year, and its soundtrack album spent 12
consecutive weeks at No 1 in the US. Newton-John’s performance was nominated
for a Golden Globe and she performed Hopelessly Devoted to You at the 1979
Oscars.
The film
remains a much-loved staple of the small screen and the singalong circuit; its
soundtrack is one of the top 10 biggest sellers of all time.
Born in
Cambridge, England, in 1948, Newton-John and her family emigrated to Melbourne,
Australia, when she was six. Yet she remained proud of her roots: her father
was an MI5 officer who worked on the Enigma project at Bletchley Park during
the war; her maternal grandfather was the Nobel prize-winning physicist Max
Born, who sought exile in the UK from Nazi Germany on the eve of the second
world war.
At 14,
Newton-John began her professional singing career, recording her first single
in 1966 on a return trip to England, and her first solo album, If Not For You,
in 1971. A brief career dip followed the album’s initial acclaim, before
Newton-John represented the UK in the 1974 Eurovision song contest; her song,
Long Live Love, finished equal fourth behind Abba’s winning Waterloo. Then
followed a period of singing and recording country music, before she was cast
in Grease.
The
transformation her character undergoes in the film – from a strait-laced
sweetheart to a spandex-clad goer – inspired a similar swerve in Newton-John’s
musical career, culminating in her 1981 album Physical. A second collaboration
with Travolta, on the 1983 film Two of a Kind, flopped, but the pair remained
close friends through the following decades, and most recently sang together in
2012.
A number of
musical comebacks met with varying levels of success over the last four
decades, which were also spent battling illness, raising a daughter, Chloe, and
campaigning in the fields of health, the environment and animal rights.
“Cancer was
enlightening,” she told the Observer in 2012. “When you’re ill, it doesn’t
matter if you have all the money in the world – it makes no difference. I feel
very blessed to have been given the chance to live.”
Newton-John
is survived by her husband, John Easterling, founder of natural remedy firm
Amazon Herb Company, and her daughter, Chloe Rose Lattanzi.
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