Page
1 / 2
/ 3 / 4
/ 5 - Home
AE:
So you started out at such a young age, but you’re
also still in the recording industry now. Has being so famous
so young affected your career as an adult?
LG:
Yeah, sure. Again, it’s a double-edged sword. "It’s
My Party" will get me in the door but then I’ve
gotta do it. You know, do you want to do that 42 years later?
You take the good with the bad, and you make it work. There
is no point in me getting up on a stage and not doing "It’s
My Party." There’s no point.
AE:
What do you mean by that?
LG:
I’m saying there’s no reason why I shouldn’t
do it. There’s every reason to do it. Where
do you want to be: your career before or your career
now? Well, they’re the same thing. It’s
my career, it’s my life, it’s my work
in progress. And I do "It’s My Party"
ever since, and I’m just broadening my foundation
a little. When I get up on stage I do "It’s
My Party," I do "Sunshine Lollipops,"
I do all the songs people expect me to do, and then
hopefully I give them a little something extra.
AE:
I think a lot of artists would outright refuse to
do that so many years later.
LG: That’s what I meant about it being
a double-edged sword. |

Gore's hit 1963 album |
You’ve got to realize your task at hand. There’s
no point in alienating your fan base. What I think you want
to do is bring them along and then pick up a few more people
along the way. So, can you be bitter and make that choice?
Sure you can, but it’s not one that I feel comfortable
with.
AE:
I know "You Don’t Own Me" is a favorite,
especially at gay pride celebrations.
LG:
Exactly. Imagine me doing a show and not doing "You
Don’t Own Me." It’s not going to happen.
I can’t imagine an audience not being really unhappy
if I didn’t sing "It’s My Party."
And I’m not there to alienate. The idea is it’s
entertainment; you’re supposed to make people happy.
AE:
Are there any things about yourself, any misconceptions
about you that you run up against online, in magazines and
in daily life?
LG:
Oh, absolutely. Very early on, when I was 16 my family and
I were up in Detroit and we were doing a television show
for WXYZ, sort of a lip-sync show--they were popular in
almost every city in the ‘60s. We were staying at
a Ramada hotel and there was a photographer following us
around. So at one point my father was sitting in this large
leather armchair and I stood next to him in front of a huge
fireplace, four times taller than I am, and they snapped
some pictures and then there was a limo that took us to
the television station. Well, needless to say, the mansion
of the television station became my home. The photo in front
of the fireplace, that was my fireplace at home. The huge
limo was... So, I went, "Well, this isn’t true."
But it’s sort of the way publicity was done.
AE:
And would you say it’s different now?
LG:
No, I’d say it was pretty much the same, but I wasn’t
prepared for out-and-out lies. I mean, could I live with
them? Yeah, I could live with them. But as a result, people
actually thought that I came from a wealthy family. And
while I come from a very comfortable family, we were hardly
wealthy. So I think they were trying to push a poor-little-rich-girl
syndrome, and they did, so I think that’s how some
people think of me. It was kind of a forced PR, a push.
Gore's
latest album, released on June 28th |
AE:
Are there things that you come up against currently
that are misconceptions about you or misinformation
that’s out there?
LG:
Well, there’s a lot of misinformation but that’s
because there are so many websites. So I roll with
the punches. I try not to get upset when I read things
or feel as though something has been misperceived.
Again, everything in life, not just show business,
is a double-edged sword. You know, if you’ve
got a lot of money, you’ve got to figure out
how to be a good person with it. So even when your
dreams come true, you‘ve gotta watch out. You
know.
I’ve been watching what the press is doing to
Angelina Jolie, and I look at that and I’m really
just happy to be me. People look at me and they wave,
“Hi, Lesley.”
|
They
know me in the neighborhood. It’s no big deal. I lead
a pretty normal life now. I don’t know how many poor
kids survive when the press is out there to get the worst
possible shot of you and to exploit you on that level. I had
to deal with it a lot. I had stalkers through my life. Really
you just gotta keep chugging along and keep a positive attitude
and get through all the problems. You gotta face them, otherwise
you don’t get through.
Read
our profile
of Lesley Gore or check out her new
album / official
fan club
Page
1 / 2
/ 3 / 4
/ 5 - Home