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His Story So Far BORN : April 12, 1950, in New York. |
News The Interview / DAVID CASSIDY Adelaide, Saturday, November 16, 2002 ‘30,000 people screaming "I love you, I love you", it’s an overwhelming feeling’
Shielded by 27 security guards, Cassidy’s arrival in Adelaide was brought forward from Tuesday to Sunday to avoid the mass truancy that occurred in Sydney. "It was pretty much chaos and hysteria everywhere," Cassidy recalls of Australia. "They were great fans, though. The audience was incredible. When you're standing at the focal point, 20,000, 30,000 people screaming ‘I love you, I love you’, it’s an overwhelming feeling." But that was way back then. Now he admits to being unsure what - at age 52 - he returns to Adelaide on Monday for a belated encore rendition of such bubblegum classics as I Think I Love You, Cherish and Could It be Forever. "My fans everywhere all over the world have been incredibly supportive," Cassidy says over the phone from his home in Miami. "It will be interesting to see what happens when I come back because it’s been so long since I’ve been there. I don’t know what to expect." While most Australians only know Cassidy as girl-magnet pop star and squeaky clean Keith Partridge from the TV series The Partridge Family, he has enjoyed a very enduring, active and highly successful theatrical career in the UK and UK. He's starred in more than 2500 live shows, including Broadway and West End productions, winning awards and selling out shows as writer, director, producer and performer. In 2001, he chose to go back to his first love - performing live concerts around the world - and this year released an album, Then and Now (a platinum hit in the US), with the mature Cassidy reworking his old hits. He says there will be a lot of classics in the Adelaide concert. "Because I haven't been around flogging it for years and years, I've done so much work in the theatre and Broadway ... it's like I opened up a chest that had all these jewels and they were mine," he says. Launched to fame by The Partridge Family in the early '70s, Cassidy at his peak, age 21, was the world's highest-paid solo entertainer - with a fan-club bigger than the Beatles and Elvis combined. He sold 25 million records and had 10 No 1 hits (five with The Partridge Family) before retiring from the pop scene shortly after his Australian tour. "I'd been at it for five years and I was quite burnt out and I had been devoted ... to the business of David Cassidy as opposed to who I am and where I am and what I am as a human being," he says. "I always wanted people to know that I loved it, but I wanted to move on creatively and artistically and in every other way and do something else." As for how the fan base has changed over the decades? "It's interesting," says Cassidy. "Twenty-five years ago, the voices were very high-pitched and they threw a lot of love beads and things at me. Now their voices have dropped an octave and it's almost like three generations. There are kids, there are fans when they were kids, teenagers, and their parents come." "Instead of throwing love beads they throw, like, lingerie, bras and underwear."
Simon Yeaman |