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Auburn Annie
02-05-2006, 01:30 PM
Kris Kristofferson A Sex Symbol at 70

Feb. 5, 2006


(CBS) Kris Kristofferson remembers the first time he was ever on stage. It was while he was in kindergarten. He performed with his back to the audience.

“My mother said, "That was horrible.”

The rest, as they say, may be history, but also a mystery to him.

“How I got from there to being up on the stage in front of thousands of people, I don't know,” he admits laughing.

Destiny or not, stardom happened. Kris Kristofferson has written hit after hit, "Sunday Morning Coming Down," "Help Me Make It Through the Night," and "Me and Bobby McGee."

He earned a place in the country music hall of fame, and has a whole other career in movies, starting in the 1970's, playing sexy lead roles in "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" opposite Ellen Burstyn and "A Star Is Born" with Barbra Streisand. For that performance, he won a Golden Globe.

CBS’s Tracy Smith caught up with Kristofferson at the Bitter End, where he played his first New York gig some 35 years ago. Now, as he approaches his 70th birthday, Kristofferson has another movie coming out and he has a new studio album called "This Old Road."

But there’s the mystery again. He doesn’t even consider himself a good singer.

“I don't think anybody thinks I'm a good singer.”

He also has an unstar-like blend of modesty and honesty. Is it that quality that makes him such a sex symbol to women?

“How do I answer that without sounding like a total egotist?

Watch what happened when Tracy dared to call his lyrics poetry.

“Watch me go over backwards here in a minute.”

The truth is Kristofferson's been student of poetry since he was a teenager. He was actually a Rhodes Scholar, and earned a master’s degree in English lit in 1960. After graduation, he flew helicopters in the army, and five years later was about to start a teaching job at West Point when he took a life-changing detour.

“I spent a couple of weeks in Nashville just hanging out with songwriters, and fell in love with it.

“My mother was pretty embarrassed about me going in that direction. She said, ‘Nobody over the age of 14 listens to that kind of music, and if they did it wouldn't be anybody we'd want to know.’"

But mother didn't know best. He landed a job in a Nashville recording studio, working his way from the ground up.

“It was called studio setup man, but it was a janitor. I emptied the ashtrays and supplied the tapes and stuff, cleaned up the studio.”

But he didn’t empty the ashtrays of just anyone. It was people like Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash. In fact, Cash, who went out of his way to talk music with the young janitor, became Kristofferson's lifelong idol.

“It showed me the measure of the man. It meant he was everything I'd hoped he'd be.”

Desperate to have Johnny record one of his songs, he showed up on Cash's front lawn. It's a story Cash loved to tell, and did with wife June Carter at his side, on his 1970s television program, “The Johnny Cash Show.”`

“I was trying to attract his attention.”

And it worked. Cash's recording of “Sunday Morning Coming Down” won the country music association's song of the year.

Kristofferson suddenly was thrust from the shadows and started performing on his own. His most important early performance came at the hands of the man in black. Again and again, it happened on “The Johnny Cash Show.” While it's tempting to say a star was born, under that cool façade, Kristofferson says, he was scared to death.

“It's a very vulnerable position you're in when you're a songwriter singing your own songs.”

Maybe he didn't like singing them, but others sure did, most famously, Janis Joplin. It wasn't until after Joplin died from a drug overdose in October 1970 that Kristofferson first heard her recording of his song.

“She had hooked it. It was a very emotional experience for me at the time. Ii thought it was so sad.”

Joplin's version of “Me and Bobby McGee” hit number one on the billboard charts. He may have written it, but Janis made it her own.

That year, Kristofferson was nominated for five Grammy awards and was featured on the “David Frost Show” to promote "Help Me Make It Through the Night," which went on to win country song of the year. Life should have been easy. Instead, he was drinking a lot.

“Probably at least a bottle and a half of whiskey a day. Maybe more.”

By the mid 70s, he started to worry it would kill him. So he cleaned up his act.

“I didn't completely clean up right away. But I quit drinking like that.”

It was too late to save his marriage to singing partner and second wife Rita Coolidge. By 1980, they'd divorced. Three years later, he married Lisa Meyers. They have 5 kids and live in a remote part of Hawaii. Their neighbor is longtime friend and golfing buddy, Willie Nelson.

Soon, Kristofferson and Nelson left the island and hit the road. They were joined by Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash. They became The Highwaymen.

“I always looked up to all of them, and felt like I was kind of a little kid who had climbed up on Mount Rushmore and stuck his face out there.”

Kristofferson continued recording solo albums, but it was his acting that stood out, with diverse roles in “Lone Star” and “A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries.” Later, he played the character Whistler, along side Wesley Snipes, in the “Blade” trilogy, and won a new generation of fans.

In addition to his new album, “This Old Road,” there's another album coming out later this year, a tribute to Kris on his 70th birthday, with recordings by everyone from Emmylou Harris to Oscar winner Russell Crowe.

Kristofferson has jammed several lifetimes into seven decades, but whether you see him as a songwriter, singer, actor, poet, sex symbol, to him, it just doesn't matter.

“Whether you're a success in the eyes of the world or not won't matter if you're doing what you love to do and doing it honestly and with your whole spirit and heart. Then I think that's a good as it gets.”

closetcanadian
02-05-2006, 01:55 PM
I saw the interview with Kris on CBS' Sunday Morning news program earlier today. He seems genuinely modest and somewhat surprised by the success he has acheived in the music business. Man is truly a class act and an incredible songwriter.

charlene
02-06-2006, 09:23 AM
Kris was my first introduction to Lightfoot! I have always thought he was gorgeous and sexy and still do-he has "something." He's coming to Toronto in March and playing at a wonderful venue at the University of Toronto - Convocation Hall - I saw Lyle Lovett there a few years ago.
Kris's music is as dear to me as Lightfoots is and I am hoping to see him in March. The first time was May 1973 at Massey and Lightfoot got up and sang Bobby Magee with him.....I had run out of film (I have some superb pics of Kris and Rita) so was thrilled to see a pic of them in the Songbook booklet! It will be almost 33 years between Kris concerts if I do get down to see him...I love his music, his voice and his honest humility. He gets emotional and is not afraid to show it on TV when speaking of his friends and family. He's a lovely man and my one moment in the airport in Toronto airport in 1988 with him is etched in my memory forever....wish I had a pic!
His "Austin Sessions" from a few years ago is a superb collection of his hits, many done as duets.
I wonder if Lightfoot will attend the show at Convocation Hall like he did Massey back in 1973????
hmmmm.......
If I remember I just might ask him on the 13th......

Auburn Annie
02-06-2006, 10:00 AM
For those interested, here's the date/time info:

price : $42.50 - $49.50
date : Sun, March 26
door : 7:00pm
show : 8:00pm

Borderstone
02-06-2006, 05:36 PM
It's always hard to believe that someone famous you grew up admiring is "that" old,isn't it? :eek:

I can't believe 30 years has passed since Kris and B. Streisand were at Sun Devil Stadium in the summer of 1976 filming Kristofferson's concert scene for,"A Star Is Born". I wasn't there naturally but I read about it. Nearly 20 takes for that scene! Sheesh!

Did anyone like his acting in the film? I thought he did excellent. :)

Janice
02-07-2006, 04:41 AM
Originally posted by Borderstone:
Did anyone like his acting in the film? I thought he did excellent. :) I think Kris is just as good an actor as he is a singer/songwriter. I love that movie - and the soundtrack. It's funny, the part was originally offered to Elvis, but he turned it down because he wouldn't be getting top billing - it was a Streisand movie. But looking back, I really can't even imagine anyone but Kris in that role - it was almost like it was written for him.

charlene
02-07-2006, 11:20 AM
here's some images to gaze upon. I'll have to scan my pics from may 1973....
http://images.google.ca/images?svnum=10&hl=en&lr=&q=kristofferson&btnG=Search
page 10 has pic of his wife Lisa.

Borderstone
02-07-2006, 03:56 PM
Y'know what? He's sort of a cross between Clapton,Burt Reynolds and Chuck Norris in appearence (given certain photos).

Maybe that's his appeal to you ladies? :D

SilverHeels
02-07-2006, 05:23 PM
If I were KK, I'd sue you!

charlene
02-07-2006, 05:25 PM
I just ordered my tickets....33 years between concerts is long enough!
lol
He's not a cross between anyone - he's just his own gorgeous self....

SilverHeels
02-08-2006, 02:55 PM
I remember seeing him and Rita at the London Palladium in May, 1972 -- they both wore black and looked and sounded fantastic! A few weeks later, Gord played there. *Sigh* ... memories! :rolleyes:

Bill
02-08-2006, 04:28 PM
I've seen him twice...in the 80s in Dallas, and passing in the hall years later at DFW airport!
He is one of my top heros along with Gord, Leo Kottke, and Karla Bonoff. I'm 45 and have been listening to these folks for little over thirty years!

I chuckled at the CBS interview when the reporter asked about him not thinking he was a good singer..."I don't think ANYONE thinks I'm a good singer!" Yep, I agree, but a master none the less.

Hope Kris tours somewhere I can catch the show!

SilverHeels
02-08-2006, 07:15 PM
<<..."I don't think ANYONE thinks I'm a good singer!" Yep, I agree, but a master none the less.>>

I agree, Bill. And even at 70 he is still sex on legs, IMO. :D

Borderstone
02-08-2006, 08:46 PM
Sue me? :confused: Heck,it was a compliment! :rolleyes: Along with Kristofferson,I think those guys are cool. :cool: <-----See? ;)