
It's
not very often an entertainer can sit in an audience and see
herself perform. Rita MacNeil had that opportunity on an August
night in 2000. On that summer evening she attended the Live Bait
Theatre in Sackville, N.B., for a performance of Flying On Her
Own. It told MacNeil's life story through her songs. And while
she enjoyed the attention the production gave her career, she
said, "I didn't think the story was earth-shattering, just
something you could pretty well put anyone into. It was about
one person, but so many of us could be there."
Playwright,
Charlie Rhindress couldn't have said it better. MacNeil's songs
are about conversations, friends getting together, community
roots, believing in dreams, both good and bad times, working
people, taking risks, home and paying tribute to a loving family
- things that ring true for everybody.
"MacNeil's
artistry lies in the way she can turn the events of her life
into something with which many people can identify," said
Rhindress. "(What's) remarkable is that she can touch on
the specific, but it becomes universal."
The
truth is not many could weather what she did and achieve what
she has. On A Personal Note, her book written with Anne Simpson,
detailed most of her struggle to succeed as a singer in spite of
personal difficulties.
Rita
grew up in Big Pond, Cape Breton with three brothers and four
sisters. Often chaotic, her youth included the physical and
psychological trauma of surgery for a cleft palate, a first love
affair that left her with a child and a broken heart, a marriage
breakdown and numerous frustrating attempts to kick-start a
musical career.
Rita's
shyness, even during childhood singing lessons when "the
teacher did most of the singing," thwarted her first
attempts to express herself musically, so she only sang to her
mother in the kitchen. As a teen, however, Rita loved to listen
to music - Celtic, country, folk, rhythm and blues and rock - on
the radio. Her mother Renee "was a great
encouragement," Rita said. "She believed in the
singing and wanted me to be able to perform, one day, because
she knew that's what I loved." Renee MacNeil did not live
to see her daughter's success, but Rita's song Reason To Believe
acknowledges the gift.
After
a number of unsuccessful attempts to find work in the music
business, Rita MacNeil found inspiration in the women's
movement. In 1971, she wrote about women having a voice and
called it Need For Restoration; the next year she wrote a song
protesting a beauty pageant, called Born A Woman, which became
the title of her first album, recorded in 1974. Picked up by
Boot Records, BORN A WOMAN launched MacNeil into the folk music
circuit - from the Riverboat and Mariposa to Northern Lights (in
Sudbury) and the Kootenays Folk Festival in B.C. Despite a
troublesome marriage, having to care for her two children and a
disappointing career thus far, "whenever I sang I felt
strong," she wrote. "Music…was really the best
medicine for me."
Back
in Cape Breton in 1979, she found work and more inspiration to
write. The songs came fast and furious - Black Rock,
Troubadours, My Island, Brown Grass and Old Man (for her father)
and Working Man (about the coal miners of Cape Breton).
Suddenly,
people paid attention to her work. There were press interviews,
radio appearances and calls for concert appearances. She even
got an invitation to sing Working Man with the Men of the Deeps,
an all-male choir of miners that had been singing since 1967; it
was the beginning of a beautiful relationship. "The song
became like an anthem when the men sang with me," she
wrote.
Flushed
with new successes, the MacNeil family and friends financed her
second album in 1980. PART OF THE MYSTERY, while a creative
success, stumbled at the start. The first 250 albums were flawed
in the pressing. The family's Big Pond Publishing and
Productions Limited was operated on a shoestring and sales were
conducted on consignment. Nevertheless, Rita MacNeil's fan base
grew, more media appearances resulted and the first royalty
cheques rolled in.
The
turning point, however, was Expo '86 in Vancouver, where despite
her normal misgivings about the gig, "I was on cloud nine
when I discovered the first show was sold out, 350 people were
in the audience and…the audience stayed…People wanted to
listen to the music," she said. Meanwhile, the Vancouver
Sun said, "for God's sake, you must hear Rita MacNeil. See
her at Expo this month so you can talk knowledgeably when she
becomes a star." Later that year, her FLYING ON YOUR OWN
album was recorded and then released in 1987. The album soon
went gold and helped earn MacNeil her first Juno Award for Most
Promising Female Vocalist, at age 42.
She
sang in Britain, opening for Steeleye Span. Her REASON TO
BELIEVE album went platinum in 1988, the same year it was
produced. She went to Australia to sing with Andre-Philippe
Gagnon. In 1989, at the Juno Awards, she and the Men of the
Deeps performed Working Man and brought down the house; right
after, with tears in her eyes, k.d. lang came on stage to accept
her Country Female Vocalist Juno and commented, "It's tough
standing up here after listening to that."
MacNeil
was on a roll. In 1990, she sold more records in Canada than
Garth Brooks. In 1991 she was invited to play at Royal Albert
Hall in England.
There
were honourary doctorates from five Canadian Universities. In
1992, she was inducted into the Order of Canada. Her television
appearances broke records - her 1993 CBC TV Christmas special,
One Upon A Christmas, drew 2 million viewers and her musical
variety show Rita & Friends (winner of the 1996 Gemini
Award) attracted 1 million viewers a week over three seasons.
There were two more Junos, four Canadian Country Music Awards
and seven East Coast Music Awards in the '90s.
A
long way from the flawed pressings and shoestring budgets of the
early '80s, Big Pond Publishing and Productions was modernized,
but was still operated by Rita MacNeil's family. In addition,
another MacNeil enterprize, Rita's Tea Room, the former school
house turned into a restaurant in 1982 in Big Pond, began to
take-off. From June to October visitors began arriving by the
busload to enjoy a meal, buy Rita MacNeil souvenirs and sign the
three-ringed binder that serves as a guest book.
In
spite of the confidence so much success might have instilled,
MacNeil still doubted herself. During the recording of a
Christmas 2000 special, the prospect of performing a duet with
Patti LaBelle, left MacNeil petrified. When promoting the songs
on her MUSIC OF A THOUSAND NIGHTS album, she would periodically
sing Snowbird (written by Gene MacLellan and made famous by Anne
Murray) on stage. "I was terrified to do that song,"
she admitted. "I said backstage, 'I think they're going to
throw tomatoes.'"
After
all these years, even Rita MacNeil found it difficult to
recognize what her playwright biographer, Charlie Rhindress, saw
in her. "She has a very shy personality, but is a very
strong person on the inside." |
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