Dusty Springfield - A Biography

A contemporary of Sandie Shaw, Cilla Black and Lulu, Dusty was determined to elevate the craft of pop singing by careful choice of material. Her affinity for soul music enabled her to imbue her own singing with its values, without resorting to mere shouting and screaming.
She admired the great American performers like Aretha Franklin and Gladys Knight and was selflessly keen to promote their work. However Dusty Springfield more than the other girls who put their stamp on the Sixties, had a unique power and maturity. This enabled her to interpret songs by composers like Burt Bacharach and Carole King with such force they became definitive versions.
Even now you only have to mention songs like “I Only Want To Be With You”, “I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself” and “You Don’t Have To Say You Love Me” and it’s possible to hear Dusty’s voice sometimes strident, sometimes delicate, her character imprinted on every note.
Dusty with her blond beehive hair-dos and heavy “Panda” eye make-up was an instantly recognisable celebrity; and icon of the black-and-white Sixties. Yet many saw this image as a mask to conceal an awkward, insecure woman who needed to be reassured. In fact she was quite capable of defending herself, as critics and detractors soon found. When interviewed in Music Maker magazine in 1966 she was described as Britain’s most powerful answer to the soul sound then sweeping the nation. “Dusty is that rare bird – a singer who has to believe in a song before recording it. A singer with soul. Her reputation in music circles can be summarised in three words: ‘Anything WON’T do.’”

She hit the front page of the Daily Mirror when she threw a cake at a waiter whose manner she didn’t like, at the Melody Maker Poll Awards. But her pranks were usually good humoured, like her ability to mimic her favourite radio comics the Goons.
The combination of high spirits and high ideals made her good company and good copy. Dusty Springfield was hardly ever out of the headlines during her six years at the top and she seemed destined to become one of the great, perennial performers. This made her slow fade into obscurity during the Seventies all the more distressing. There were some signs of a revival in her fortunes, but the glory days were over.
She was born Mary O’Brien in Hampstead, north London, in 1939. She and her elder brother Dion began singing together as children in their parents’ garage, where they made their earliest tape recordings. When Mary left school she carried on singing harmonies with her brother, who had began performing at local folk clubs.
In 1957 the pair gained further experience singing at Butlin’s holiday camps. Mary later joined a vocal group, the Lana Sisters, who made some records and backed the singer Al Saxon. In 1959 she returned to work with Dion who had in the meantime teamed up with Tim Field.

The Springfields had Top Five hits with “Island of Dreams” (1962) and “Say I Wont Be There” (1963. They also enjoyed American success with “Silver Threads and Golden Needles” which got to No. 20 in September 1962 and went straight to No 1 in Australia. The Springfields thus spearheaded the so-called “British Invasion” before the Beatles. In July 1963 they had their last hit with “Come On Home” which peaked at No 31. The group broke up in September 1963 after a farewell show at the London Palladium.
In the aftermath Tom Springfield concentrated on writing while Dusty launched her solo career in fine style with “I Only Want To Be With You” by Ivor Raymonde and Mike Hawker. It went straight to No 4 in the UK in January 1964 and No 12 in the US.
In a burst of activity Dusty recorded her first solo album, went on tour with bands like the Searchers and the Tremeloes and then collapsed from overwork. But artists lived or died by issuing a steady stream of singles. Her follow up, “Stay Awhile”, came out in February and got to No 13 in the UK. Then came a trip to the US to appear on the Ed Sullivan Show. Her debut album A Girl Called Dusty, appeared in April 1964. One of the tracks was “Wishin’ and Hopin’”, her next US hit, which got to No 6. Her next UK smash was “I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself”, followed by “Losing You” which was written by Tom Springfield.

Dusty never had another chart topper, but many more fine performances followed, including “Goin’ Back”, “All I See Is You” (1966), “I’ll Try Anything”, “Give Me Time” (1967) and “I Close My Eyes and Count to Ten” (1968).
She seemed to be enjoying her success. But periodic dust-ups hit the headlines. In December 1964 she was invited to tour South Africa. Although clearly against apartheid, she agreed to go, but refused to perform before segregated audiences. In the row that ensued she was deported back to Britain. This drew some criticism from British showbiz artists including Derek Nimmo, who felt that Dusty was needlessly offending prospective employers. She offered them only a sharp rebuke, later describing Nimmo as “a prat”.

She had three wigs for different occasions. Wig Number One was called Cilla, Number Two was Lulu and Number three was Sandie. I found her tossing one of the wigs all around the dressing room. I said “Hi Dusty, am I interrupting something?”. She said “I’m just giving Cilla a good kicking!” The odd thing was, you wouldn’t recognise Dusty without her wigs, false eyelashes and make-up. I think that was a kind of mask that helped give her confidence.
However Dusty wasn’t afraid of Buddy Rich, the tough talking American jazz drummer who insulted her when they appeared on a show together in New York. Altham remembered: There was a row about the billing. She wanted her name to be the same size as Buddy’s. She climbed a ladder outside the theatre to alter the sign. He called her a name and she whacked him one!
Dusty, says Altham, had a vulnerable, childlike quality.
She was rather like Marilyn Monroe in that sense. She was quite humble about her singing and really didn’t think she was any good. But of all the Sixties girls, she was the best and had a very special talent. She later led a rather lonely, isolated existence and I thought it was a big mistake to duck out of the public eye when she went to live in America. She just seemed to lose all her confidence.
Dusty toured the world in 1967 performing in cabaret in London, New York, Australia and Japan. That same year her third album, Where Am I Going included versions of Bobby Hebb’s “Sunny” and Aretha Franklin’s “Don’t Let Me Lose This Dream”. She was voted Best Female Vocalist in the New Musical Express annual awards for five successive years and she was given her own BBC television show on which she cheerfully introduced such favoured guests as Jimi Hendrix, Mel Torme and Scott Walker.

Springfield relocated to America in 1970 and thereafter recorded only sporadically and received practically no recognition in Britain. And interview she gave to the London Evening Standard in 1970, in which she hinted at her sexual orientation , resulted in a cooling of popularity at home. Certainly she found the intrusion into her private life unpleasant.
She said later, “I have been extremely hurt by people saying things about me. I have a certain pride in myself as a woman and it upsets my femininity. I can’t stand to be thought of as a big butch lady. I’ve done nothing wrong and I refuse to invent a relationship to appease people.”
By now her health was poor and she suffered from depression. Moving to Los Angeles, she spent more time campaigning for animal rights than recording. She bought a house in Laurel Canyon and tried to fit into the suburban scene. “It was sort of nouveau riche”, she said. “The trouble was – I was not very nouvelle and not very riche.”

Between 1974 and 1977 she did no recording at all and began to drink heavily. Then she took a grip and started to piece her life together. She even took singing lessons. However, “comebacks” in the late Seventies and early Eighties failed to take off. She needed a kick start to her career. Help came from an unlikely source. In 1987 she was invited to London to record with the Pet Shop Boys. The result was her first chart appearance in years when she guested with Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe on their single “What Have I Done to Deserve This?”, a No 2 hit in both the UK and US. “That was a watershed in my life,” she said.

Dusty now came back from California to live in England with her cat, Nicholas. Her return was celebrated with a BBC biography, ‘Dusty’ screened in May 1994. A new album A Very Fine Love, was released in 1995 and showed her singing as well as ever.
Then just after she had completed the recording, she was diagnosed as suffering from breast cancer and she had to undergo chemotherapy at the Royal Marsden Hospital. She said, “I remember crying, thinking I haven’t got time to be ill.”

Chris Welch,The Independent 4th March, 1999
Dusty Springfield born April 16th 1939 – died March 2nd, 1999.
Always in our hearts.