Essayer OR - Gratuit
The graduate
The Guardian Weekly
|September 08, 2023
She was a TV child star - then became a pop phenomenon. With her new second album, the singer is trying to make sense of her young life
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OF ALL THE HIGHLIGHTS of Olivia Rodrigo's first two years as a pop star -breaking streaming records with her heartbroken debut single Drivers License aged 17; helping President Biden encourage young people to get vaccinated; winning three Grammys after she released her debut album, Sour - her set at Glastonbury 2022 still stands out. Rodrigo had big plans for her Saturday afternoon performance: she had asked Lily Allen if they could duet on her favourite song by the British pop star, her 2009 hit Fuck You. Then the day before Rodrigo was due to play, Roe v Wade was overturned, removing the federal right to abortion in the US. She was in London. "We were all, like, we should stay here," Rodrigo, 20, says. "We were so devastated, crying because it felt so surreal and so awful." Then Allen had texted her. "She goes, "See the news? I guess we know who we're gonna dedicate this song to.""
Allen recalls Rodrigo pacing backstage, memorising her speech. On stage, Rodrigo said: "I'm devastated and terrified, and so many women and so many girls are going to die because of this," then dedicated Fuck You to "the five members of the supreme court who have shown us that, at the end of the day, they truly don't give a shit about freedom", listing them by name. "We hate you," Rodrigo had said, then danced around with Allen, middle fingers flipped. That's what music's for, says Rodrigo, "expressing your rage and dissatisfaction".
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 08, 2023 de The Guardian Weekly.
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