Posts Tagged ‘Debbie Gibson’

Backstage With Deborah Gibson

May 16th, 2008

Deborah Gibson’s three-week run at Harrah’s Resort in Atlantic City, N.J., has been on my calendar for months, so I am overjoyed when my night finally arrives. (As a kid, I was a member of DGIF — the Debbie Gibson International Fan Club. She was a huge inspiration!)

Prince Charming and I trek down to the casino, and greet Deborah backstage before her Pop Goes Broadway performance. She insists I come back again after the show!

During the high-energy spectacle of show tunes and pop hits, Deborah delights with audience participation and lively conversation. We are sitting a few rows from the stage, so it’s a close call every time they look for volunteers. (Ah!) I’m in good company. The guy beside me is holding an “Electric Youth” sign and the girl next to us went to Calhoun High School with Deborah.

“This is my dream come true in terms of combining all my pop hits with all of my highlights of my Broadway career,” Deborah, 37, tells me. “In the audience, there’s really everyone from 8-80. They’re children of the ’80s and people in their eighties. For the older people who probably don’t know my pop career, they get all the familiar Broadway songs. And the people who come here get the Broadway songs plus the more current burlesquey hot numbers from Cabaret and Chicago.”

What’s her favorite thing to do in Atlantic City?

“Just being near the water and walking near the water has been my favorite thing,” she tells me. “My room is literally on top of the water. I feel like I’m on a cruise ship when I look out the window.”

Her dancer from 20 years ago, Buddy Casimano, joins her in this elaborate stage production. What happened to the famous black hats? She has hundreds — thousands — in storage.

Ryan Seacrest’s sister caught my hat,” Deborah tells me. “I met her once with him, and she was like ‘Oh my God, I caught your hat at your concert in a 20,000 seat arena.’ Isn’t that funny? There are probably 100 people floating around with one of my black hats.”

Most prized these days is the cap given to her by her 90-year-old uncle Joe.

“He recently gave me his real, old-school cab driver newsboy cap,” she says. “He’s worn it every day of his life. All of my other old relatives are like ‘Joe, are you sure you want to part with this?’ He’s like ‘yeah, I want Deborah to have it.’ That’s probably now my most special hat. They live pretty close to Atlantic City. Grandpa was one of 13, and all the generations are getting on a bus and coming to the show soon. [laughs] They come to see everything I do. They come to New York to see me on Broadway. It’s amazing.”

After the show, we wait at the door and fans ask if I’m Deborah’s sister. (Wow! What a compliment.) We nosh on cheese-and-crackers and sip Pinot Grigio with her momager Diane and business partner Jimmy Van Patten (son of Dick – they’re working on a musical together!) as Deborah greets well-wishers. She returns for conversation and good times before our night ends with hugs. I feel like the luckiest person in the world.

Catch Deborah performing Pop Goes Broadway at Harrah’s Resort in Atlantic City through May 24.

Debbie Gibson Files Restraining Order on Fan

April 15th, 2008 / Author: cwillett

For most fans, waiting in line for an autograph from their favorite singer is sufficient, but for Debbie Gibson fanatic Bassass Jorge Puigdollers, that’s just not enough. In fact, he’s even gone to such great lengths to meet the singer that she’s decided to file a restraining order against him.

“About a week ago, a security guard found a note inside the house that read, ‘I’d like to come back and talk to you,’” a friend of the Electric Youth singer tells OK!. Lucky for Debbie, she was away on tour and not home to receive the note. But on April 13, Bassass returned. “She was only home a couple of hours and her doorbell rang," explains the friend. "Through her security cameras, she was able to see it was him.”

According to the friend, Debbie politely asked the fan, who is a native of Barcelona, Spain, to go away but "he refused to leave so she called the police."

The friend also tells OK! that this die-hard fan had attended Debbie’s concert in El Paso, Texas, days earlier and when he couldn’t get to see her backstage, drove 27 straight hours to her house in L.A. “It’s totally sick, what did he hope to accomplish?” the source asks. “Once somebody comes to your house as a fan, they cross the line.”

In the restraining order, which prohibits Bassass from coming within 100 yards of Gibson, she alleges that her first experience with the 44-year-old superfan was in 2002 and that she has had to notify security guards at concert venues and at her hotels of his presence. Her friend tells OK! that Bassass has even managed to get into her dressing room in Chicago and elsewhere.

This isn’t the first time Debbie has had to deal with overzealous admirers. The friend says that one obsessed stalker threatened to kill her and showed up to a concert venue with a firearm.

Catching Up With… Deborah Gibson

February 5th, 2008

OK! recently chatted with Deborah Gibson, the ’80s teen icon formerly known as Debbie, who learned to build her hits on a Casio keyboard and tape recorders set on her mother’s ironing board. One of those songs, “Foolish Beat,” managed to etch her name in the history books of pop music — 17 years old when she recorded the song, Deborah holds the title of youngest person to write, produce and perform a Billboard No. 1. She spoke at length with OK! about her upcoming performances, shared a unique piece of fitness advice and why she wants to empower budding songwritiers with her music camp for kids.

How did you get involved with Camp Electric Youth?

I hold this record for being the youngest writer/producer of a number one in history, not to toot my own horn — on the contrary, that’s to say I can’t believe I’ve held that record for 20 years and no one’s broken it. It’s crazy to me — there are plenty of young singer/songwriters, but even the producing field, it’s still predominantly a male-dominated field and skewed slightly older. I just felt that was one thing — I just want to go back to the original message that I had when I was 17 — to empower young people. Back then I was doing it in a kind of rah-rah, preachy way, but now with 21 years experience in the business, I’ve seen so much, and I’ve seen so many things that can go wrong — much like Britney [Spears], much like Mariah [Carey]’s meltdown, I’ve had the same meltdowns, I just had them in private. And I also always had the desire to be well and happy and healthy. I think I have a lot to teach kids in the way of how to navigate a career long-term. I love American Idol, I’m a big fan, but all about this sensationalized, quick road to stardom, but I think there’s something to be said for… I come from theater and I see a lot of really talented, ambitious kids — I believe the people with that mentality are those that ultimately maintain a long-term career. I’m friends with Dick van Patten, who’s in his late 70s now — that man, I saw him onstage last year, he hasn’t stopped working since he was 7. He never had a career where he was on the cover of magazines each week, which I think is what kids are striving for these days — to be in the media all the time, more than they’re striving to master a craft that’ll carry them through their whole life. That’s really where the inspiration for doing this came from.

 

What’s it like judging Total Pop Star?
I realized this year that I have something to offer in the way of advice. Not advice because “Hey, I’ve had a hit record every year for the past 20 years” because I haven’t, but advice on how to sustain a career and hone your performing skills. When they came to me, I thought this could be a great hit that explodes or not, but it sounds like a great, great alternative to American Idol. Contestants submit their application online, which is crazy because I remember having to fly to L.A. to audition. It’s such a cool thing to see. It’s a very interesting way to evaluate talent, and based on suggestions, contestants can revise their videos. I’m just doing this because I want to. Nobody’s getting rich, getting a lot of publicity, but this is a really great ground-level thing with a very real record deal at the end. And we’ll actually be writing and producing music for the winner, so that’s kind of a cool thing.

 

Any diet or fitness tips?
I just went through a six-month bout of disc problems with my back, and I had to stop working out. I learned so much about my body. I learned that you can’t force your body to be what it’s not going to be at certain times. Now I’m happy to say I’ve got the problem solved. I’m so at peace with my body — if I’m doing eight shows a week, I might accidentally get thin — I look at myself and go, “Deb, you need a hamburger.” I’m a fan of a girl with a little meat on her bones, and I don’t think guys really want someone who looks like a 12-year-old boy. I’m glad that there are a lot of role models at this point who are driving that point home. Just people that embrace their bodies. I love dance, tap especially. If people haven’t tried tap, it is the greatest workout — you have to keep your core muscles tight the whole time to be light on your feet. Anything that distracts me from the fact that I’m working out is a good thing. I get very bored on machines — I love things that use the body and the mind and the spirit.

 

Can you talk about some of the specifics of your upcoming Harrah’s residency?
I jokingly say it’s part Liza Minnelli, part Beyonce, because that’s what I am. I’ve always been older than my years and younger than my years in a way. I’ve always had one foot in current pop culture. Maybe I’m in denial that I’m 37, but I’m always more in touch with younger people. I think that comes out in the way that I perform even the old stuff — there’s a new energy and a new edge to the way I perform that stuff. But then again, I do all the Broadway stuff, and I banter with the audience in a way that’s very inspired by growing up watching the Olivia Newton-John Physical special, and the Color Me Barbra special, and the Liza Minnelli — all that stuff, so I think that I’m kind of a blend of things. It’s kind of who I am, I spent my childhood and my last five years doing musicals, but then there’s the part of me that has that pop spontaneity. I love the freedom to be able to not be in the combines of musical theater.

Any plans for Valentine’s Day?
This is really funny — I will be performing on a gay cruise Valentine’s Day week, so I will have 2,000 Valentines and they will be all gay. Which is so funny, but you know, I don’t have a boyfriend right now, and it takes the pressure off. I love my gay audience, so I think it’s going to be a Valentine’s Day to remember. But I’ll be singing love songs to other couples, so that makes me happy. I will be with the gays.

What’s the best thing about being single?
Oh gosh, everyone that’s involved in a marriage, even happily, there’ll always be compromise, and you always have to check in with somebody. For me, I can pick up and do anything I want, at any time, without consulting anybody. I’m so aware of the fact that that is a luxury, I know that I’ve got it good now. That and being able to have my dog and cat sleep in my bed now.

What do you look for in a guy?
I feel like I need people to understand my life, and also, I want to be inspired. I love people with big dreams, big ideas and creativity. I love humor, I love playing verbal ping pong with someone, matching wits. I hate a first date where people run down a list of possible connections. I really believe in connection, which is why I’m 37 and still single — I believe that you just have to authentically connect with someone. For different people, it happens at different times. Right now, my life is so great with my family and friends and career — it’s got to be a really dynamic person who really adds something to my life for me to put the energy in. Because when I do put it in, it’s 150 percent. Now, I have great male friends that are good standby dates for events and things. That’s kind of the way my life goes right now.

By John-Paul Anthony

The Valerie Gallery

August 24th, 2007 / Author: matt
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