wnyc.org / 93.9fm / am 820

It Takes One

Monday, April 13, 2009
Marie Osmond

When the show Donnie and Marie finished its run in 1979, Marie Osmond was ready to start a new life as a secretary. She explains why she decided to stay in show business in her memoir Might As Well Laugh About It Now.

Event: Marie Osmond will be reading and signing books
Monday, April 13, at 7:30 pm
Barnes & Noble, Smith Haven Mall
Lake Grove, NY
For more information, call 631-724-0341.


Comments

  • [1] MM April 13, 2009 - 12:45PM

    Is she a strict Mormon. If not, which of the teachings of Mormonism does she disagree with.


  • [2] jose moskowitz from brooklyn April 13, 2009 - 01:10PM

    What would you do, how would you react if one of your children decided to convert from the Mormon religion?


  • [3] Jay April 13, 2009 - 01:15PM

    Have you ever seen the show "The Family Guy?" You sound like you were treated like the character Meg Griffin


  • [4] antonio from park slope April 13, 2009 - 01:16PM

    My sister and I grew up watching the "Donnie and Marie show", good times..

    But does anyone believe that the jackson's looked to the osmonds for moves?!


  • [5] Adrienne Adams from Manhattan April 13, 2009 - 01:16PM

    I support WNYC and enjoy and learn from just about every show you do. Usually have you on all day. Just turned you off because Marie Osmond is coming on Lopate. Marie Osmond??!?

    This is why I don't watch/listen to most commercial media. Boring, vapid, perdictable.

    Give me more Dadaists, please!


  • [6] Mike April 13, 2009 - 01:19PM

    Any plans to do Broadway?


  • [7] the truth from Atlanta/New York April 13, 2009 - 01:20PM

    We need to talk to the person who still needs/has a secretary to take short hand in 2009!!!


  • [8] the truth from Atlanta/New York April 13, 2009 - 01:20PM

    The PC term is Administrative Assistant and if short hand is NOT dead it should be!


  • [9] Jamie April 13, 2009 - 01:21PM

    Really, Adrienne? You understood what that guy on Dadaism was talking about? Marie is far more interesting to listen to.

    See that is what is great about WNYC, there is something for everyone.


  • [10] chicago listener April 13, 2009 - 01:24PM

    "Paper Roses" is a popular song written by Fred Spielman and Janice Torre


  • [11] MM April 13, 2009 - 01:28PM

    Does she believe in this:

    >>>Mormons claim their book to be a record written on golden plates by prophets of a race who lived in the Americas for about 1,000 years. Joseph Smith said he found these plates in 1823 near Palmyra, NY and executed an exact and inerrant translation of them with the help of an angel, two friends and special instruments.<<<

    And this:

    >>>A major claim of the Book of Mormon is that Christ appeared in the New World shortly after His resurrection and that His second coming will preceded by a massive conversion of the American Indians to Christ, who will then exterminate the gentiles that do not accept it. After that, the believing Indians and Mormons will build the New Jerusalem (in Independence, Missouri), where Christ will return to live<<<


  • [12] Soundlanguage from Jersey City, NJ April 13, 2009 - 01:30PM

    Ironic to have a bit on Marie Osmond & Dadaism on the same day...

    Can we get her to do a live version of Hugo Ball's "Karawane"? (heads up Adrienne)... for years it's been a fav "art" piece. The straight-laced doing weird is a match made in heaven.


  • [13] MichaelB from Morningside Heights April 13, 2009 - 01:30PM

    Adrienne Adams [5] What elistist snobbery & foofery. You think you are an openminded intellectual, but you in truth are not. It is listening to something different and outside your normal boundaries that defines openmindedness. Your attitude is contrarty to that and is frankly insulting. I'm embarressed for you. And I'll stack my years (decades) of listening to WNYC against yours any day.


  • [14] Larry from Nyack April 13, 2009 - 01:30PM

    When will very religious people realize that having 8 children, while around us the resource depletion, environment degredation and climate heating caused by too many people, is a sin against their God? The "rules" to "go forth and multiply" were declared when there were no more than 500 to 800 million people world-wide: now there are nearly 10 times as many! Let's hear an Osmond agree that if she had to do it again she'd have 1 or 2 births and adopt the rest!


  • [15] chicago listener April 13, 2009 - 01:31PM

    MW, behave yourself. Her faith helped her get through life. It's not my cup of tea, nor yours, obviously. And, so, what?

    Congrats to you, Marie, for soldiering on.


  • [16] Phoebe from NJ April 13, 2009 - 01:34PM

    MM: Do you believe - that a mythical figure called "Jesus" was crucified and rose again 3 days later? Equally bizarre and obviously made-up as the Mormon legend. Leave her alone - she is no more to be blamed for growing up Mormon than any given religion.

    Enjoyed the discussion.


  • [17] chicago listener April 13, 2009 - 01:37PM

    [[14 Larry from Nyack April 13, 2009 - 01:30PM When will very religious people realize that having 8 children, while around us the resource depletion, environment degredation and climate heating caused by too many people, is a sin against their God? ]]

    ::sigh:: that's what you took away from this conversation? i don't have any kids, so let's say for the sake of argument that Marie is picking up my slack...or I'm picking up hers, if you prefer.


  • [18] the truth from Atlanta/New York April 13, 2009 - 01:38PM

    MM give it a rest! Pleeese


  • [19] tom April 13, 2009 - 01:43PM

    Amazing missed oppurtunity not to have Andre Codrescu and Marie Osmond dialogue about dada.

    here is Ms. Osmond reciting Hugo Ball's poetry

    http://ubu.artmob.ca/sound/ball_hugo/Ball-Hugo_Karawane.mp3

    8. [listen] Marie Osmond performing Hugo Ball's "Karawane"

    Taken from a Ripley's Believe It Or Not segment on sound poetry from the mid-80s. According to producer Jed Rasula, "Marie Osmond became co-host with Jack Palance. In the format of the show, little topic clusters (like "weird language") were introduced by one of the hosts. In this case, the frame was Cabaret Voltaire. Marie was required to read Hugo Ball's sound poem "Karawane" and a few script lines. Much to everybody's astonishment, when they started filming she abruptly looked away from the cue cards directly into the camera and recited, by memory, "Karawane." It blew everybody away, and I think they only needed that one take. A year or so after it was broadcast, Greil Marcus approached me, wanting to use Marie Osmond's rendition of Hugo Ball for a cd produced in England as sonic companion to his book Lipstick Traces; so I was delighted to be able to arrange that."


  • [20] Louise from Boston May 29, 2009 - 02:04PM

    Did the commenter saying she expected MO to be a vapid waste of time (as opposed to -- waht was it sshe wanted...dadaism... nihilism(?)) actually go on to listen? I was surprised, I admit, to find her quite scintillating, wise, funny, and honest -- a very valuable half hour. She puts a spin on public utterance (after all, required almost all her life), that takes it far beyond Miss America style. Her laugh did strike me as a bit too "against the darkness," to be catching, but as a fellow sufferer from depression (as she says "depression is depression, post partum or not), I think I understand.


Leave a Comment

Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. WNYC reserves the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the WNYC.org Comment Guidelines before posting.

Your comment


* required
The information entered into this form will not be used to send unsolicited email and will not be sold to a third party.
 
Back to Episode