Daily Mail

Every girl’s 70s pin-up – and the awful news that made our hearts skip a beat

As teenage idol David Cassidy lies gravely ill . . .

- By Jan Moir

Over the weekend, David Cassidy hovered on the brink of death in a Florida hospital. In his private room, the former teen idol was induced into a medical coma. His organs were failing, his body was shutting down, his family were gathered at his bedside. expecting the worst.

Over the wider world, more than a million hearts skipped a beat at the terrible news.

For the 67-year- old singer is still capable of producing an emotional crumple in middleaged female fans who can still remember all the words to Cherish, his first hit single of nearly – gulp – 50 years ago.

Women who never met Cassidy, but who remember what it felt like to have loved him from afar. Women no longer in the first or even the fourth flush of youth, who are now willing him to get better, fingers crossed, God speed, get well soon.

His publicist said that there was nothing ‘imminent’ about Cassidy’s condition, despite the failure of his liver and kidneys. Doctors were hoping to keep him as well as possible, as the search begins to find a liver for a possible transplant operation. It is no secret that the star has had problems with alcohol addiction over the last few years, resulting in four arrests for drunk driving, a divorce from his third wife after 28 years together – and bankruptcy.

As he swam back into the headlines and his predicamen­t became clear, it was hard not to feel a pang of sadness. Please, not David, not now. For he, above all the other teenyboppe­rs and pop stars, has the power to transport a certain generation of women back to a very specific time in their past. Back then, we had Charlie perfume on our wrists, strawberry-flavoured gloss on our lips and David Cassidy on our bedroom walls. With his puka shell necklaces and appliquéd dungarees, he was the floppyhair­ed fount of a million schoolgirl crushes. Then and now, he represents the absolute essence of adolescenc­e from a more innocent age – it is awful to think of him fighting for his life.

For he was our original poster boy, most beloved pin-up, our first, our last, our everything. We were absolutely crazy about him. In today’s world, where sophistica­ted teenagers have their pick of myriad distractio­ns and entertainm­ents, there is no comparison to the pungent, global power of his appeal. You have absolutely no idea. Before him there were four Beatles to choose from, while Davy Jones was the only Monkee worth losing your peanuts over – but everyone loved wholesome and sweet David.

At the height of Cassidyman­ia, he was the highest-paid solo artist in the world, selling more than 25million copies of each of his singles. None of the dark and slightly dangerous stars who came afterwards, such as Marc Bolan, David Bowie or Adam Ant could ever match his reach nor his nourishing, parent-approved appeal. Today, only Justin Bieber comes close in terms of passionate fandom – but to be frank, he and the Beliebers often seem bizarre and unhinged. In comparison, David Cassidy’s songs plugged straight into heart of the tentative yearnings of innocent little girl-ings, unsure and unschooled in the ways of love. Could It Be Forever? How Can I Be Sure? I Think I Love You – never have the conundrums of fledgling romance been so sweetly and acutely expressed. For the lovelorn amongst our sorority there was the rainbowcha­sing song Daydreamer.

And for me there was Cherish, his first and, in my opinion, greatest song of all, in which he beseeched the object of his secret affection to ‘cherish me as much as I cherish you.’ I love it still.

And it gladdens my heart to note that somehow Cassidy survived the long-haul damage of 1970s pop celebrity and remained respectful of his fans – unlike those, such as Gary Glitter and Michael Jackson.

When I met him in 2007 it seemed fantastica­l. My teenage self would have gasped, unbelievin­g. There was even a moment when our knees touched, shriek.

In a dimly- lit bar of the Dorchester Hotel in London, he was odder, smarter, tougher, shorter and crankier than I expected. Dressed all in black he was still handsome and fit although, despite the lush gloom, he wore tinted glasses and his breath smelled of minty mouthwash. He ordered a big glass of red wine and seemed focussed and in control. Only now do I realise that this was base camp for the ascent into addiction to follow.

‘ Too intrusive,’ he would respond to questions he didn’t like.

‘No way,’ he said, when I asked if he ever got bored singing I Think I Love You for the thousandth time on his millionth comeback, or farewell, tour. ‘I am not, as you put it, like a fly trapped in amber. Not any more. That’s for sure,’ he insisted.

THAT simply could not have been true. Cassidy was an intelligen­t man who came to loathe the constricti­on of teenybop fame – he wanted to be taken seriously as an actor and a musician, but that never happened, not really. Back in 1970, he was a young actor trying to make it in Hollywood when he was co- opted into a television show called The Partridge Family. From the beginning the savvy, 20-year-old Cassidy had his reservatio­ns about the role. In real life, he was a hippy who lived up in Laurel Canyon in LA, smoking dope and dreaming of playing dark, sophistica­ted roles or being the next Jimi Hendrix.

Figuring that The Partridge Family would flop anyway, Cassidy signed on as Keith, the squeaky- clean elder son – and also signed away all his rights to his image and his recordings. What did it matter, he figured? The ‘crazy’ show was going to flop anyway. Of course, it went on to be hugely popular all over the world, and catapulted Cassidy, the show’s heartthrob, into a monstrous level of fame.

In the four-year period from 1970-74, he made over $8 million, a fantastica­l sum at the time. Yet he ended up with almost nothing, ripped off by business associates and poorly drafted contracts. very few stars have risen so high, but ended up with so little – or been so keen to flee the spotlight. When a fan was killed in the crush at one of his London concerts in 1974, Cassidy retired and went into a long, mental decline.

We met to discuss his autobiogra­phy Could It Be Forever? This was not his first volume of reminiscen­ces, but it was certainly his most candid. He recounted a gripping tale of fame and fortune found and lost, and his struggle to reclaim his sanity. He had always felt abandoned by his father, who left home when he was three. He wrote of how 15 years on the therapist’s couch had failed to heal him completely and confessed that he had been clinically depressed, but never suicidal. I told him I found the book rather melancholy.

He didn’t like that. ‘ The last thing I want is for people to think that my life has been sad. It has been blessed.’

He couldn’t have known back then that the worst chapter was yet to come. Or that someone who had put so much happiness into the world would ultimately reap so little of it himself. I hope he gets well soon, too. But like his family, I fear the worst.

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 ??  ?? Smile that faded: Cassidy with daughter Katie in 2007, and, above, in his heyday
Smile that faded: Cassidy with daughter Katie in 2007, and, above, in his heyday

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