The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mathis: Reagan helped kick addiction

- By Nardine Saad

Legendary singer Johnny Mathis owes a debt of gratitude to former First Lady Nancy Reagan.

The 81-year-old crooner credited Reagan with helping him kick his drinking habit after she saw him overindulg­ing at a reception.

“We were sitting around, you know. I was drinking, and she suggested I might have a problem,” Mathis said in an upcoming interview with “CBS This Morning’s” Nancy Giles.

“I said, ‘Probably not, but what do you have in mind?’ And so she sent me to a place called Havre de Grace in Maryland, and I was there with a bunch of Jesuit priests. I had three weeks of finding out why I drank, how I could stop. And it was the greatest thing that ever happened to me in my life.”

The influentia­l presidenti­al wife, who championed the fight against drug abuse with her “Just Say No” campaign, died last year of congestive heart failure at 94.

Mathis, who pioneered the greatest-hits album genre and is releasing a collection of contempora­ry songs produced by Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds, previously admitted his vice was champagne.

However, he also famously struggled with drug addiction following his dealings with “Dr. Feelgood” Max Jacobson. Jacobson administer­ed so-called vitamin shots that contained amphetamin­es, which did wonders for Mathis’ ailing voice but left him with a drug addiction.

Mathis’ wide-ranging interview is set to air Sunday and covers his history with racism, rebounding from losing his home in a 2015 fire and the fallout from coming out in 1982.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States