Bangkok Post

Golden age for Kylie Minogue

- GLENDA KWEK AFP

From teenage soap sensation to pop royalty, over Kylie Minogue’s three-decade career she has sold 80 million records, survived breast cancer and become a gay icon whose fan base spans generation­s.

The pint-sized Aussie superstar celebrated her 50th birthday yesterday, another milestone for the singer who is one of the few celebritie­s known simply by her first name.

To mark the occasion, Kylie has said she is planning “an extravagan­za” with friends in London, where she is based. And if her litany of hits — including I Should Be So

Lucky and Can’t Get You Out Of My Head

— is anything to go by, she will have no trouble getting the party started.

Born in Melbourne on May 28, 1968, Kylie has defied critics who once wrote her off as a “singing budgie” to establish herself as one of Australia’s biggest cultural exports and an internatio­nal sex symbol.

“Kylie is a star that has become iconic outside of just singing,” Australian fashion expert Paula Joye said of the country’s highest-selling artist of all time. “She’s become part of the fabric of Australian culture.”

Kylie was just 11 when she appeared in the television series Skyways, but is best known for her star turn as Charlene in long-running soap opera Neighbours from 1986-88.

She and her co-star Jason Donovan won popularity as an on-screen couple and were secretly a real-life item at the same time, although their romance did not last.

Her first single — a cover of 1960s Little Eva hit Locomotion — reached No.1 in Australia in 1987 and became a global hit, launching the girl-next-door’s new career as a pop star and, later, dance diva.

She teamed up with Donovan for 1988 duet Especially For You, which sold more than a million copies in Britain alone

and topped the charts across Europe and Australasi­a.

While Donovan’s career since then has seen him star in musicals and speak frankly about his struggles with drug addiction, Kylie went on to record top-selling singles such as Better The Devil You

Know, Spinning Around and All The Lovers — performing them around the world in glitzy showgirl outfits.

“On stage, she always looks like a giant sequin,” said Australian fan Troy Lester, who pursued a career in costume design and fashion after falling in love with Kylie’s costumes.

“It’s incredible that you can be this little ball of energy and sparkle so much. She’s a little pocket rocket that just keeps going and it’s great to have that kind of positivity in your life.”

Kylie’s high-energy performanc­es and feel-good pop tunes are still a winning formula, according to veteran music journalist Jenny Valentish.

“She’s dazzling, an all-rounder entertaine­r. In a previous time, she would have been a dancing girl probably going around Australia in the gold rush age [of the 1850s] entertaini­ng the miners,” Valentish said.

The pop princess has long had a big LGBTI following and has often graced Sydney’s annual Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade.

In 2016, Kylie and her then-fiancé, British actor Joshua Sasse, wore “Say ‘I Do’ Down Under” T-shirts in support of same-sex marriage at Australia’s top music awards.

Fan Owen Lambourn, who goes by the moniker Owen Minogue on Twitter, recalled how her career kicked off during the Aids epidemic of the 1980s.

“A lot of high-profile people steered clear of the community because there was that stigma that you were endorsing death, but she looked at everybody as being human,” Lambourn said.

“She’s a great icon and an ambassador for universal love.”

 ??  ?? Kylie Minogue performs at Royal Albert Hall in London.
Kylie Minogue performs at Royal Albert Hall in London.

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