The Morning Call (Sunday)

Director wants viewers to hear O’Connor’s voice

New documentar­y lays out sympatheti­c reappraisa­l of singer

- By Meredith Blake

Thirty years ago, Sinead O’Connor tore up a picture of Pope John Paul II on “Saturday Night Live,” effectivel­y destroying her mainstream career with a single act of protest against the Catholic Church.

Then 25, the Grammywinn­ing Irish singer was an unlikely pop star. Known for the raw, emotive power of her voice and her equally fierce resistance to industry pressure — most famously, by shaving her head — O’Connor had risen to internatio­nal fame with her transcende­nt cover of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” and her vulnerable, tear-streaked performanc­e in its accompanyi­ng video.

A sharp critic of racism and misogyny in the music business, O’Connor was already a controvers­ial figure. But the “SNL” incident — in which O’Connor sang Bob Marley’s “War” before tearing up the photo to protest, she later said, the Catholic Church’s enablement of child abuse — turned her into a full-blown pariah. Two weeks later, O’Connor was booed off the stage at a Bob Dylan tribute concert in New York City and fled, crying, into the arms of Kris Kristoffer­son.

She has since been in pop culture purgatory, continuing to write and perform music but never coming close to the levels of acclaim or visibility she achieved in the early ’90s.

The ugly incident at the Dylan concert opens “Nothing Compares,” a new documentar­y that offers a sympatheti­c reappraisa­l of O’Connor as an iconoclast­ic artist whose provocatio­ns were decades ahead of their time.

“It made this huge mark on me as a young Irish woman to witness this hero of mine being treated the way she was,” said Kathryn Ferguson, director of “Nothing Compares,” which recently premiered on Showtime.

“The seeds for this film were really planted at that moment.

It was a story that stuck with me throughout my adult life. I couldn’t understand why there hadn’t been a cinematic feature made about her.”

Ferguson, who grew up in Belfast, recalls her father playing “The Lion and the Cobra,” O’Connor’s debut album, on repeat in the car, she said recently from London. When Ferguson was a teenager, she and her friends discovered O’Connor on their own terms and swiftly fell in love.

As a graduate student, Ferguson contacted O’Connor’s management team about using some of her music in her thesis film, a connection that led to Ferguson directing the video for O’Connor’s song “Fourth and Vine” in 2013.

“I remembered all of this passion I’d had as a young teenager,” Ferguson said, “and I just really wanted to try and work out how to make this film.”

She spent much of the next five years “talking incessantl­y” about the project before it started to come together in early 2018.

The timing was right: The #MeToo movement was surging in the U.S. and elsewhere. In Ireland, same-sex marriage had recently become legal and abortion was about to follow. “The world was on fire with women speaking out,” Ferguson said. “It felt a wee bit mad that this incredible figure wasn’t being mentioned in any of this — someone who has inspired so many of the young activists that were directly changing the country.”

Using extensive archival video and brief, stylized re-creations and interviews with O’Connor’s friends, collaborat­ors and contempora­ries, “Nothing Compares” traces O’Connor’s meteoric rise from troubled teenager to Rolling Stone cover girl, and her even more precipitou­s fall from grace. A theme throughout the film is the lingering effect of her traumatic childhood: O’Connor endured physical and emotional abuse at the hands of her mother and was sent to live in a church-run Magdalene home as a teenager.

Most important, “Nothing Compares” features an extensive interview with O’Connor. Her now-gravelly voice can be heard throughout the film, reflecting on aspects of her life and work, but her face appears only in archival video — a conscious filmmaking choice.

“Our observatio­n was just how amazingly well the media has done in reducing her voice by mocking and ridiculing her,” Ferguson said. “The key takeaway I wanted was that you heard her voice, and it wouldn’t be interrupte­d. Having her narrate her story on her own terms was of utmost importance.”

The documentar­y intentiona­lly focuses on a brief but formative era in O’Connor’s life. Although it touches upon the legacy she has had on other female artists and activists, it does not explore her turbulent journey since 1992, which has included several

marriages, a bitter custody battle, mental health struggles and, in January, the death by suicide of her teenage son.

“What went on in this era has had horrific reverberat­ions throughout the rest of her life,” Ferguson said. “But as she says in the film, the positive thing is the commercial career that was annihilate­d after her actions in 1992 wasn’t the career that she was seeking.”

It’s impossible to know how a Sinead O’Connor might be received today. But it’s clear that O’Connor was radically ahead of her time in many ways, from her refusal to conform to prescribed gender roles to her songs about police violence against Black people. Most obviously, the church she criticized for perpetuati­ng child abuse and the exploitati­on of women has now apologized for wrongdoing in Ireland and around the world.

Like many other women who were shunned in the ’90s and dismissed as “crazy,” O’Connor is receiving an overdue cultural reconsider­ation — one she spearheade­d by writing a memoir, “Rememberin­gs,” published to acclaim last year. Her music is finding new fans: “Drink Before the War” was recently included in an episode of “Euphoria.” And “Nothing Compares,” which debuted at the Sundance Film Festival, is bringing O’Connor’s story to a generation of viewers who weren’t yet alive when she immolated her career at 30 Rock.

Ferguson said that many of the screenings get rowdy and emotional. Young people come up to her “with their eyes flashing, just incensed and inspired” by O’Connor’s ordeal. “There’s audible gasps when you get to that backlash moment, because it’s still very shocking to see that this young singer from Dublin is causing this much noise. (Her detractors) obviously saw her as a threat — somebody that had to be silenced.”

Ferguson doesn’t know if O’Connor herself has seen the film, but, she said, “I really hope she feels proud.”

 ?? FRED TANNEAU/GETTY-AFP 2013 ?? Sinead O’Connor is the subject of Kathryn Ferguson’s documentar­y “Nothing Compares.”
FRED TANNEAU/GETTY-AFP 2013 Sinead O’Connor is the subject of Kathryn Ferguson’s documentar­y “Nothing Compares.”

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