The Broadway legend Carol Channing will be 90 next month and she is still going strong.
She sat down for an exclusive interview with dot429 and I wanted to share some excerpts with you:
With one of the longest and most successful careers in show business, what are your keys to success?
Carol Channing: Always remember that the next job is going to be your best. That’s one of the reasons I never missed a performance. It wasn’t that I was all fire healthy all the time. In fact, I would just get sicker thinking about that. I knew that trips had been planned, babysitters had been hired, and disappointing them made me sicker. I also knew that skipping a show meant you probably would have given your best performance, and you missed it.
As an international icon and a gay icon, what are your views on the current “state of affairs” in the LGBT community (specifically gay marriage)?
Carol Channing: I honestly don’t know. I never cared if someone was gay or not. If a friend was gay? Well, that’s all there was to it. The gay community is responsible for so much of my success, and I love them. It’s a mutual love affair, really. They make the better audiences too, because they laugh often and loudly. Applause is obligatory, but laughter is a reward, and gay audiences reward me often. Years ago, I was made their Queen in San Francisco, which is so much better than legend or icon. I was told that on that day, there wasn’t a blonde wig to be found in stores. Isn’t that wonderful.
What do you believe are the primary contributing factors that make you an acclaimed gay icon?
Carol Channing: I can’t think of myself as an icon or legend. The moment you do, then you’re not. There are so many talented people that have been called a “gay icon” that have no similarities at all. So I don’t know that I can answer that. There will always be certain individuals that a minority will put on pedestals, but for different reasons. The gay community has had Sophie Tucker, Ethel Merman, Bette Midler, Cher, Madonna. The list is long, really. The only thing I can think of that they have in common is a desire to lift up the audience.

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