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Angela Bowie

American actress and journalist

Angela Bowie (born Mary Angela Barnett; September 25, 1949) is an American actress and journalist who, along with her ex-husband David Bowie, influenced the glam rock culture and fashion of the 1970s.

She was married to Bowie (whom she *isted in conceptualizing the costumes for the Ziggy Stardust stage show) from 1970 until their divorce in 1980. The couple had one child, film director Duncan Jones.

Contents

  • 1 Early life and education
  • 2 Career
    • 2.1 Film and television
    • 2.2 Writing
    • 2.3 Music
    • 2.4 Journalism
  • 3 Personal life
    • 3.1 Relationships
    • 3.2 Estrangement from Duncan Jones
    • 3.3 Rolling Stones song "Angie"
  • 4 Fictional portrayals
  • 5 Bibliography
  • 6 References
  • 7 Interviews
  • 8 External links

Early life and education

Angie Bowie was born as Mary Angela Barnett, an American citizen, on September 25, 1949, in Cyprus to Col. George M. Barnett, a United States Army veteran, and his wife, Helena Maria Galas Barnett, a naturalized Canadian. Her father was a mining engineer and ran a mill for Cyprus Mines Corporation. She has one brother, who is 16 years older than her. Both her parents died in 1984.

She is of English and Polish descent, and she was raised as a Roman Catholic. However, she has identified as a Cypriot, writing in 2000: "I am a Cypriot by disposition. I don't have a p*port or Cypriot nationality but my heart is Cypriot, not Greek or Turkish Cypriot, just Cypriot."

Educated in Cyprus, Switzerland, and the UK (Kingston Polytechnic), she briefly attended Connecticut College until she was expelled after an affair with a girl, an event mentioned in her 1981 autobiography Free Spirit.

Career

Film and television

During the 1970s, Angie Bowie occasionally appeared as a guest on television talk shows. She appeared on The Tonight Show, hosted by Johnny Carson on November 16, 1973. She also performed on The Mike Douglas Show in early 1975.

She auditioned for the leading role for the television movie Wonder Woman which aired on March 12, 1974, and starred Cathy Lee Crosby (not as often reported for the later television series Wonder Woman, in which the *le role was played by Lynda Carter). Newsweek hypothesized in its February 11, 1974 issue that she lost the part because of her refusal to wear a bra.

Later in 1975, Bowie bought the television rights to Marvel Comics' characters Black Widow and Daredevil, hoping to develop and sell a series featuring the two heroes. She planned to play Black Widow, with actor Ben Carruthers as Daredevil. The series failed to secure a studio deal, and it never went beyond the development stage.

In March 1982, Bowie appeared on the television program The Old Grey Whistle Test, reciting poetry, while Mick Karn, from the band *an, played b*. Her performance was lambasted by the British media.

Bowie appeared as herself in the D.A. Pennebaker concert film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1973) and Glitter Goddess of Sunset Strip (1991). She also has had credited acting roles in at least four films: Eat the Rich (1987, as Henry's wife), Demented (1994), Deadrockstar (2002, as Bartender) and La Funcionaria Asesina (The Slayer Bureaucrat, 2009, as Helen Price/Constance).

On January 5, 2016, Bowie appeared on the seventeenth series of Celebrity Big Brother. On January 10, she was informed off screen of the death of her former husband David Bowie. Although she initially chose to stay in the house, she voluntarily decided to leave on January 19, in part on medical grounds.

Writing

Bowie has written two autobiographies: Free Spirit (1981, including samples of the author's poetry), as well as the Backstage P*es: Life On the Wild Side with David Bowie, published in 1993 and updated in 2000. It detailed her alleged drug-fueled and openly bisexual lifestyle with her former husband and many other well-known musicians. In 2014, she produced a large book about sex *led Pop Sex as well as a book about cats *led Cat-Astrophe. In 2015, she released the book Fancy Footwork: Poetry Collection.

Music

The CD maxi-single "The World Is Changing", with six mixes, including prominent vocal support by Dabonda Simmons, was credited to Bowie with co-composers David Padilla, Morgan Lekcirt, Tom Reich, Jim Durban and D.J. Trance. It appeared in 1996 on New York label Warlock Records (distributed in Europe through Music Avenue on the Nite Blue label). The cover featured a logo of the Bowie name clearly modeled on the one seen on her former husband's Let's Dance releases. The album Moon Goddess was released in 2002 on the record label The Electric Label.

She sang with Subterraneans vocalist Jude Rawlins on a version of the Rolling Stones song "The Last Time", also included on the 2003 Subterraneans album Orly Flight.

Journalism

Bowie has reinvented herself as a journalist specializing in gender issues. She served as a "roving reporter" for the transgender and drag monthly Frock Magazine. In 2002, she wrote a Pocket Essentials book *led Bisexuality.

Personal life

Relationships

She met musician David Bowie in London in 1969, at the age of 19. According to her, they met through their mutual friendship with record executive Calvin Mark Lee. The couple married one year later, on March 19, 1970, at Bromley Register Office in Beckenham Lane, Kent. They had an open marriage. She stated that they were not in love, and the union was a marriage of convenience. She told the Evening Standard, "We got married so that I could work . I didn't think it would last and David said, before we got married, 'I'm not really in love with you' and I thought that's probably a good thing." Their son Duncan Zowie Haywood Jones was born on May 30, 1971. He later preferred to be known as Joe or Joey but has reverted to the name Duncan Jones. After nine years of marriage, Angie and David Bowie separated, and they divorced on February 8, 1980, in Switzerland. In the divorce settlement, she received £500,000 paid in installments and a 10-year gagging clause. Not wanting to fight over custody, she left their son with David. She stated that David's drug habit had become so out of control that she believed giving him the responsibility of raising their son would stabilize him.

During her marriage, she often accompanied her husband on his international concert tours. He wrote the song "The Prettiest Star", about her. (During a backstage sequence in the concert film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, David calls Angie by the name Star). After the divorce, Bowie said she was blackballed from the entertainment industry and was so depressed that she considered suicide.

Following her divorce, Angela Barnett had a long-term relationship with punk musician Drew Blood (born Andrew Lipka); they had a daughter, Stacia Larranna Celeste Lipka (also referred to as Stasha). She later lived in Tucson, Arizona.

In 1993, she began a relationship with Michael G*ett, an electrical engineer nearly 20 years her junior. As of 2016 they lived in Acworth, Georgia.

Estrangement from Duncan Jones

Bowie is estranged from her son Duncan Jones, saying in a 2010 interview that a reconciliation was unlikely. She also mentioned the estrangement during her 2016 appearance on Celebrity Big Brother. She previously said that, although she has not seen her son since he was 13, he had been in very brief contact with her daughter Stasha in the early 2000s. "He emailed me and I didn't know what to say. So I put them together. They corresponded for a bit and then that stopped. He is cold, like his father. David cut me off. Zowie, or Duncan, cut me and Stasha off", she said.

When asked by The Times in 2017 whether she had been in touch with her son since David Bowie's death the year before, she responded "My son? No, why should I be? I'm not interested. It stopped when my father changed his will to not include an educational trust fund for Zowie because David divorced me. When my father did that, I followed precedent. It's over. Nothing. Nothing to do with me." In a 2018 interview for Marc Maron's WTF podcast, Jones reiterated that they never had reconciled, saying she was a "corrosive person."

Rolling Stones song "Angie"

Angie Bowie has long claimed to have inspired The Rolling Stones' hit song "Angie" from their 1973 album Goats Head Soup. However, the songwriters Mick Jagger and Keith Richards have consistently denied this. In 1993, in the liner notes to the Rolling Stones' compilation album Jump Back: The Best of The Rolling Stones, Richards said that the *le was inspired by his newborn daughter, Dandelion Angela. Later, in his 2010 memoir Life, he said that he had chosen the name at random when writing the song and that it "was not about any particular person." According to NME, the lyrics of the song were inspired by Jagger's breakup with Marianne Faithfull.

Fictional portrayals

The fictional character of Mandy, portrayed by Toni Collette in the film Velvet Goldmine, was based upon Bowie.

Bibliography

  • Angela Bowie Free Spirit. The book was published by Mushroom Books, in 1981 (name appears as "Angie Bowie" on the cover).
  • Angela Bowie Backstage P*es. The book was published by Jove Books, The Berkeley Publishing Group, in 1993.

References

    Interviews

    • Interview from BlairingOut.com – Oct. 2012

    External links

    • Official website
    • Angie Bowie at IMDb
    Live albums
    • David Live
    • Stage
    • Ziggy Stardust: The Motion Picture
    • Santa Monica '72
    • LiveAndWell.com
    • Gl* Spider
    • Live Santa Monica '72
    • VH1 Storytellers
    • Bowie at the Beeb
    • A Reality Tour
    • Live N*au Coliseum '76
    • Cracked Actor (Live Los Angeles '74)
    • Welcome to the Blackout (Live London '78)
    • Serious Moonlight (Live '83)
    • Glastonbury 2000
    • ChangesNowBowie
    • Ouvrez le Chien (Live Dallas 95)
    • Something in the Air (Live Paris 99)
    • I'm Only Dancing (The Soul Tour 74)
    • No Trendy Réchauffé (Live Birmingham 95)
    • Look at the Moon! (Live Phoenix Festival 97)
    • David Bowie At The Kit Kat Klub (Live New York 99)
    Soundtracks
    • Christiane F.
    • Love You till Tuesday
    • Labyrinth
    • Lazarus
    EPs
    • Baal
    • BBC Sessions 1969–1972
    • Earthling in the City
    • Live EP (Live at Fashion Rocks)
    • Space Oddity
    • The Next Day Extra
    • No Plan
    • Is It Any Wonder?
    Compilations
    • The World of David Bowie
    • Images 1966–1967
    • Changesonebowie
    • The Best of Bowie
    • Changestwobowie
    • Rare
    • Golden Years
    • Fame and Fashion
    • Changesbowie
    • Early On (1964–1966)
    • The Singles Collection
    • Rarestonebowie
    • The Deram Anthology 1966–1968
    • The Best of David Bowie 1969/1974
    • The Best of David Bowie 1974/1979
    • Bowie at the Beeb
    • All Saints
    • Best of Bowie
    • Club Bowie
    • The Collection
    • The Best of David Bowie 1980/1987
    • iSelect
    • Nothing Has Changed
    • Legacy
    Box sets
    • Sound + Vision
    • The Platinum Collection
    • David Bowie
    • Five Years (1969–1973)
    • Who Can I Be Now? (1974–1976)
    • A New Career in a New Town (1977–1982)
    • Loving the Alien (1983–1988)
    • Spying Through a Keyhole
    • Clareville Grove Demos
    • The 'Mercury' Demos
    • Conversation Piece
    • Brilliant Live Adventures
    • Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001)
    Concert videos
    • The 1980 Floor Show
    • Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars
    • Serious Moonlight
    • Gl* Spider
    • Tin Machine Live: Oy Vey, Baby
    • VH1 Storytellers
    • Reality: Tour Ed.
    • A Reality Tour
    • Glastonbury 2000
    Video albums
    • Love You till Tuesday
    • Video EP
    • Jazzin' for Blue Jean
    • Day-In Day-Out
    • Tin Machine
    • Bowie – The Video Collection
    • Black Tie White Noise
    • Jump: Interactive CD-ROM
    • Best of Bowie
    • Reality
    • The Best of David Bowie 1980/1987
    • The Next Day Extra
    Do*entaries
    • Cracked Actor
    • Ricochet
    • Black Tie White Noise
    • Sound and Vision
    Tours
    • Ziggy Stardust Tour
    • Diamond Dogs Tour
    • Isolar
    • Isolar II
    • Serious Moonlight Tour
    • Gl* Spider Tour
    • Tin Machine Tour
    • Sound+Vision Tour
    • It's My Life Tour
    • Outside Tour
    • Earthling Tour
    • Hours Tour
    • Mini Tour
    • Heathen Tour
    • A Reality Tour
    Related
    • Iman (wife)
    • Angie Bowie (first wife)
    • Duncan Jones (son)
    • The Hype
    • Junior's Eyes
    • BBC Sessions
    • Berlin Trilogy
    • Major Tom
    • Ziggy Stardust
      • The Spiders from Mars
    • Ava Cherry
    • The Thin White Duke
    • Jareth
    • The Nomad Soul
    • Symphony No. 1 "Low"
    • Symphony No. 4 "Heroes"
    • Symphony No. 12 "Lodger"
    • "Bowie"
    • David Bowie Narrates Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf
    • We Were So Turned On: A Tribute to David Bowie
    • The Life Aquatic Studio Sessions
    • Heteropoda davidbowie
    • Lazarus
    • Stardust
    • Death
    • Art collection
    • David Bowie Is
    • Statue of David Bowie
    • Tao Jones Index
    • Category