[quote] While the song was a hit, the subject matter put Ian at the center of controversy. Some club owners refused to book her out of fear of violence, and in the new documentary Janis Ian: Breaking Silence, she recalls one show at Valley Music Theater in Encino, Calif. — "probably my fourth or fifth time on a concert stage" — where she got a lot more than she thought she could handle.
[quote] "When I started 'Society’s Child,' these people started yelling," Ian, who will turn 74 on April 7, recalls. "And I thought they were yelling something nice ‘cause on stage you can’t really hear what people are yelling very clearly. But I realized they were all yelling 'N---- lover!' at me. I didn’t know if it was 10 or 20 people or if it was the majority of the audience. It became this horrible, almost prayer-like chant."
[quote] She tried to block out the noise and focus on singing, but the chanting grew louder and louder. "I knew that I was going to start to cry, and I didn’t want them to see me cry." she says. "So I put down my guitar on the stage, and I walked off stage, and I went to the restroom, and I started to cry. I just didn’t know what I was supposed to do."
[quote] After a while, the promoter, who had been in the box-office and missed the commotion in the crowd, came into the bathroom and asked her why she wasn't on stage. After she explained what had happened, he delivered some tough words.
[quote] "He said, ‘Well, you don’t leave the stage because somebody calls you a name," Ian remembers. "People were getting shot. People were getting knifed. People were disappearing. Freedom riders were getting killed. It was civil war. And I didn’t want to die. I really didn’t want to die. We argued for quite a while. It felt like years. And he finally said something like, ‘I can’t believe the girl who wrote that song is a coward.’ "
[quote] Ian, the granddaughter of Jewish Russian immigrants, thought of everything her family had endured before coming to the United States. (Ian was born Janis Eddy Fink in Farmingdale, N.J.) "Who was I to leave the stage"? she decided. "So I went back on stage, and I picked up my guitar, and I started to sing again, and I thought, ‘Okay, here I am.’ And I made it my business to keep singing the song, get through the show."
[quote] The chanting continued, and the ushers came in and shined their flashlights on the people who were making the noise so the audience could see who they were. The theater manager then threw them out. Ian later realized that the 20-odd people who had created the ruckus had come to the concert for the express purpose of intimidating her. In the end, she was more affected by the people in the crowd and on staff who stood up to the hecklers.
[quote] "It was a life changing moment for me," Ian says. "Because I realized for the first time that the song didn’t just have the power to make people angry, but it had the power to make people stand up and stand up for what they believe. And that was a huge deal, that music could do that. I think that was a large part of what set me on my course."
I have no idea who she is, but good for her!
Check out this awesome pic of Janice Ian standing with a very young Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel.
Bruce was kind of cute.