Today's (Sunday's) Toronto Star has an
article/interview on Joni in the Arts & Entertainment
section. There's also a photo in the hard-copy
version.)

Here's a link:

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1035778493755&call_pageid=968867495754&col=969483191630

and here's the article for those who don't like links
(apologies for the bandwidth otherwise.):
------------------------------------------------------

Joni Mitchell's both sides now on display
Joni has looked at both sides of life

MARTIN KNELMAN

It's five o'clock on a weekday afternoon, and the
California sun is about to disappear into the Pacific
Ocean, but Joni Mitchell  who happens to be known as
one of the world's greatest and most original living
singer/songwriters  is still wearing her pyjamas.

"I've got to go to a birthday party and wrap a
present." 

She is standing in the yellow-and-blue-tiled kitchen
of her mansion in the upscale Bel Air neighbourhood of
Los Angeles, where she has spent most of the day
talking on the phone and drifting from room to room.

So far today she's been unable to get off the phone
long enough to get dressed. The birthday party is for
her former manager, Elliot Roberts, who is turning 60
(a milestone Mitchell herself will face next
November).

Now she's on the phone again, doing an interview with
some journalist in Toronto, once more telling the
story of the tall girl with high cheekbones and long
blonde hair who started her career in Yorkville coffee
houses and became famous for turning her own psychic
pain into popular art with such songs as "The Circle
Game," "Chelsea Morning," "Woodstock," "Big Yellow
Taxi" and "Turbulent Indigo," all the while recording
21 albums and winning five Grammy Awards.

To the despair of handlers trying to promote her
current album, Travelogue, Mitchell almost never gives
interviews, partly because she guards her privacy,
partly because she thinks the media always want to
turn everything into trivial gossip, partly because,
as she explains bluntly: "I'm not good with the press.
I can't handle it. I tend to be too honest."

But she has agreed to do just this one interview
because it's about The Life And Times Of Joni
Mitchell: A Woman Of Heart And Mind  a two-hour
television biography that will premiere Tuesday.

CBC will show it in two parts this week and next on
Life & Times. Then in April, PBS will show it in a
two-hour slot in its prestigious American Masters
series  a tremendous honour since the series does
indeed focus on artists who truly are masters.

Having the film made was by no means an easy or
relaxing experience but Mitchell has seen the finished
product. She likes it and wants other people to see
it, though she is also honest about her reservations:
"You can't get a whole life into a bio. I feel that
I'm a jukebox with 300 buttons, and people keep
pressing only two  A1 and B2.

"The only reason I'm doing this interview is that I
think the film is touching and unusual. I have my own
criticisms of it, but it's good storytelling, and you
get drawn into it. My father once said to me, `Joan,
you've lived many lives in one.' I think this piece
brings that out. It's like a fairy tale. It shows a
life that's been wonderful and difficult and full of
challenges and joys. Susan Lacy (the director and
editor) took a lyrical, poetic approach; it's a very
romantic piece."

In almost every room of Mitchell's house there is a
radio tuned to a different station, though none is
tuned to a music station. "There has been a tremendous
drop in the standards of music on the radio. It was
always the fluffy stuff that got the most attention,
but there used to be places where the pioneering
spirit had its place. Now it's all droning mediocrity.
You'd have to be on ecstasy to enjoy the direction
music has gone in. I've lost interest. I don't want to
be a part of it."

Instead her radios are tuned to talk stations offering
news flashes and political commentary, which all seem
like madness to her.

"I wander through my house trying to get a picture of
what is happening to the human psyche," she says in a
tone that's both perplexed and angry. "The whole thing
is ridiculous  a tragic comedy. We're marching into
war. That means we've become an imperialist power,
which goes against everything America stands for. It
all comes down to personal economic interest."

Whatever her bank account may say, she is still
essentially that vulnerable waif who was born in Fort
Macleod, Alberta, raised in Saskatchewan, and who made
the world take notice when she strummed her guitar and
sang about her deepest feelings in a sweet soprano
voice that ranges over several octaves.

Susan Lacy, the American Masters veteran
producer-director, has gone way beyond the usual
conventions of TV bios, creating a riveting narrative
that tells the story of Mitchell's life while also
providing a complex and intelligent overview of the
ups and downs of her career. It includes not only
marvellous performance footage but also revealing
interviews with, among others, David Crosby, Graham
Nash and David Geffen.

The film was produced by Eagle Vision, an independent
company, in association with PBS, and has a different
feel from most CBC Life & Times bios, partly because
it's twice as long as most, and partly because it was
acquired by CBC with little creative input.

For years Mitchell has bemoaned celebrity even though
she was also conscious of enjoying its benefits, and
she has always followed her own personal and artistic
instincts rather than giving in to the fashion of the
times and commercial pressures. You are not ever going
to see Joni Mitchell in Las Vegas doing a "Joni's
greatest hits" act that exploits her audience's
nostalgia for the 1960s and 1970s.

Over the years she has faced her share of meltdowns.
Husbands and lovers have come and gone. "I'm a serial
monogamist and I've had good relationships," she says.
"I'm proud that there are men in the bio who speak
tenderly and insightfully about me."

The critics were sometimes unkind about her constant
attempts to be fresh and inventive. She had a kind of
nervous breakdown  out of which came fresh
inspiration. She withdrew into painting and
meditation.

She had already been written off as has-been a decade
ago when she quipped: "Now I have rich people's
problems, and you can't make songs out of rich
people's problems."

That was before her spectacular 1994 comeback with an
album that won two Grammys and new fans. Then in 1997,
she was elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 
the same year she was deluged with publicity about her
reunion with the daughter she, as an unwed mother, had
given up more than 30 years earlier.

Through it all, Joni Mitchell has never forgotten
exactly who she is or where she came from. When you
listen to her new version of "Both Sides Now" on her
2000 album of the same title, it's obvious her voice
doesn't have the lyric purity it had when she first
sang it three decades earlier. But now her voice has
the rich and weary, smoky lived-in quality of a woman
who has enough experience to understand at last the
words she wrote so long ago.

"Something's lost but something's gained/ In living
every day."

And when you hear the thrillingly mature Joni Mitchell
revisit this signature song, you know you're getting
the simple truth, without lipstick or makeup:

I've looked at life from both sides now

>From win and lose and still somehow

It's life's illusions that I recall

I really don't know life at all.

=====
Catherine
Toronto

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