For Performers, The Show Must Always Go On
Posted Wed Jan 14, 2009 5:38pm PST by Billy Altman in
Stop The Presses!

In what's certain to be one of the most dramatic renditions of the Star Spangled Banner ever heard at a national sporting event, the National Football League confirmed today that
Jennifer Hudson is going to sing the National Anthem before the start of this year's Super Bowl in Tampa Florida on February 1.
Hudson's performance will mark her first public appearance since October, when the 27-year-old, Academy Award-winning performer's mother, brother and nephew were all killed in Chicago--a triple murder that Hudson's sister's estranged husband has been charged with committing.
Dealing with personal losses are, of course, a very real part of life for everyone. But having a spotlight shining brightly on an entertainer soon after enduring a private tragedy of the magnitude of Hudson's is a rather rare occurrence. Unfortunately, it does happen every now and then.

One of the most famous post-tragedy musical appearances--and while it came about because of an accident rather than a crime, the one most comparable to Hudson's in terms of the magnitude of the event marking the public return of a major performer after a devastating loss--was that of
Reba McEntire at the 1991 Oscars. On March 16 that year, following a concert in San Diego, a private plane carrying seven members of the country singer's backing band and McEntire's road manager crashed into the side of a mountain near the Mexican border, killing all on board. McEntire originally was going to be on the plane, too, but was suffering from bronchitis, and had been talked by her husband into staying behind to try and get a proper night's sleep.
McEntire immediately cancelled her upcoming concert dates, but on March 25, less than ten days after the terrible tragedy, she made good on her prescheduled appearance at the Academy Awards, where she performed the Oscar-nominated song "Checkin' Out," from the Meryl Streep film
Postcards From The Edge.
Because of the circumstances, Streep, who'd actually performed the song in the
film, reportedly offered to sing it herself, but McEntire decided to honor her
fallen friends' memories by doing the show--and with a worldwide audience
watching.

Still, perhaps the most famous--and undoubtedly the saddest--case of an entertainer overcoming a tragedy in public happened back in November 1943 to comedian
Lou Costello. Following a long illness that had kept him out of radio and film work for a year, Costello was ready to make his comeback on his popular nationally-aired radio show with partner Bud Abbott when, just hours before the broadcast, his one-year-old son drowned in the family's swimming pool. Instead of canceling, Costello performed the entire show. The moment the show signed off, he broke down in tears, while a shaken Abbott explained to the stunned studio audience what had happened to Costello earlier that day.
If ever the term "The Show Must Go On" was defined, that surely was it.
Gimme a break!
Nice job. You managed to be unsympathetic, cruel, racist and drag politics into a completely unrelated discussion, and label grief as "mental weakness" - a formidable achievement in one blog. Guess what? Not every column is written to present an "argument." He's just pointing out that yes, even the priviledged celebs you loathe do indeed go back to work after tragedy.
Take that axe you're so eager to grind and put it to work on the huge chip on your shoulder. You're pathetic.
AND wtf is up with the "(which, btw, is something that happens more in black communities and minority communities, according to the statistics)" bull?? It can happen anywhere at anytime. MyDemocratAzzhole, You are reading the worng statistics because "caucasians" are just as crazy to commit a crime like that of Hudson's ex brother-in-law! hell look at the "caucasians" who kill their children..hmmm you dont hear abt minorites doing that. So how is that for some damn statistics!!!!
lovely parenthetical with no statistical data to back it up. Racist and pathetic. Not many people, famous or not, lose their mother, brother and nephew all at once and to murder.
And nice that you single out Hudson when Reba and Costello were also lauded.
Tragedy is tragedy. The only thing I don't like about this article is that it makes a judgement on who suffered the worst tragedy.
How can we judge that?