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Helen Reddy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian-American singer, actress, TV host, and activist (1941–2020)

Helen Reddy
Reddy in 1975
Born
Helen Maxine Reddy

(1941-10-25)25 October 1941
Melbourne,Victoria, Australia
Died29 September 2020(2020-09-29) (aged 78)
Los Angeles, California, US
CitizenshipAustralian, American[1]
Occupation(s)Singer, actress, activist, television host
Years active1965–2002
2011–2017
Known for"I Am Woman"
Political partyDemocratic[1]
Spouses
Children2
RelativesToni Lamond (half-sister)
Tony Sheldon (nephew)
Patsy Reddy (cousin)
Musical career
GenresPop,easy listening
InstrumentVocals
Labels
Musical artist

Helen Maxine Reddy (25 October 1941 – 29 September 2020) was an Australian-American singer, actress, television host, and activist. Born inMelbourne to a show business family, Reddy started her career as an entertainer at age four. She sang on radio and television and won a talent contest on the television programBandstand[a] in 1966; her prize was a ticket to New York City and a record audition, which was unsuccessful. After a short and unsuccessful singing career in New York, she eventually moved to Chicago, and subsequently, Los Angeles, where she made her debut singles "One Way Ticket" and "I Believe in Music" in 1968 and 1970, respectively. The B-side of the latter single, "I Don't Know How to Love Him", reached number eight on the pop chart of the Canadian magazineRPM. She was signed toCapitol Records a year later.[2]

During the 1970s, Reddy enjoyed international success, especially in the United States, where she placed 15 singles on the top 40 of theBillboard Hot 100. Six made the top 10 and three reached number one, including her signature hit "I Am Woman".[3][4] She placed 25 songs on theBillboard Adult Contemporary chart; 15 made the top 10 and eight reached number one, six consecutively. In 1974, at the inauguralAmerican Music Awards, she won the award forFavorite Pop/Rock Female Artist. On television, she was the first Australian to host a one-hour weekly primetime variety show on an American network, along with specials that were seen in more than 40 countries.[5]

Between the 1980s and 1990s, as her single "I Can't Say Goodbye to You" (1981) became her last to chart in the US, Reddy acted in musicals and recorded albums such asCenter Stage before retiring from live performance in 2002. She returned to university in Australia, earned a degree, and practised as a clinicalhypnotherapist and motivational speaker. In 2011, after singing "Breezin' Along with the Breeze" with her half-sister,Toni Lamond, for Lamond's birthday, Reddy decided to return to live performing.[5]

Reddy's song "I Am Woman" played a significant role in popular culture, becoming an anthem forsecond-wave feminism. She came to be known as a "feminist poster girl" or a "feminist icon".[6] In 2011,Billboard named her the number-28 adult contemporary artist of all time (the number-9 woman). In 2013, theChicago Tribune dubbed her the "Queen of '70s Pop".[7]

Early years

[edit]

Helen Maxine Reddy[8][9] was born into a well-known Australian showbusiness family inMelbourne. Her mother was Stella Campbell (née Lamond), an actress, singer and dancer; her father was Maxwell David Reddy (born 1914 in Melbourne, Victoria), a writer, producer and actor. Her mother performed at the Majestic Theatre inSydney and was best-known as a regular cast member on the television programsHomicide (1964),Bellbird (1967) andCountry Town (1971).[10] During Reddy's childhood, she was educated atTintern Grammar[11] and later Stratherne Girls' School in Hawthorn for a short time (mostly to study drama)[citation needed]. Her half-sisterToni Lamond and her nephewTony Sheldon are actor-singers.[12]

Reddy had Irish, Scottish and English ancestry.[13] Her great-great-grandfather, Edward Reddy, was born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1855. Her Scottish great-grandfather, Thomas Lamond, was a one-time mayor ofWaterloo, New South Wales, whose patron wasHercules Robinson, 1st Baron Rosmead.[14]Patsy Reddy, a former New Zealandgovernor-general, is a distant cousin.[15]

Reddy was born duringWorld War II. Her father was asergeant in theAustralian Army with a unit of entertainers, serving inNew Guinea with one of his actor friends,Peter Finch, at the time of Reddy's birth.[16] Her father returned to service during theKorean War.[17]

At age four, Reddy joined her parents on the Australianvaudeville circuit, singing and dancing; she recalled: "It was instilled in me: 'You will be a star'. So between the ages of 12 and 17, I got rebellious and decided this was not for me. I was going to be a housewife and mother."[18] At age 12, owing to her parents' constant touring nationwide and their arguing, Reddy went to live with her paternal aunt, Helen "Nell" Reddy, "who was her role model"; as her aunt, "she gave her niece stability, a sense of morality, and strength" for her future career as a singer who motivated women.[19] The younger Helen's teenaged rebellion in favour of domesticity manifested as marriage to Kenneth Claude Weate, a considerably older musician and family friend; divorce ensued, and to support herself as a single mother to daughter Traci, she resumed her performing career, concentrating on singing, since health problems precluded dancing (she had a kidney removed at 17). She sang on radio and television, eventually winning a talent contest on the Australian pop music TV showBandstand, the prize ostensibly being a trip to New York City to cut a single forMercury Records. After arriving in New York in 1966, she was informed by Mercury that her prize was only the chance to "audition" for the label and that Mercury considered theBandstand footage to constitute her audition, which was deemed unsuccessful. Despite having onlyUS$200 (equivalent to $1,938 in 2024) and a return ticket to Australia, she decided to remain in the United States with three-year-old Traci and pursue a singing career.[20]

Music career

[edit]

1966–1968: Early career

[edit]

Reddy recalled her 1966 appearance at the Three Rivers Inn inSyracuse, New York—"[T]here were like twelve people in the audience"[21]—as being typical of her early US performing career. Her lack of awork permit made it difficult to obtain singing jobs and she was forced to make trips to Canada which did not require work permits for citizens ofCommonwealth countries. In 1968,Martin St James, an Australianstage hypnotist she had met in New York City, threw Reddy a party with an admission price ofUS$5 (equivalent to $45.21 in 2024) to enable Reddy—then down to her lastUS$12 (equivalent to $108.51 in 2024)—to pay her rent. On this occasion, Reddy met her future manager and husband, Jeff Wald, a 22-year-old secretary at theWilliam Morris Agency who crashed the party.[22] Reddy toldPeople in 1975, "[Wald] didn't pay the five dollars, but it was love at first sight."[18]

Wald recalled that Reddy and he married three days after meeting and, along with daughter Traci, the couple took up residence at theHotel Albert inGreenwich Village.[22] Reddy later stated that she married Wald "out of desperation over her right to work and live in the United States".[23] According toNew York Magazine, Wald was fired from William Morris soon after having met Reddy and "Helen supported them for six months doing $35-a-night hospital and charity benefits. They were so broke that they snuck out of a hotel room carrying their clothes in paper bags." Reddy recalled: "When we did eat, it wasspaghetti, and we spent what little money we had on cockroach spray."[18] They left New York City for Chicago, where Wald landed a job as talent coordinator atMister Kelly's. While in Chicago, Reddy gained a reputation singing in local lounges, including Mister Kelly's, and in 1968 she landed a deal withFontana Records, a division of major-label Chicago-basedMercury Records.[19] Her first single, "One Way Ticket", on Fontana was not an American hit but it did give Reddy her first appearance on any chart as it peaked at number 83 in her native Australia.[24]

1969–1975: "I Am Woman" era and stardom

[edit]

Within a year, Wald moved Reddy and Traci to Los Angeles, where he was hired atCapitol Records, the label under which Reddy was to attain stardom; however, Wald was hired and fired the same day.[19] At the same time, in 1969, Reddy enrolled at theUniversity of California Los Angeles to study psychology and philosophy part-time.[25][26]

Reddy became frustrated as Wald found success managing acts such asDeep Purple andTiny Tim without making any evident effort to promote her; after 18 months of career inactivity, Reddy gave Wald an ultimatum: "he [must] either revitalise her career or get out... Jeff threw himself into his new career as Mr. Helen Reddy. Five months of phone calls to Capitol Records executive Artie Mogull finally paid off; Mogull agreed to let Helen cut one single if Jeff promised not to call for a month. She did "I Believe in Music" penned byMac Davis backed with "I Don't Know How to Love Him" fromTim Rice andAndrew Lloyd Webber'sJesus Christ Superstar. The A-side fell flat, but then some Canadian DJs flipped the record over and it became a hit – number 13 in June 1971 – and Helen Reddy was on her way."[19]

Reddy's stardom was solidified when her single "I Am Woman" reached number one on theBillboard Hot 100 in December 1972. The song was co-written by Reddy withRay Burton; Reddy attributed the impetus for writing "I Am Woman" and her early awareness of the women's movement to expatriate Australian rock critic and pioneer feministLillian Roxon. Reddy is quoted inFred Bronson'sTheBillboard Book of Number One Hits as having said that she was looking for songs to record which reflected the positive self-image she had gained from joining the women's movement but could not find any, so "I realised that the song I was looking for didn't exist, and I was going to have to write it myself."[27] "I Am Woman" first appeared on her debut albumI Don't Know How to Love Him, released in May 1971. A new recording of the song was released as a single in May 1972 but barely dented the charts. Female listeners soon adopted the song as an anthem and began requesting it from their local radio stations in droves, resulting in its September chart re-entry and eventual number-one peak. "I Am Woman" earned Reddy aGrammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. At the awards ceremony, Reddy concluded her acceptance speech by famously thanking God "because She makes everything possible". The success of "I Am Woman" made Reddy the first Australian singer to top the US charts.[28]

Three decades after her Grammy, Reddy discussed the song's iconic status: "I think it came along at the right time. I'd gotten involved in thewomen's movement, and there were a lot of songs on the radio about being weak and being dainty and all those sort of things. All the women in my family, they were strong women. They worked. They lived through theDepression and a world war, and they were just strong women. I certainly didn't see myself as being dainty", she said.[7]

Over the next five years following her first success, Reddy had more than a dozen US top-40 hits, including two more number-one hits. These tracks includedKenny Rankin's "Peaceful" (number 12), theAlex Harveycountry ballad "Delta Dawn" (number one),Linda Laurie's "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" (number three), Danny Janssen & Bobby Hart's "Keep on Singing" (number 15),Paul Williams' "You and Me Against the World" (featuring daughter Traci reciting the spoken bookends) (number 9),Alan O'Day's "Angie Baby" (number one),Véronique Sanson andPatti Dahlstrom's "Emotion" (number 22),Harriet Schock's "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady" (number eight) and theRichard Kerr/Will Jennings-penned "Somewhere in the Night" (number 19). She also had two Australian number-one singles, while "Angie Baby" was her only UK top-40 hit.[29]

From left to right:Dionne Warwick,Don Kirshner, Reddy andOlivia Newton-John in 1974

On 23 July 1974, Reddy received a star, located at 1750 Vine Street, on theHollywood Walk of Fame for her work in the music industry.[30][31]

In August–September 1974, Reddy, along withRolf Harris and many other entertainers and performers, to perform atExpo '74 inSpokane, Washington. On Tuesday 24 September Australia held a "national day", with Reddy singing thenational anthem.[32][33][34]

In late 1975, Reddy toured East Asia, Australia and New Zealand and collected 16 gold records, including 6 gold records in Australia and 6 gold records in New Zealand.[35]

At the height of her fame in the mid 1970s, Reddy was a headliner, with a full chorus of backup singers and dancers to standing-room-only crowds on theLas Vegas Strip. Among her opening acts wereJoan Rivers,David Letterman,Bill Cosby andBarry Manilow. In 1976, Reddy recordedthe Beatles' song "The Fool on the Hill" for the musical documentaryAll This and World War II.[36]

Reddy was also instrumental in supporting the career of friendOlivia Newton-John, encouraging her to move from England to the United States in the early 1970s, giving her professional opportunities that did not exist in the UK. At a dinner party at Reddy's house, Newton-John met producerAllan Carr, who offered her the starring role in the hit film version of the musicalGrease.[37]

1976–1990: Career decline

[edit]

Reddy was most successful on theEasy Listening chart, scoring eight number-one hits there over a three-year span, from "Delta Dawn" in 1973 to "I Can't Hear You No More" in 1976. However, the latter track evidenced a sharp drop in popularity for Reddy, with a number-29 peak on theBillboard Hot 100. Reddy's 1977 remake ofCilla Black's 1964 hit "You're My World" indicated comeback potential, with a number-18 peak, but this track – co-produced byKim Fowley – would prove to be Reddy's last top-40 hit. Its source album,Ear Candy, Reddy's 10th album, became her first album to not attain at leastgold status since her second full-length release, 1972'sHelen Reddy.[38]

In 1978, Reddy sang as a backup singer onGene Simmons's solo album on the song "True Confessions".[39] That year also saw the release of Reddy's only live album,Live in London, recorded at theLondon Palladium.

Of Reddy's eight subsequent single releases on Capitol, five reached the Easy Listening top 50 – including "Candle on the Water", from the 1977 Disney filmPete's Dragon (which starred Reddy). Only three ranked on theBillboard Hot 100: "The Happy Girls" (number 57) – the follow-up to "You're My World", and besides "I Am Woman", Reddy's only chart item that she co-wrote – and the disco tracks "Ready or Not" (number 73) and "Make Love to Me" (number 60), the latter a cover of an Australian hit byKelly Marie, which gave Reddy a lone R&B chart ranking at number 59. Reddy also made it to number 98 on theCountry chart with "Laissez les bon Temps Rouler", the B-side to "The Happy Girls".[40]

Without the impetus of any major hits, Reddy's four Capitol album releases subsequent toEar Candy failed to chart. In 1981, she said: "I signed [with Capitol] ten years ago ... And when you are with a company so long you tend to be taken for granted. For the last three years, I didn't feel I was getting the support from them."[41]

May 1981 had the release ofPlay Me Out, Reddy's debut album forMCA Records, which she said had "made me a deal we [Reddy and Wald] couldn't refuse"; "we shopped around and felt the most enthusiasm at MCA".[41] Reddy's new label affiliation would result in only one minor success; her remake ofBecky Hobbs's 1979 country hit "I Can't Say Goodbye to You" returned her for the last time to theBillboard Hot 100 at number 88; it also returned Reddy to the charts in the UK and Ireland (her sole previous hit in both was "Angie Baby"). Her 14 November 1981Top of the Pops performance brought "I Can't Say Goodbye to You" into the UK top 50; the track would rise there no higher than number 43, but in Ireland reached number 16, giving Reddy her final high placing on a major national chart. MCA released one further Reddy album,Imagination, in 1983; it would prove to be Reddy's final release as a career recording artist.[42]

The unsuccessfulImagination was released just after the finalisation of Reddy's divorce from Wald, whose alleged subsequent interference in her career she blamed for the decline of her career profile in the mid-1980s: "Several of my performing contracts were cancelled, and one promoter told me he couldn't book me in case a certain someone 'came after him with a shotgun'."[23] Reddy states that she was effectively being blacklisted from her established performance areas, which led to her pursuing a career in theatre where Wald had no significant influence.[43]

1990s–2000: Later recordings

[edit]

In 1990, Reddy issuedFeel So Young on her own label – an album that includes remakes of her repertoire favourites. Meanwhile, her one recording in the interim had been the 1987dance maxisingle "Mysterious Kind", on which Reddy had vocally supported Jessica Williams. The 1997 release ofCenter Stage was an album of show tunes which Reddy recorded forVarèse Sarabande; the track "Surrender" – originating inSunset Boulevard – was remixed for release as a dance maxisingle. Reddy's final album was the 2000 seasonal releaseThe Best Christmas Ever. In April 2015, Reddy released a cover of the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" for the albumKeep Calm and Salute The Beatles on thePurple Pyramid label.[44]

2002–2010: Retirement

[edit]
Reddy (second from right) in early 2007 with students at a women's leadership conference in Sydney

Reddy announced her retirement from performing in 2002, giving her farewell performance with theEdmonton Symphony Orchestra. The same year, she moved from her longtime residence inSanta Monica, California, back to her native Australia to spend time with her family, living first onNorfolk Island[45] before taking up residence inSydney.[43]

Reddy also earned a degree in clinicalhypnotherapy andneuro-linguistic programming. She was a practising clinical hypnotherapist and patron of the Australian Society of Clinical Hypnotherapists.[46][36]

At a ceremony in August 2006, Reddy was inducted into theAustralian Recording Industry Association (ARIA)Hall of Fame by actress singer,Toni Collette, who described her song, "I Am Woman", as "timeless". The song was performed by fellow Australian,Vanessa Amorosi.[47]

In April 2008, Reddy was reported to be living "simply and frugally off song royalties, pension funds, and social security ... [renting] a 13th-floor apartment with a 180° view ofSydney Harbour".[48] Her apartment had been recently appraised, causing Reddy concern over its future affordability; however, the New York-based landlord learned his tenant's identity and wrote her: "I had no idea it wasthe Helen Reddy who was living in my unit. Because of what you have done for millions of women all over the world, I will not sell or raise your rent. I hope you'll be very happy living there for years to come."[48]

For several years, Reddy maintained that she would not return to the stage. In 2008, she stated, "It's not going to happen. I've moved on", and explained that her voice had deepened to a lower key and she was not sure if she would be able to sing some of her hits. She also said that she had simply lost interest in performing, saying that "I have very wide-ranging interests".[48] In 2011 she was interviewed by Australian television and said she was very happy to be retired from show business.[49]

2011–2020: Brief comeback to concerts

[edit]

In 2011, Reddy decided to return to performing after being buoyed by the warm reception she received when she sang at her sister's 80th birthday party. "I hadn't heard my voice in 10 years, and when I heard it coming over the speaker, it was like: 'Oh, that's not bad. Maybe I should do that again,'" Reddy explained in 2013.[7]

Being more in control of her performances also appealed to Reddy, who said, "I have more leeway in the songs that I choose to sing. I'm not locked into what the record company wants."[7] She explained, "One of the reasons that I'm coming back to singing is because I'm not doing the greatest hits. I'm doing the songs that I always loved. So many are album cuts that never got any airplay, and they're gorgeous songs."[50] She also performed many of her best-known songs, including, "Angie Baby", "You and Me Against the World", a medley of "Delta Dawn"/"Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady", and "I Am Woman", reasoning on the latter that the audience "comes to hear" it.[7]

She said she refused to sing "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)" because she disliked the monotony of the repeated chorus. "They used to have a contest on the radio that you could get two free tickets to Helen Reddy's show if you could tell us how many times she sang "leave me alone". I think it was like 42 times," she said.[7]

Reddy appeared in downtown Los Angeles at the2017 Women's March on 21 January. The march for women's rights and unity following theinauguration of Donald Trump brought out 750,000 people. Reddy was introduced by actressJamie Lee Curtis and sang ana cappella version of "I Am Woman".[51][52]

In August 2015, unnamed sources revealed that Reddy was diagnosed withdementia and had moved into theMotion Picture and Television Fund's Samuel Goldwyn Center, where she was cared for by family and friends.[53]

Film, theatre and television

[edit]
Reddy (right) withCarol Burnett, 1973

A frequent guest on talk shows and variety programs of the 1970s and early 1980s – with credits includingThe Bobby Darin Show,The Carol Burnett Show andThe Muppet Show – Reddy helmed the 1973 summer replacement series forThe Flip Wilson Show (Reddy had become friends withFlip Wilson when she worked the Chicago club circuit early in her career); the series,The Helen Reddy Show, provided early national exposure forAlbert Brooks andthe Pointer Sisters.[54] She also served as the semiregular host of the late-night variety showThe Midnight Special in 1975 and 1976.[55]

Reddy's film career included a starring role inWalt Disney'sPete's Dragon, introducing theOscar-nominated song "Candle on the Water" and the role of a nun inAirport 1975, singing her own composition "Best Friend". For her part inAirport 1975, Reddy was nominated for aGolden Globe forMost Promising Newcomer – Female.[56] Reddy was one of many musical stars featured in the all-star chorale in the filmSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978). She later played cameo roles in the filmsDisorderlies (1987) andThe Perfect Host (2010).[57]

Despite her late 1970s decline on the music charts, Reddy still had sufficient star power in 1979 to hostThe Helen Reddy Special, broadcast that May onABC-TV, of which Jeff Wald was the producer. In September 1981, Reddy announced she would be shooting the pilot for her own TV sitcom, in which she would play a single mother working as a lounge singer inLake Tahoe,[41] but the project was abandoned. She was an occasional television guest star as an actress, appearing on the television programsThe Love Boat,Fantasy Island,The Jeffersons (as herself),Diagnosis: Murder andBeastMaster.[58]

In the mid-1980s, Reddy embarked on a new career in the theatre. She mostly worked in musicals, includingAnything Goes,Call Me Madam,[59]The Mystery of Edwin Drood and – both onBroadway and theWest EndBlood Brothers.[60] She also appeared in four productions of the one-woman showShirley Valentine.[61]

Reddy's notable stage roles included:

  • Shirley Valentine – as Shirley, which she performed in numerous venues across the US in 1997.[62]
  • Blood Brothers – as Mrs Johnstone – Broadway (1995), West End and Liverpool.[63]
  • Love, Julie – as Gail Sinclair.[64]
  • The Mystery of Edwin Drood – as Edwin Drood/Miss Alice Nutting – Sacramento Music Circus.[65]
  • Call Me Madam – as Mrs Sally Adams – Sacramento Music Circus (August 1986).[66]
  • Anything Goes – as Reno Sweeney
    • Long Beach Civic Light Opera (July 1987).[67]
    • Sacramento Music Circus (July 1985).[65]
  • Senior Entourage – as Helen – (May 2021).

In 2007, Reddy had a voice cameo as herself in theFamily Guy television show'sStar Wars parody, "Blue Harvest".[68] In 2011, she guest-starred onFamily Guy again, singing the opening theme song for the show's fictional Channel 5 News telecast.[69]

Personal life

[edit]

Political service, citizenship

[edit]

Reddy became anaturalised American citizen in 1974, saying after the ceremony, "I feel like I'd like to have a cup of tea and a good cry."[70] She resumed her Australian citizenship subsequently, when the opportunity to maintain dual American–Australian citizenship became available.[1]

Reddy was active in community affairs:

Family

[edit]
Reddy and Wald withBetty Ford in 1976

Three of Reddy's forebears left Ireland and went to Canada, Australia and New Zealand. A distant cousin, former New Zealand governor-generalPatsy Reddy, is descended from their mutual New Zealand forebear.[74]

Reddy was an enthusiasticgenealogist; she researched her family's history extensively and founded the Tasmanian Genealogical Society.[75] "Genealogy is addictive; it begins as an interest, becomes a hobby, then a passion, and finally an obsession. Not only with each generation uncovered does the number of people to investigate double, but so too does the desire to understand the forces that shaped them," she wrote in her autobiography.[76] She was asked in an interview whether her name had any connection to theReddycaste from India. Her response was: "I have done some research on my father's side; most of my research has been done on my mother's side. His father was born in Ireland, but his great-grandfather served with an Irish regiment stationed in India, so it is possible that I have Indian ancestry. But it has not yet been established."[75]

At age 20, Reddy married Kenneth Claude Weate, an older musician and family friend whom she says she wed to defy her parents, who wished her to follow them into show business.[57] The couple separated not long after the birth of their daughter, Traci.[57]

In 1968, she married Jeff Wald, a native ofthe Bronx.[57] She converted to Judaism before marrying Wald,[77] with whom she had a son, Jordan,[78][b] born in 1972.[79]

In a 1975People interview, Reddy admitted that her relationship with then-husband and manager Wald was volatile, with the couple having "huge, healthy fights", but that she owed her success (she was then the world's biggest-selling female vocalist for two consecutive years) to Wald: "He runs it all. Naturally, when the moment of performance comes I have to deliver – but everything else is him. It's not my career; it's our career."[80]

By 2 January 1981, Reddy and Wald had separated and he had moved into aBeverly Hills treatment facility to overcome an eight-yearcocaine addiction, a US$100,000-per-year habit (US$325,828 in 2024)[81].[79] Reddy subsequently filed for divorce, yet withdrew her petition the day after filing it, stating: "After 13 years of marriage, a separation of one month is too short to make a decision."[22] In 1982, after finding evidence of Wald's continued substance abuse, Reddy again separated from him and initiated divorce proceedings, which this time went through in January 1983. They agreed to shared custody of their son Jordan, but later became embroiled in a court battle after both filed for sole custody.[79] Her son later changed his surname to Sommers and became her assistant.[48]

In June 1983, she married Milton Ruth, a drummer in her band; the couple divorced in 1995.[57]

Death

[edit]

Reddy died at theMotion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Los Angeles on 29 September 2020, at the age of 78.[82] She suffered fromAddison's disease anddementia in her later years. No cause of death was given.[83][57]

Reddy's second husband and former manager, Jeff Wald, died on November 12, 2021, at the age of 77.[84]

Portrayals

[edit]

A biographical film about Reddy titledI Am Woman was released in 2019, in which Reddy is played byTilda Cobham-Hervey.[85]

Awards

[edit]

American Music Awards

[edit]

TheAmerican Music Awards (AMAs) is an annual American music awards show. They commenced in 1974. Reddy won one award from four nominations.

YearNominee / workAwardResult
1974Helen ReddyFavorite Pop/Rock Female ArtistWon
1975Helen ReddyFavorite Pop/Rock Female ArtistNominated
1976Helen ReddyFavorite Pop/Rock Female ArtistNominated
1977Helen ReddyFavorite Pop/Rock Female ArtistNominated

APRA Awards

[edit]

TheAPRA Awards are presented annually from 1982 by theAustralasian Performing Right Association (APRA), "honouring composers and songwriters".[86]

YearNominee / workAwardResult
2021[87]Helen ReddyTed Albert Award for Outstanding Services to Australian Musicawarded

ARIA Music Awards

[edit]

TheARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres ofAustralian music. They commenced in 1987.

YearNominee / workAwardResult
2006[88]Helen ReddyARIA Hall of Fameinducted

Australian Women in Music Awards

[edit]

TheAustralian Women in Music Awards is an annual event that celebrates outstanding women in theAustralian Music Industry who have made significant and lasting contributions in their chosen field. They commenced in 2018.

YearNominee / workAwardResult
2018[89]Helen ReddyAWMA Honour Rollinducted

Grammy Awards

[edit]

TheGrammy Awards is an award presented bythe Recording Academy to recognise achievements in themusic industry. They commenced in 1959. Reddy has won one award from two nominations.[90]

YearNominee / workAwardResult
1973"I Am Woman"Best Female Pop Vocal PerformanceWon
1976"Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady"Best Female Pop Vocal PerformanceNominated

People's Choice Awards

[edit]

ThePeople's Choice Awards is an American awards show, recognising people in entertainment, voted online by the general public and fans. The show has been held annually since 1975.

YearNominee / workAwardResult
1975[91]Helen ReddyFavorite Female PerformerNominated

Recognition

[edit]

In December 2020, Reddy was listed at number 35 inRolling Stone Australia's "50 Greatest Australian Artists of All Time" issue.[92]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1974Airport 1975Sister Ruth[93]
1977Pete's DragonNora[94]
1978Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club BandOur Guests At Heartland[95]
1987DisorderliesHappy Socialite[96]
2010The Perfect HostCathy Knight[97]
2020Senior EntourageHelen

Television

[edit]
YearTitlePerformanceType
1962In Melbourne TonightHerself / SingerTV series, Australia
1962Sunnyside UpHerself / SingerTV series Australia, 1 episode
1965–1966BandstandHerself / SingerTV series Australia, 4 episodes
1968–1979The Mike Douglas ShowHerself - Co-host / Herself - SingerTV series US, 13 episodes
1970–1981The Tonight Show with Johnny CarsonHerself / Herself - Musical Guest / Herself - Host / Herself - Guest Hostess / Herself - GuestTV series US, 31 episodes
1970The Sound of MusicHerself/PerformerTV series, 1 episode, Australia
1971The Virginia Graham ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1971–1980Dick Clark's American BandstandHerself / Guest / Musical GuestTV series US, 5 episodes
1971Make Your Own Kind Of Music!Herself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1971The David Frost ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 2 episodes
1972–1977The Carol Burnett ShowHerself - Guest / Various characters / HerselfTV series US, 6 episodes
1972–1973The Merv Griffin ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 5 episodes
1972Love! Love! Love!HerselfTV special, US
1972The Glen Campbell Goodtime HourHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1972The Talk of the TownHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1972The John Byner Comedy HourHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1972Rollin' On The RiverHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1973The Bobby Darin ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1973–1977The Midnight SpecialHerself - Host / Herself - Hostess / Herself - SingerTV series US, 17 episodes
1973Morecombe and WiseHerself - GuestTV series UK, 1 episode
1973The New Bill Cosby ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1973The 15th Annual Grammy AwardsHerself - Winner song of the year "I Am Woman"TV special, US
1973The Helen Reddy ShowHerself - HostessTV series US, 8 episodes
1973Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day TelethonHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1973FlipHerselfTV series US, 2 episodes
1974American Music AwardsHerself - HostTV special, US
1974GTKHerselfABC TV series Australia, 1 episode
1974The 16th Annual Grammy AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1974–1975The Mac Davis ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 2 episodes
1975American Guild Of Variety Artists 5th Annual Entertainer Of The Year AwardsHerself - Honoree Female VocalistTV special, US
1975The Don Rickles Show - Mr. WarmthHerselfTV special, US
1975The Flip Wilson SpecialHerselfTV special, US
1975The 47th Annual Academy AwardsHerself - Audience memberTV special, US
1975The Glen Campbell Music ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1975Sammy And CompanyHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1975Sunday SpecialHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1975–1976Dinah!HerselfTV series US, 3 episodes
1975TattletalesHerself & Jeff WaldTV series US, 5 episodes
1975–1985Top of the PopsHerself - SingerTV series UK, 5 episodes
1975Adesso musicaHerselfTV series Italy/Germany, 1 episode
1975Helen Reddy In ConcertHerself - SingerTV special, UK
1975Some Of My Best Friends Are MenHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1975Helen Reddy ConcertHerselfTV Concert special, AUSTRALIA
1976Friars Club Tribute To Gene KellyHerself - PerformerTV special, US
1976Celebration: The American SpiritHerselfTV special, US
1976The Tonight Show With Johnny CarsonHerself - Host / Singer with Olivia Newton-John "Never Fall In Love Again"TV series US, 1 episode
1976The 18th Annual Grammy AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1977The American Music AwardsHerself - HostTV special, US
1977Neil Diamond: Love At The GreekHerself (uncredited)TV special, US
1977All You Need Is Love: The Story Of Popular MusicHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1977Good Morning AmericaHerself - GuestTV series US, 2 episodes
1977The National Tribute To Hubert H. HumphreyHerselfTV special
1977Willesee At SevenHerselfTV series Australia, 1 episode
1978All-Star Salute To Women's SportsHerselfTV special, US
1978Thank You, Rock 'N' Roll: A Tribute To Alan FreedHerselfTV special, US
1978The Muppet ShowHerself - Special Guest Star sings "Blue" / "We'll Sing In The Sunshine"TV series US, 1 episode
1978Live WednesdayHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1978Sesame StreetHerself sings "Grow"TV series US, 1 episode
1978Australian Music To The WorldHerselfTV special, Australia
1979The 6th Annual American Music AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1979George Burns' 100th Birthday PartyHerselfTV special, US
1979The Helen Reddy SpecialHerself - HostessTV special, US
197960 MinutesHerselfTV series, 1 episode Australia
1980The American SportsmanHerself - NarratorTV series US, 1 episode
1980The 52nd Annual Academy AwardsHerself - Performer "It's Easy to Say" (from '10') with Dudley MooreTV special, US
1980The Tim Conway ShowHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1980The Love BoatElinor GreenTV series US, 1 episode
1980The Royal Charity Gala ConcertHerself - PerformerTV special, Australia
1980The Val Doonican ShowHerselfTV series UK, 1 episode
1980Horas doradasHerselfTV series Spain, 1 episode
1980John Newcombe's Australian Stars In The StatesHerself at Her homeTV special, Australia
1981The American Music AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1981The John Davidson ShowHerselfTV series, 1 episode
1981Channel Nine Celebrates: 25 Years Of TelevisionHerself - archive clip 'Bandstand'TV special, AUSTRALIA
1981Solid GoldHerself - Co-hostTV series, 2 episodes
1981Television: Inside And OutHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1982Grace KennedyHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1982Fantasy IslandSuzi SwannTV series US, 1 episode
1982Australian Music Stars Of The 60sHerself - Archive clipsTV special, Australia
1982I Love LibertyHerselfTV special, US
1983The American Music AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1983The Mike Walsh ShowGuest - HerselfTV series, 1 episode
1983Ladies Night OutHerselfTV series UK, 1 episode
1983WoganHerself - GuestTV series UK, 1 episode
1983Paul Squire EsqHerself - GuestTV series UK, 1 episode
1983The 25th Annual Grammy AwardsHerselfTV special, US
1983Salute!HerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1984Match Game/Hollywood Squares HourHerself - PanelistTV series US, 5 episodes
1984Celebrity ChefsHerself - GuestTV series US
1985Puttin' On The HitsHerself - JudgeTV series US, 1 episode
1985American Bandstand's 33 1/3 CelebrationHerselfTV special, US
1985The JeffersonsHelen ReddyTV series US, 1 episode
1986Television: The First 30 YearsHerselfTV special, Australia
1987–1988Hour MagazineHerselfTV series, 2 episodes
1988Lou Rawls Parade Of StarsHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1990Home For EasterHerself - HostessTV movie
1990The Martha Warfield ShowHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1991Voices That CareHerself - Choir memberTV special, US
1992Hollywood Fantasy ChristmasHerselfTV special, US
1993Vicki!Herself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1993Maury PovichHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
1995The First 100 Years Of CinemaHerselfTV special, US
1997The Rosie O'Donnell ShowHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1997; 2003This Is Your Life? Judith DurhamHerselfTV series Australia, 1 episode
1997When Rock Was Young: The 70sHerself - Archive clip "I Am Woman"TV special, Australia
1998Intimate PortraitHerselfTV series US, 1 episode
1998DeniseHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
1998; 1999Good Morning AustraliaHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 2 episodes
1999M.U.G.E.N'’Herself - VoiceVideo Game
1999Good Morning AustraliaHerself & sister Toni Lamond sing "Breezin Along With The Breeze"TV series Australia, 1 episode
2000BeastMasterThe SeerTV series US/Australia/Canada, 1 episode
2000Diagnosis: MurderDanielle MarshTV series US, 1 episode
2001Burke's BackyardHerself - Celebrity GardenerTV series Australia, 1 episode
2003This Is Your Life? Helen ReddyHerselfTV series Australia, 1 episode
2003Love Is In The AirHerselfABC TV series Australia, 1 episode "She's Leaving Home"
2003; 2011Today TonightHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2005TodayHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2005SunriseHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2005Mornings With Kerri-AnneHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2006The Aria Hall Of FameHerself - InducteeTV special, Australia
2007; 2011Family GuyChannel 5 Jingle Singer / Helen ReddyTV series US, 2 episodes
2010Mother Of Rock Lillian RoxonHerselfFilm documentary, Australia
2010Talking HeadsHerself - GuestABC TV series Australia, 1 episode
2011Today TonightHerselfTV series Australia, 1 episode
2012A Carol Burnett ChristmasHerselfVideo
2013MarieHerself - GuestTV series US, 1 episode
2013Studio 10Herself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2013Time Of My LifeHerselfTV Special, Australia
2014The Morning ShowHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2014The Daily EditionHerself - GuestTV series Australia, 1 episode
2015Studio 10Herself - Health ReportTV series Australia, 1 episode
2016The Beatles And World War IIHerselfFilm documentary, UK
2017; 2018Studio 10HerselfTV series, 1 episode
2018Studio 10Herself - Archive clipsTV series Australia, 1 episode
2019SunriseHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019TodayHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019The Morning ShowHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019Studio 10Herself & Melinda Schneider (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019; 202010 News FirstHerself & Melinda Schneider (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019; 2020Nine NewsHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019; 2020Seven NewsHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019; 2020Sky NewsHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode
2019; 2020ABC NewsHerself (G'Day USA Gala)TV series Australia, 1 episode

Discography

[edit]
Main article:Helen Reddy discography

Books

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Not to be confused with Dick Clark's television programAmerican Bandstand; hereBandstand refers to the variety program hosted by Australian presenter Brian Henderson.
  2. ^Original name Jordan Wald, 1972, currently Jordan Sommers

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"Helen Reddy, 'I Am Woman' Singer, Dies at 78". Variety. 30 September 2020. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  2. ^"RPM Top 100 Singles"(PDF). 4 July 1971.
  3. ^"'I am Woman' on australianscreen online".Aso.gov.au. Retrieved3 March 2011.
  4. ^".: See It Live". Archived fromthe original on 10 December 2015. Retrieved2 November 2015.
  5. ^ab"The Official Helen Reddy Website". 17 July 2007. Archived fromthe original on 17 July 2007.
  6. ^Arrow, Michelle (July 2007)."It Has Become My Personal Anthem: "I Am Woman", Popular Culture and 1970s Feminism".Australian Feminist Studies.22 (53):213–230.doi:10.1080/08164640701361774.S2CID 143230741.
  7. ^abcdefCaro, Mark (13 March 2013)."Helen Reddy ready to roar again".Chicago Tribune. Retrieved20 March 2015.
  8. ^Reddy 2006, p. 5.
  9. ^Nemeh, Kathy (2002).Biography and Genealogy Master Index 2003. Gale Research International, Limited. p. 673.ISBN 978-0-7876-4055-2.
  10. ^Reddy 2006, p. 183.
  11. ^"Helen Reddy (YG 1958) | Tintern Aspectus".newsletter.tintern.vic.edu.au. 12 February 2019. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  12. ^Doreian, Robyn (27 January 2018)."Tony Sheldon: Why it's been a privilege to work alongside my mum".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  13. ^Reddy, Helen (9 May 2006)."Autobiography:The Woman I Am".The Washington Post. Retrieved16 June 2008.
  14. ^Reddy 2006, p. 146.
  15. ^Young, Audrey (23 March 2016)."Spotlight falls on quiet achiever".The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved23 March 2016.
  16. ^Reddy 2006, p. 6.
  17. ^Reddy 2006, pp. 48–49.
  18. ^abcWindeler, Robert (3 February 1975)."Helen Reddy Sings Out for Women's Lib – but Jeffrey Calls the Tune".People. Retrieved19 August 2016.
  19. ^abcdMurphy, Mary (1976)."Superstar Women and their Marriage: Reddy and Her Rival".New York: 26. Retrieved18 January 2020.
  20. ^"Helen Reddy's daughter Traci pays tribute to her trailblazing mother".celebrity.nine.com.au. 30 September 2020.
  21. ^"Interview With Helen Reddy".Classicbands.com. Retrieved19 August 2016.
  22. ^abc"Jeff Wald".Lukeford.net. 3 March 1981. Retrieved19 August 2016.
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  24. ^Hung, Steffen."australian-charts.com - Forum - 1968 (ARIA Charts: Special Occasion Charts)".Australian-charts.com. Retrieved25 May 2018.
  25. ^Wilmoth, Peter (3 May 2012)."Helen Reddy". The Weekly Review AU. Archived fromthe original on 2 May 2018. Retrieved2 May 2018.
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  27. ^"'I Am Woman': How Helen Reddy's Feminist Anthem Quietly Changed Pop".www.msn.com.
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  32. ^"Top artists for Expo '74".The Canberra Times. Vol. 48, no. 13, 667. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 11 February 1974. p. 3. Retrieved16 March 2025 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^"Australian Expo day".The Canberra Times. Vol. 49, no. 13, 870. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 26 September 1974. p. 17. Retrieved16 March 2025 – via National Library of Australia.
  34. ^"Australia day at Expo 74".The Canberra Times. Vol. 49, no. 13, 868. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 24 September 1974. p. 9. Retrieved16 March 2025 – via National Library of Australia.
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  36. ^ab"Helen Reddy".www.theartofhealing.com.au.
  37. ^Watters, Jim (11 June 1978)."Olivia Newton-John: Not Really the 'Girl Next Door'".The New York Times. Retrieved25 April 2018.
  38. ^"Gold & Platinum search".RIAA. Retrieved3 October 2020.
  39. ^Graff, Gary."Helen Reddy biopic 'I Am Woman' roars onto screens".The Oakland Press.
  40. ^"Helen Reddy".Billboard. Retrieved3 October 2020.
  41. ^abcTiegel, Eliot (19 September 1981)."Helen Reddy Moving to TV Via Sitcom".Billboard. Vol. 93, no. 37. p. 37. Retrieved18 January 2020.
  42. ^Gates, Anita (30 September 2020)."Helen Reddy Dies at 78; Sang 'I Am Woman'".The New York Times.
  43. ^abShand, John (30 September 2020)."Helen Reddy, the roaring sound of feminism".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  44. ^"Cover versions of All You Need Is Love by Helen Reddy".SecondHandSongs.com. Retrieved19 August 2016.
  45. ^Baker, Fiona (12 April 2013)."Helen Reddy: My island home".Probus South Pacific. Retrieved17 April 2014.
  46. ^"Interview: Helen Reddy Wants to Help On and Off the Stage".theatermania.com. 3 August 2012. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  47. ^Adams, Cameron (17 August 2006)."ARIA Hall of Fame honours rock greats".Northern Territory News.Archived from the original on 22 August 2006. Retrieved13 September 2020 – viaNational Library of Australia.
  48. ^abcdKeck, William (16 April 2008)."Singer Helen Reddy is now a writer and a speaker".USA Today. Retrieved6 July 2010.
  49. ^BrainyAlien1 (24 November 2011)."I Am Helen Reddy – If you don't know who I am, watch this". YouTube. Retrieved25 May 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  50. ^"Helen Reddy comes out of retirement".CBS News. 13 July 2012. Retrieved20 March 2015.
  51. ^"Protesters Pour Into Downtown LA For Women's March",KCBS News, 21 January 2017.
  52. ^Helen Reddy at the 2017 Women's March ("I Am Woman") onYouTube
  53. ^"Helen Reddy, who sang ground-breaking feminist anthem, in nursing home with dementia".The Daily Telegraph. 5 August 2015. Retrieved18 January 2020.
  54. ^"Helen Reddy: Australian singer of feminist anthem I Am Woman dies".Sky News. Retrieved3 October 2020.
  55. ^"'Midnight Special' Musical Variety Series Getting Documentary".Variety. October 2018. Retrieved3 October 2020.
  56. ^"Winners & Nominees 1975, Page 5".The Golden Globes.Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Retrieved3 October 2020.
  57. ^abcdefGates, Anita (29 September 2020)."Helen Reddy, Singer Behind 'I Am Woman,' Dies at 78".The New York Times. Retrieved29 September 2020.
  58. ^Vagg, Stephen (14 July 2019)."Australian Singers Turned Actors".Filmink.
  59. ^Hawn, Jack (25 July 1987)."Reddy: Full Speed Ahead . . . And Back".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  60. ^Ehren, Christine (1998)."Helen Reddy's Showtunes Take Center Stage On CD, Sept. 29".Playbill. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  61. ^"Helen Reddy, singer of feminist anthem I Am Woman, dies at 78".The Irish Times.
  62. ^Kershner, Jim (13 November 1997)."'Shirley Valentine' A Reddy-Made Role".
  63. ^Gans, Andrew (30 September 2020)."Remembering Helen Reddy's Connection to the Stage".Playbill.
  64. ^Shennan, Rona (30 September 2020)."I Am Woman singer Helen Reddy has died aged 78".Yorkshire Evening Post.
  65. ^abBWW News Desk (5 September 2012)."Three Stage to Feature Helen Reddy, 10/1".Broadway World.
  66. ^"Call Me Madam".Ovrtur.com.
  67. ^Loynd, Ray (29 July 1987)."Stage Review: 'Anything Goes' Docks in Long Beach".Los Angeles Times.
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  70. ^"News roundup".The Gettysburg Times.Associated Press. 12 December 1974. Retrieved20 March 2015.
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  72. ^Champion, Dale (23 July 1977)."Reddy Tries Out Her New Role".San Francisco Chronicle. p. 5. Retrieved29 September 2020 – via NewsBank.
  73. ^Smith, Russell (19 April 1985)."Feminist and activist, Helen Reddy is still singing 'I Am Woman'".Chicago Tribune.The Dallas Morning News. Archived fromthe original on 30 September 2020. Retrieved29 September 2020.
  74. ^Young, Audrey (23 March 2016)."Spotlight falls on quiet achiever".The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved23 March 2016.
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  77. ^Levins, Harry (14 December 2000)."People in the News".St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved16 June 2008. – "Although Helen Reddy is Jewish, she has just released an album titled 'The Best Christmas Ever.' When an Internet interviewer cocked an eyebrow, Reddy said she had stuck to her religious beliefs by making sure that no song mentioned Jesus."
  78. ^White, Abbey (13 November 2021)."Jeff Wald, Producer and Manager for Helen Reddy and Sylvester Stallone, Dies at 77".The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved14 November 2021.
  79. ^abcJarvis, Jeff (16 May 1983)."Tug-of-war for a 10 year-old".People. Retrieved20 March 2015.
  80. ^Robert Windeler: "Helen Reddy - Queen of Housewife Rock",Stereo Review, December 1976. p. 92
  81. ^1634–1699:McCusker, J. J. (1997).How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda(PDF).American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799:McCusker, J. J. (1992).How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States(PDF).American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present:Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis."Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved29 February 2024.
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  83. ^Convery, Stephanie (30 September 2020)."Helen Reddy, Australian singer of feminist anthem I Am Woman, dies aged 78".The Guardian. Retrieved30 September 2020.
  84. ^"Jeff Wald, Who Managed Helen Reddy, Sylvester Stallone and Donna Summer, Dies at 77". 13 November 2021.
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  88. ^"ARIA Icons: Hall of Fame".Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA).Archived from the original on 18 July 2008. Retrieved8 March 2021.
  89. ^"Honour Roll".Australian Women in Music Awards. Retrieved19 March 2021.
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  91. ^"1975 - 1st Annual People's Choice Awards". Archived fromthe original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved10 November 2015.
  92. ^"50 Greatest Australian Artists of All Time – #35: Helen Reddy", Deborah Conway,Rolling Stone Australia, 8 February 2021. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  93. ^Gillard, Julia (30 September 2020)."Helen Reddy's I Am Woman is still relevant, and that's not necessarily a good thing".ABC News. Retrieved2 October 2020.
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External links

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