Current:Home > StocksMelissa Etheridge connects with incarcerated women in new docuseries ‘I’m Not Broken’ -GrowthProspect
Melissa Etheridge connects with incarcerated women in new docuseries ‘I’m Not Broken’
Robert Brown View
Date:2025-04-09 23:19:55
NEW YORK (AP) — Melissa Etheridge realized two career dreams with her new docuseries “Melissa Etheridge: I’m Not Broken”: performing for incarcerated women and recording the concert for a live album.
The singer-songwriter grew up in Leavenworth, Kansas — an area home to a well-known federal penitentiary and other state and military prisons — and when she was starting out, she found a receptive audience in people incarcerated there. Inspired by Johnny Cash’s famous prison concerts, the two-time Grammy winner won permission for a live show at the Topeka Correctional Facility, a Kansas women’s prison, with a film crew documenting the process.
In the series, which starts streaming on Paramount+ this week, Etheridge meets and corresponds with several people in the prison, learning how they ended up there. Their stories inspired her to write her new song, “A Burning Woman.” Many of the women had experienced drug addiction, and Etheridge said she connected with them after her 21-year-old son’s 2020 opioid-related death.
Etheridge, 63, spoke to The Associated Press recently about her emotional 2023 performance and the new album. Answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.
AP: How was the experience of meeting the inmates and hearing their stories?
ETHERIDGE: When I went and heard their stories, I was blown away that they were all mothers. That just really broke my heart. And then just how relatable. This could be my sister. This could be my friends. There but for the grace of God go I.
AP: How was realizing your dream of recording a live album?
ETHERIDGE: When I grew up in the ’60s and ’70s, live albums were it. I mean, “Frampton Comes Alive!” That’s what you do if you can get to a point as a rock ‘n’ roll artist. I always wanted to and by the time I got there in the ‘90s, they were like, “No, there’s no live albums.” So finally! And I love this. It’s a really special concert. The setlist was curated for them. It had the few hit songs in it, but it had really deep tracks that really dealt with that longing and guilt and pain.
AP: You performed the new song at the live concert and it echoes some of the pain you heard in the inmates’ stories. How did it feel to see their supportive response?
ETHERIDGE: It was even more than I thought it would be. That they jumped right on the call-and-response, and that they’ve got footage of the women saying “I’m not broken!” means everything. Because just saying “I’m not broken,” just saying “I’m worth it,” that was the whole intention for it. I hope people love it because it’s a rockin’ song. It’s a Melissa Etheridge song. I really like that.
AP: In the series, you play the new song for your wife, TV writer-producer Linda Wallem for feedback. Do you often solicit her opinion on new music?
ETHERIDGE: I love living with a creative woman. I love being married to someone whom I really trust their taste, because she doesn’t like a lot of things. She’s in entertainment — she’s been a director, a producer. She’s really used to telling people, “Hey, you might be able to do it a little better” — very famous people. So I know she’s not pulling any punches for me. And when she likes (the work) it means a lot to me because I don’t really have a lot of people that I can trust and be so raw with. I’m blessed to have a partner like that.
AP: There were several emotional moments in the concert, including when you sang about your son Beckett, who died from an opioid addiction — how was that experience?
ETHERIDGE: Before we walked on stage, I was with the band, and we all kind of huddled together and I just was like, “You know, this is a real dream come true.” And I went (mimics crying) “Oh, no, I’m on the edge here. This is not OK!” So I gathered myself together and I was all good until I started talking about that. To see 500 women who have been through more than I’ll ever — they’ve been through their trials and are not with their children. To see them show such empathy and compassion for me, that blew me away.
AP: It’s so moving to hear you talk about Beckett. You’re so wise and calm about his death in the series — how do you separate your grief, and did surviving cancer help you get clarity in that process?
ETHERIDGE: Plant medicine, plus cancer, and kind of a new outlook on life — and that was 20 years ago — it’s really worked for me because I’m very healthy and very happy. The idea that you suffer all your life and then at the end you’re going to get some sort of (reward) — that’s OK for some people, but I just don’t believe that. And that my son is in nonphysical (world), that life doesn’t end when we end, that there’s something in all of us that is eternal — those things comfort me, and so I believe them. It is the way that I walk through this, and I hope to inspire. But also, it helps me when I can speak directly. And every time I do say to someone, “Yes, he would want me to be happy,” I believe that and I know it.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Peek inside the 2024 Oscar rehearsals: America Ferrera, Zendaya, f-bombs and fake speeches
- Vanity Fair and Saint Laurent toast ‘Oppenheimer’ at a historic home before Oscars
- Sly Stallone, Megan Fox and 'Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey' score 2024 Razzie Awards
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Trump supporters hoping to oust Wisconsin leader say they have enough signatures to force recall
- 49ers Quarterback Brock Purdy and Jenna Brandt Are Married
- Sly Stallone, Megan Fox and 'Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey' score 2024 Razzie Awards
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Slain woman, 96, was getting ready to bake cookies, celebrate her birthday, sheriff says
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- A TV show cooking segment featured a chef frying fish. It ended up being a near-extinct species – and fishermen were furious.
- Chris Evans and His Leading Lady Alba Baptista Match Styles at Pre-Oscars Party
- Sly Stallone, Megan Fox and 'Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey' score 2024 Razzie Awards
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Descendants of suffragists talk about the importance of women's voices in 2024
- Oscars 2024: Chris Hemsworth and Elsa Pataky Have an A-Thor-able Date Night
- Ariana Grande Channels Glinda in Wickedly Good Look at the 2024 Oscars
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Kansas State tops No. 6 Iowa State 65-58; No. 1 Houston claims Big 12 regular-season title
There shouldn't be any doubts about Hannah Hidalgo and the Notre Dame women's basketball team
Princess of Wales appears in first photo since surgery amid wild speculation of her whereabouts
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Heidi Klum, Tiffany Haddish and More Stars Stun at the Elton John AIDS Foundation Oscars 2024 Party
Little League isn't just for boys: How girls and their moms can get involved in baseball
France enshrines abortion as a constitutional right as the world marks International Women’s Day