LOS ANGELES — Breast cancer sidelined her for
two years, but pop singer Kylie Minogue is back with a vengeance
with a new album, an upcoming tour and the belief that after 20
years at the top, she isn’t finished yet.
Minogue, who transformed herself from a 1980s
soap opera actress to one of the biggest-selling female stars
and sex symbols in Europe and in her native Australia, said her
well-publicized cancer battle in 2005 forced her to evaluate her
life.
"You do tend to hear more about people who
have said, ‘That’s it. I’m going to go in a completely different
direction.’ And I think I would have had a valid excuse.
"But no, not me. I’m not finished. I get joy
out of what I do. I’m ready to go on," Minogue, 39, told Reuters
in an interview.
Since recovering from surgery and
chemotherapy in 2005, the petite blonde has written a children’s
book, launched a perfume and a London museum fashion exhibit,
been honored with an Order of the British Empire by Britain’s
Queen Elizabeth II and released her 10th studio album, "X," in
Europe in November.
Not that "cancer" is a word you hear Minogue
using often. In fact, she’d rather not talk about her illness at
all.
"I don’t have a nice little phrase to
summarize what that meant, or what it did, or how I’ve changed.
I don’t want to talk about it too much.
"I have some understanding of what other
people might go through, but I don’t have the answers. I am sure
the day will come where I will be more forward about it. If I
was one-on-one with a patient, I would share everything," she
said.
The performer of dance hits like "Can’t Get
You Out of My Head" and "Spinning Around" said there are three
very personal songs on the "X" album, which is due to be
released in the United States in March.
But some reviewers have expressed surprise
that "X" is more an album of classic Kylie dance and pop numbers
than a reflection on the tumultuous last three years, during
which Minogue also split with her long-term boyfriend, French
actor Olivier Martinez.
The announcement of Minogue’s European tour,
set to begin in May in Paris, laid to rest persistent media
speculation about her health.
She dismissed the notion that the tour would
be physically less demanding than her extravagant, abandoned
2005 "Showgirl" world tour.
"You don’t feel the pain when you are
performing, when your adrenaline is going. It will be two hours
of energy," she said.
"The bulk of the show is going to be more
streamlined, but I’m sure there will be a moment when the
showgirl in me will appear."
Like many pop stars who are huge in Britain
and Europe, Minogue has not made the transition to mass-market
fame in the United States. But even that has its blessings.
"It’s a slightly weird situation for me because I can still
walk the streets here (in Los Angeles) and no one will recognize
me. I love it," she said. – Reuters