Kris Kristofferson recalls comforting Sinéad O'Connor on stage

admin admin | 09-30 16:15

It was Kristofferson who comforted O'Connor at a Bob Dylan tribute concert in New York's Madison Square Garden in October 1992 when the crowd booed her amid the fallout from the Dubliner tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live on US television the previous week.

"Well, it was Bob Dylan's birthday, I can't remember what birthday," Kristofferson told host O'Callaghan. "They were celebrating it at Madison Square Garden, I think.

"Sinéad had just recently on Saturday Night Live torn up a picture of The Pope in a gesture that I thought [was] very misunderstood. And she came out and got booed.

"I went out. They told me to get her off the stage and I said, 'I'm not about to do [that]. I went out and I said, 'Don't let the bastards get you down'. And she said, 'I'm not down' - and she sang.

"It was very courageous. It just seemed to me wrong booing that little girl out there, but she's always had courage."

On Saturday Night with Miriam, Kristofferson and O'Connor, who died in July 2023, duetted on Kristofferson's classic song Help Me Make It Through the Night.

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Gold prices see drop in local and international markets

Listen to article In a major shift in the local gold market, the price of 24-carat gold per tola dec...

Bank of England cuts interest rate as UK inflation hits three-year low

The Bank of England on Thursday said it was cutting its key interest further after UK inflation hit ...

US Fed Reserve to cut rates amid economic uncertainty under second Trump term

The US Federal Reserve is expected to reduce its benchmark policy rate by a quarter of a percentage ...

Last 28th Māori Battalion veteran Sir Bom Gillies dies, aged 99

Sir Robert 'Bom' Gillies, the last surviving member of the 28th Māori Battalion, has died. He was 99...

RSA seeks new pokie consent after 'honest mistake'

Whakatāne's Returned Services Association has made a plea to council for help to reopen its gaming r...

Drugs, theft, safety fears: Tourism village's emergency housing motel impacts

A claim that emergency housing motels have not impacted tourism in Rotorua has been rubbished by one...