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(Fredericksburg, VA)
Being different a plus for folk artist
by Michael Zitz
Robin Renée will play her alternative pop "bohemian
glam" tomorrow night at Picker's Supply.
May 24, 2001
WHEN: Friday night at 8
WHERE: Picker's Supply, 902 Caroline
St. in downtown Fredericksburg
HOW MUCH: $8, all ages
INFO: Call 898-0611
THE FREE LANCE-STAR
By the time she was 9, Robin Renée
knew she was different.
She says she knew even then that she
liked other girls.
"I came out at 9," she said.
By the time she was 10, she had her
own music group, "The Half Mann Band," which played
elementary schools in the Philadelphia area.
At 12, she realized she liked both girls
and boys, and she came out as a bisexual.
"I understood myself very early,"
Renée said.
Now she's trying to help others understand.
The 34-year-old singer-songwriter still
lives in her hometown of Atco, N.J. She is a widely published
poet.
She's won awards for folk music, but
refers to her work as alternative-pop and "bohemian glam."
One of her biggest influences was Elvis
Costello. But her biggest inspiration and her first idol was
bisexual tennis star Billie Jean King.
Renée admired King's power and
conviction.
"She was determined to be all of
herself as a feminist and a tennis player," Renée
said. "She opened my mind to being anything I wanted to
be."
David Bowie had a similar effect. Watching
the sexually ambiguous glam rocker sing on TV encouraged Renée
to pursue a music career.
But being bisexual doesn't define Renée
as a musician.
"It's more accurate to say that
being bisexual is one of the things I am," she said. "It
forms my music, in the same way as many other things about me.
"My CD ['In Progress'] is accessible
to everybody," Renée said. "It's not particularly
queer, not particularly targeting toward a queer audience. But
I am out and vocal, and I do have some songs that clearly deal
with that issue."
It was easy for her to be open about
her sexual orientation because her parents were understanding--and
because not doing so would have simply been too painful, she
said. And the choice between openness and living a lie, she said,
was a simple one even for a child.
"I realized I could live according
to social mores and be miserable--or choose the other way,"
Renée said.
Copyright 2001 The Free
Lance-Star Publishing Company.
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