“Even when she’s not here, she’s here,” Winehouse-Collins says as she visits her daughter’s gravestone. Another chance to see a 23-year-old Amy Winehouse at Porchester Hall where, hot from her triumph at the 2007 Brits, she gave a special one-off concert. Minden idk legtöbb zenei kiadványát értékesít brit ni eladók közé sorolják a több mint 24 millió eladott lemezével. július 23.) hatszoros Grammy-díjas angol soul -, jazz - és rhythm and blues -énekesn és dalszövegíró volt. In happier moments, Winehouse-Collins reads her daughter’s school report cards, which noted her love of performing. Amy Jade Winehouse ( London, Southgate, 1983. “As her health got worse, my MS progressed. “Behind closed doors, we were all trying to deal with the power of her addiction,” says Winehouse-Collins. The documentary, which addresses Winehouse’s relationships, bulimia and mental health issues, details her family and friends’ powerless attempts to help her. Tentatively titled Amy Winehouse: 10 Years On, the film will share insight into the singers.
“You couldn’t tell her to do something or not do something … nobody controlled Amy. Start your free trial to watch Amy and other popular TV shows and movies including new releases, classics, Hulu Originals, and more. Amy Winehouses mom is honoring the late music star with a new documentary 10 years after her death.
“I look back and there’s lots of things I wish I would have done differently,” says her father Mitch Winehouse, who has faced criticism in the media over the singer’s struggles. She was 27.Ĭonsidered one of the most talented singers of her generation with hits including “Rehab” and “Back to Black”, her untimely death shook the music world. That term only tells half the story, however, in Asif Kapadia’s factually exhaustive, emotionally exhausting documentary. Winehouse, who struggled with drink and drug problems through much of her career, died from alcohol poisoning at her north London home on July 23, 2011. Self-destructive is the label commonly attached by armchair pop psychologists to tragic figures like Amy Winehouse, the nervy, unruly and viciously talented British jazz-soul singer who died in 2011, aged just 27, from the cumulative effects of substance abuse. “She was prone to addiction, she could not stop herself. “It’s only looking back now that I realize how little we understood,” Winehouse-Collins says in the film. Winehouse-Collins, who has multiple sclerosis (MS), has rarely spoken about her daughter publicly but shares her version of events in the documentary, which was commissioned by Britain’s BBC Two and BBC Music and will air on Friday, July 23. Narrated by her mother Janis Winehouse-Collins, Reclaiming Amy features home footage, family pictures and interviews with close friends who recall the six-time Grammy Award winner’s happier as well as darker times. Amy Winehouse’s family and friends look back on her life in a new documentary marking 10 years since the singer’s death, with harrowing accounts of her rise to global fame and struggles with addiction.