oh god, Maureen Orth. I can't even ...
Orth is a decent journalist but not particularly gifted, imo. It's interesting you mention the Tina Turner piece bc I'm lukewarm about it. The piece is OK but overall it doesn't feel very 'pulled together' to me. It feels somewhat unfinished in spite of it being so long and so detailed. Then there is that bit you mention. I don't wanna get into it but, yeah, that part is massively problematic, imo.
That said, she did get the best Tina quote:
"You asked me if I ever stood up for anything. Yeah, I stood up for my life."
For those who don't know what happened, here's the notable "Yikes" passage in Orth's VF profile of Tina:
Tina Turner likes to spend money – oodles of it. She doesn’t look at the price tags. She often buys duplicates of her designer clothes in case the cleaners wreck something. She collects antique furniture, owns a house in Germany and is renovating another in the South of France, drinks Cristal champagne, drives a Mercedes jeep, and indulges herself with massages, facials, psychic readings, and holistic cures. She’s sold 30 million records since 1984, when “What’s Love Got to Do With It?” soared to No. 1 on the pop charts and her Private Dancer album spawned three additional hit singles and swept the Grammys. Although she hasn’t had a hit record in seven years, on her last European tour, in 1990, she filled stadiums and played to 3.5 million people, outdrawing both Madonna and the Rolling Stones. So she’s hardly hurting.
But not long ago her accountant called her and told her, “You’ve been having a good time.” If she wanted to keep the perfumed bubble bath filled to overflowing, it was time to turn on the faucet again — go out and strut her stuff for millions of dollars while the movie was playing and the sound track was being released. Not that she feels particularly like singing onstage – doing that every night with her extraordinary, God-given talent is all wrapped up in her mind with hideous memories of beating and indentured servitude. She’s rather act. “I think it’s more classy to be an actress than to be a rock singer. But you don’t make as much money. I ain’t no dummy. I know that.”
First off, "no hit record in seven years?" That's profoundly untrue. Now, Orth is probably referring to Tina's post-
Private Dancer works doing better in Europe than in North America, but that's not surprising. Tina always said that Europe supported her more, openly admitted as such. But Tina's works and singles were still hitting the American charts in some fashion. The last full on hit in America she'd ever have was "I Don't Wanna Fight," on the soundtrack for
What's Love Got to Do With It?, but again, the
Wildest Dreams and
Twenty-Four Seven albums did big numbers in Europe, as did the singles.
Orth basically suggests that Tina was overspending and on the verge of experiencing an M.C. Hammer-like fate, and only went on tour in 1993 to stay afloat. Orth ludicrously overstates Tina's desire to act and the trauma associated with Ike to say that Tina felt like an indentured servant onstage. That simply doesn't jibe at all. Not to mention that Tina had experienced having to start from the ground up again in between leaving Ike and releasing
Private Dancer, so she knew how to be frugal and certainly wasn't going to blow everything she'd earned.
Even in her best works, Orth has a tendency to take really notable potshots and subtle and not-so-subtle insults to certain figures. While Michael was the one who got the worst of it, Orth often wrote quite disparagingly of Bill and Hillary Clinton, especially in her June 2001 article about the infamous Marc Rich pardon (and a connection to Michael, given that Michael accompanied Denise Rich, replacing Paul McCartney, to the fundraiser where she gifted President Clinton the saxophone. She also takes the moment to remind the readers that "Jackson's career never recovered" after the Chandler allegations).
Also of note, Orth is the widow of Tim Russert, the late host of NBC's
Meet the Press. This is as much of a polar opposite for the catty Orth as you can imagine. But again, James Carville and Mary Matalin are married and they've made it work somehow.