Portland Press Herald, May 6, 1993
Julio Iglesias! In or out of love, this crooner's hot stuff
By SELBY FRAME
Staff Writer
You have to wonder how many women Julio Iglesias - the archetypical
Latin lover, crooner and international sex symbol - calls in a day.
"I call my wife because she's pregnant," he says during a telephone
interview between tours at his Miami house. "Then my girlfriend,
because she's pregnant, too. Then five women call me saying they
are pregnant. They sue. I don't make love for three years now, but
everyone thinks I'm father of their kids. But I'm singing all the
time. You better believe me."
Maybe about the singing.
Iglesias has sold more records internationally than anyone. Period.
He's also a master of bull, and can flirt, sing and make fun of
himself in six languages.
Maybe it's all that translating between languages, but it's hard
to get a straight answer out of Iglesias. Like the question about
his love life scooping more headlines lately than his music. This
past year, for example, a Spanish woman claimed Iglesias is the
father of her 17-year-old son. Iglesias denies it.
"I like to be on the front page, but maybe … it bothers me," he
replies in broken English. "I make love five times a year now. And
I'm doing an English album that looks like Chinese to me. Not easy
for me."
Wait a minute, Julio. First you don't make love in three years.
Now you say you make love five times a year. Which is it?
"I make love 22nd of May," laughs Iglesias. "I have to choose the
person. They have to choose me. Why the 22nd? Two and two means
two times. I don't think my body does more … Do you like red wine?"
The English album, due out later this month, will include a duet
with Dolly Parton.
"I get to sing with Dolly. We choose songs, get together in two
weeks. That would be sexy. I like that," says Iglesias. "She's a
very talented person."
Iglesias' 1984 duet with Willie Nelson, "To All The Girls I've
Loved Before," won him the first of his two Grammy Awards (he won
for best Latin singer in 1988), and put him in the American spotlight.
His other albums - there have been 67 - have sold 175 million
copies worldwide, putting him in the Guinness Book of World Records.
Not bad for a 49-year-old former soccer player from Madrid.
Iglesias got his start in music in 1963 while recovering from a
car accident that ended his soccer career and left him temporarily
paralyzed. He credits a nurse - who else? - with giving him a guitar
and encouraging him to sing.
He developed his music while studying English at Cambridge University,
and in 1968 he released his first single "La Vida Sigue Igual (Life
Goes on the Same)." It shot to the top of Spain's music charts and
made him a star.
Since then, he has traveled the world, performing a mix of Latin
pop and American standards, including renditions of Elvis Presley's
"I Can't Help Falling In Love With You" and the tender Nat King
Cole ballad, "Mona Lisa."
Some critics have complained that Iglesias' mumbled phrasing and
arrangements are overly processed, but his current U.S. tour is
drawing praise. One Miami critic described a recent concert as "elegant
crooning.
"He usually sings with eyes closed … and he stands in one place
for most of the performance, but there's plenty of writhing when
he slides his hands across his torso and glides the microphone down
his side."
He has built his career on that sensual, caressing style. He says
it's more than a sexy stage gimmick, that it's a way of building
real intimacy with audiences.
"The concert is when you have communication with people you can
make love with, when people communicate with you in a deep way,"
says Iglesias. "I don't talk about anything else but soul and brains.
I love that concept, when the brains and the heart get together.
That is very Latino."
It's also irresistible, apparently. Women around the world have
showered him with flowers, phone numbers, even racy Polaroids. Take
that, Tom Jones.
Iglesias may be glib about his studly persona, yet he is reluctant
to discuss his extensive humanitarian work, much of it on behalf
of children. He is a representative for UNICEF and has raised hundreds
of thousands of dollars for it and other humanitarian organizations
through benefit concerts.
"It's difficult to say about the kids, after talking about the
light things," says Iglesias. "I'm helping as much as I can. It's
the only way I can save my life … because I am closer to hell than
heaven."
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