CALL ME DUSTY
by DEREK WEBB
A play with music
Dusty Springfield was without doubt the finest white soul singer of her era – for millions
she was the definitive pop diva. Her lifestyle was the stuff of legend – and great drama.
With her relentless quest for perfection and refusal to compromise, Dusty Springfield
led a tortured life. Her stage persona – extravagant black mascara and back combed
hair – was at odds with the quiet, shy convent girl, Mary O’Brien, and her sexuality.
The result was a downward spiral of drugs, alcohol-abuse and self-harm but despite
all that she produced tremendous music, which still ranks as some of the finest of its
kind.
The story is as valid today as it was in the 1960’s by documenting the transient effects
of fame and the damage it can do.