Janis in 1982 |
Howie and I
once wondered together if blindness might have certain advantages for a man. It
would enable him to choose life partners on the content of their character,
rather than on their looks. Many men deny it, but we all want gorgeous gals on
our arms, as they make other men think we must not be the wastes of space we
know ourselves, deep down, to be.
In any
event, the woman the world had known as Janet Joplin came back into public view
in 1981, with her own cable television program, A Piece of My Heart, in Lupus,
Texas, not that anyone noticed, as she had reverted to her original name — Naomi
Ishizuka —and was barely recognizable. In her Big Brother & The Holding
Company and Me and Bobby McGee days, hers had been the ugliest hair in popular
entertainment, but she’d had it styled at the Vidal Sassoon salon in Milan in
1974, and begun using Pantene® conditioner. She’d taken to wearing pantsuits in
pastel colours, and to employing a makeup and hair person.
She invited no rock stars onto her television show, but instead interviewed the authors of romance novels, Republican operatives, and “Christian rock” stars. Noam Chomsky was on so often that they joshed about his becoming her Ed McMahon-like sidekick, charged with guffawing with delight at her every quip. She made small, below-the-fold headlines in 1982 when she tried to get Nancy Reagan to rebrand her famous antidrug campaign, from Just Say No to Just Say No, Thank You.recenOne got the impression that only a tiny minority of her guests or viewers recognized her as a formerly fire-breathing hippie chick hitmaker. She huddled with a succession of movie producers who wanted to make biopics in which she would be played by everyone from Jennifer Aniston to Nicole Kidman, but politely declined in every case.
Having had
much cosmetic surgery, Janis today, at 97, looks much younger, but in that
weird, sort of disturbing way of people who’ve had much cosmetic surgery. She
dotes on her adult grandchildren Shanté, whose aspirations to a career as a
white rapper she has bankrolled since 1997, and Mistee, and occasionally sings
at Lupus’s African Methodist Church. She is friends on Facebook with LaToya
Jackson, the late Michael’s ever tinier-nosed elder sister.
Invited to assess
Miley Cyrus’s recent brutalization of Heart of Glass, in which some observers thought
Cyrus was trying to evoke her, Janis told this blog, “She’s very talented, and I
wish her every success.”