As the face and sound behind one of new wave's most influential bands to emerge during the punk heyday of the '70s,
was the ultimate diva. She was the
frontwoman, a vixen with hypnotically wild stage moves and an edgy cool voice. A killer sneer matched her signature blonde mop and made her a star.
Born in the summer of 1945 in Miami,
Debbie Harry was adopted and raised by Richard and Catherine Harry in suburban New Jersey. She spent most of her young adult life working various jobs. Her initial start in music came in the late '60s with the folk-rock act
Wind in the Willows. They'd only release one album, their eponymous debut for Capitol in 1968, but
Harry had other plans. Her stint as a Playboy Bunny wasn't exactly what she had in mind, but her waitressing gig at Max's Kansas City eventually led her to the punk rock cliques taking over New York City during the '70s.
In 1973,
Harry met
Chris Stein, a graduate of New York's School of Visual Arts.
Stein was impressed with
Harry's tough persona and her all-girl rock group
the Stilettos, and within a year
Harry left the band and formed Angel & the Snake with
Stein. By 1974, they'd christened themselves
Blondie. Contrary to popular belief, their moniker wasn't derived from
Harry's famous blonde mane; she took the phrase from the obnoxious truck drivers who catcalled "Hey Blondie, give us a screw" as she'd pass by. With drummer
Clem Burke and ex-
Knickers keyboardist
Jimmy Destri,
Blondie spent eight years winning the world over with their infectious post-punk sound. Singles "Heart of Glass," the reggae-tinged "The Tide Is High," and "Call Me" were major chart-toppers in America while
Blondie's third album,
Parallel Lines sold 20 million copies worldwide.
Harry went solo while
Blondie was still hot.
KooKoo, which was produced by
Chic man
Nile Rodgers, marked her solo debut in August 1981. It wasn't nearly as accessible or as polished as her work with
Blondie, and perhaps because of that
KooKoo earned a dismal number 28 position on the U.S. charts. The next year,
Blondie issued
Hunter and called it quits, or at least a break.
Stein had fallen ill with a rare and generally fatal genetic disease called Pemphigus, and
Harry stepped out of the spotlight to nurse her partner back to health. It would be five years until she'd sing again.
She returned in 1986 with
Rockbird; critics loved it, and the
Chuck Lorre-penned "French Kissin'" was a moderate radio hit. But almost as soon as she arrived,
Harry disappeared, and she'd spend the latter part of the decade working on her acting skills. Going by "
Deborah Harry," she appeared in an episode of Wiseguy on CBS in 1989 and, returning to music, released a third album, the Euro-dance inflected
Def, Dumb & Blonde.
The '90s saw a much more reserved
Debbie Harry, in the sense that she was enjoying her pop culture status and the simple life as well. She'd appeared in countless films by this time, most notably Videodrome (1982), Hairspray (1988), and the black comedy Six Ways to Sunday (1997). In 1993 she released
Debravation, and she was also recording and touring with the avant-garde jazz troupe
the Jazz Passengers, which she'd joined for their 1997 debut,
Individually Twisted. She'd been working with
Stein,
Destri, and
Burke again, too. A
Blondie reunion was official in 1999 when the four of them released their first album in 17 years.
No Exit showed an always stylish pop/rock sound from the band, and as a seasoned artist,
Harry was as brilliant as ever. The album was a success, as was the accompanying tour, and in 2003 the follow-up,
The Curse of Blondie, came out. Three years later the group was inducted in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and in 2007
Harry's next solo full-length (she had been involved in a variety of side projects in the break),
Necessary Evil, was released.
–
MacKenzie Wilson, Rovi