Kris, Sinéad & Close Shaves
Kris, Sinéad & Close Shaves have more in common than you might think. Kris Kristofferson is better known for his role as Whistler in Blade than for his smooth chin.
Update on the post that follows. Kris met Audra Williams after the storm.
The Original Post Continues
The recent Gillette advert caught Audra’s attention. She responded by writing a post on a topical, controversial subject. Kris Kristofferson has never been concerned about speaking his truth. It brought an incident from years ago back into the minds of a younger generation.
The following is a submission by Audra Williams.
In 1992, Sinéad O’Connor ripped up a picture of the Pope on live television, in protest of the rampant child sexual abuse the Catholic Church was actively covering up. In the weeks that followed, Joe Pesci said he wanted to give her “such a smack”, Frank Sinatra said he wanted to “kick her ass”, and millionaire producer Jonathan King said she “needed a spanking”.
She was 26.
Ten days later, she was scheduled to perform at Madison Square Gardens, as part of a celebration of Bob Dylan. As soon as she got to the microphone, the audience began loudly booing her, seemingly in unison. She talked later about how awful the sound was, and how she thought she was going to be sick.
The organizers tasked Kris Kristofferson with removing O’Connor from the stage. He instead went out and put his arm around her and checked in on her and stayed until she’d steadied herself and was ready to perform. Instead of singing the Bob Dylan song she was supposed to sing, she sang Bob Marley’s ‘War’, changing some of the lyrics to be about child abuse.
As she came off stage, Kristofferson grabbed her in a bear hug and kissed her cheek. In the video — posted below in the comments — you can see that she pulls away at one point and either throws up, or nearly throws up. He just wraps her back in his arms and holds her tight.
About the incident, he says:
“Sinéad had just recently on Saturday Night Live
The recent Gillette ad has started/furthered a lot of conversations about what alternatives to toxic masculinity look like. This is it.