Cherie Ann Currie (born November 30, 1959) is an American singer, musician, actress and artist. Currie was the lead vocalist of The Runaways, a rock band from Los Angeles, in the mid-to-late 1970s. After The Runaways, she became a solo artist. Then she teamed up with her identical twin sister, Marie Currie, and released an album with her. Their duet "Since You've Been Gone" reached number 95 on US charts. Their band was called Cherie and Marie Currie. She is also well known for her role in the movie Foxes.
Cherie Currie | |
---|---|
![]() Cherie Currie in 2010 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Cherie Ann Currie |
Born | (1959-11-30) November 30, 1959 (age 62) Encino, California, US |
Genres |
|
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer, songwriter, actress, artist, producer |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, keyboards, guitar, tambourine |
Years active | 1976–present |
Labels |
|
Currie was born to Don Currie and actress Marie Harmon.[1] She was raised in Encino, California, with three siblings, an identical twin sister, Marie Currie,[2] an elder sister, actress Sondra Currie, and a brother, Don Currie Jr.
Currie and her twin sister were given a role on an episode of My Three Sons at the age of two. They were going to sing "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" with Fred MacMurray but they froze during filming and their part was cut from the show.[3] Before Currie and her twin sister rose to fame, they danced on American Bandstand. They appeared on the show as background dancers.[4][5]
Currie was the teenage lead vocalist for the all-female rock band The Runaways with bandmates Joan Jett, Lita Ford, Sandy West, Jackie Fox and Vicki Blue. Bomp! magazine described her as "the lost daughter of Iggy Pop and Brigitte Bardot".[6]
Currie joined the Runaways in 1975, at age 15. The teen rock anthem "Cherry Bomb" was written for her at the audition. Assessments of her impact differ; one reviewer has written in 2010 that "the received wisdom that [the Runaways] carved out new territory for female musicians is hard to justify—it's doubtful that the predominantly male audience who flocked to see the 16-year-old [Currie] in her undies picked up any feminist subtext."[7]
After three albums with the Runaways (The Runaways, Queens of Noise and Live in Japan), Currie went on to be a solo artist. She signed a contract with Mercury saying she would record four records, but she left the Runaways after the third album, thus she was obligated to record another album.[8] She recorded it solo and the result was Beauty's Only Skin Deep for Polygram Records. Marie Currie did a duet with Cherie on her solo record "Love at First Sight".[9]
Cherie and Marie went on a US tour in 1977, and when Marie would join Cherie on stage to sing the encores the audience would go wild.[2] Then they went on a Japan tour in 1978. While in Japan, the twins performed on many TV shows. So Cherie ran with the idea of two blonds are better than one, and changed the band name from Cherie Currie to Cherie and Marie Currie.[10] With Marie Currie, she recorded Messin' with the Boys for Capitol Records and Young and Wild for Raven. Messin' with the Boys was released in 1980. Messin' with the Boys received more radio play than Beauty's Only Skin Deep and, the song "Since You Been Gone" off Messin' with the Boys charted number 95 on U.S. charts. Both the single "This Time" and the album Messin' with the Boys made the top 200 on U.S. charts.[citation needed] Cherie and Marie performed on television shows in the 1980s including Sha Na Na, The Mike Douglas Show,[11]The Merv Griffin Show among others.[4] Along with the album recordings with Marie, Cherie and Marie sang, wrote, and produced songs for The Rosebud Beach Hotel and its soundtrack called, The Rosebud Beach Hotel Soundtrack. In the film, they acted and sang together. In 1991, Cherie and Marie Currie performed a tribute concert to Paula Pierce, a member of The Pandoras, at the Coconut Teaser. For the final performance, the remaining Pandoras backed the Curries.[12] Currie performed at the Runaways' reunion in 1994 with other Runaways Fox and West. Her sister Marie joined the three Runaways on stage and performed with the band.[8]
In 1998, Cherie and Marie held a concert at the Golden Apple, in support of their re-released version of Messin' with the Boys. Cherie's ex-bandmate West joined Cherie on stage to perform some of the Runaways songs. The Curries and West signed autographs after the show.[13] Young and Wild was released in 1998. It was Cherie and Marie's first compilation album. It contains tracks from Beauty's Only Skin Deep, Messin with the Boys, Flaming School Girls (the Runaways' compilation album), and one new track co-written by Marie. In 1999 Rocket City Records released Currie's studio album The 80's Collection. The album contains guest work by Marie Currie.[14][15]
Cherie starred in the film Foxes in 1980 with Jodie Foster. She received strong reviews for her acting debut, and because of this film she received many roles in other films.[16] Along with starring in Foxes (her best-known film), she starred in Parasite, Wavelength, Twilight Zone: The Movie, The Rosebud Beach Hotel (with Marie Currie), Rich Girl, and others, as well as numerous guest spots on television series (Matlock and Murder, She Wrote, among others). In 1984 Currie was cast as Brenda in Savage Streets, but was replaced by Linda Blair.[17] In the same year Currie was cast as the lead singer of the fictional band the Dose in the film This Is Spinal Tap, but her character was cut out of the film.[18] Cherie was considered for a part in the 1985 film Explorers but, according to her autobiography, she was in the throes of drug dependency and couldn't even make it to a meeting.[19]
Currie was a guest vocalist on Shameless's 2013 album, Beautiful Disaster. Currie released singles with ex-bandmate, Lita Ford[20] and Glenn Danzig the same year. On October 19, 2013, Currie won the Rock Legend Award at the sixth annual Malibu Music Awards. The reward was presented to her by ex-bandmate, Lita Ford. That night Currie and Ford played on stage together for the first time in 37 years.[21] Currie released another studio album, Reverie, in 2015.[22] The album features guest work from ex-bandmate, Lita Ford, Currie's son, Jake Hays, and Currie's ex-manager, Kim Fowley. Cherie toured the UK in November 2015, to support her new album. Her special guest on her UK tour was Last Great Dreamers. While in the UK, Currie recorded a live album entitled "Midnight Music in London" which features a special live appearance by Suzi Quatro. It was released in 2016.[23] In late May and early June 2016 Currie toured Australia and New Zealand.[24] In 2018, Currie and her son were nominated for the Marshall Hawkins Award for Best Original Score for the film Take My Hand.[25]
In 2019, Currie's album Blvds of Splendor was released on April 13.[26][27][28][29]
On August 2, The Motivator, her album with Brie Darling, was released.[30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38]
In 2020 Cherie Currie released an audio version of her memoir, Neon Angel. Her audio version of her book reached number 1 on Amazon's Best Biographies of Punk Rock Musician.[39] In the same year, Currie contributed her vocals to the song "Flatten the Curve" for the band FTC.[40]
Currie is now a wood-carving artist, using a chainsaw to create her works. She has been doing chainsaw art since 2002 and opened her own gallery in 2005 in Chatsworth, California.[41] As a chainsaw artist, Currie has competed in and won awards at three world Chainsaw Art competitions.[42]
Currie struggled with drug addiction for much of her younger life, a major factor in the abrupt ending of her career. She later wrote a memoir, Neon Angel, recounting life in the band and her traumatic experiences with drug addiction, sex abuse, and her broken family.[43][44][45][46][47][48]
The Runaways, a 2010 biographical drama film executive-produced by Joan Jett, focuses on the group's beginnings and explores the relationship between Currie and Jett. Dakota Fanning portrays Currie.
Currie married actor Robert Hays on May 12, 1990, and they had one son together, Jake Hays.[49][50] The marriage ended in a divorce in 1997.[50] Jake Hays learned to play guitar well enough to be included in recent recording sessions, and as a member of Currie's new touring band.
In 1979 an alternative cover photo of Currie's album Beauty's only Skin Deep appears in the background of the feature film Rock 'n' Roll High School. It appears when the Ramones are backstage.[51]
The sisters Dot, Helen, and Darby (played by Chloë Sevigny, Carisa Glucksman, and Darby Dougherty) are characters in the 1997 film Gummo, written and directed by Harmony Korine, who has mentioned that "Dot and Helen were based off [sic] a combination of Cherie and Marie Currie, home schooling, and The Shaggs."[52]
In 2006 the teen drama The O.C., in the season 3 episode "The Man of the Year", Marissa makes an entrance to "Cherry Bomb", while dressed in a provocative schoolgirl outfit, to Kaitlyn's boarding school. She pays tribute to Currie because when Currie sang "Cherry Bomb" live she wore a provocative outfit.
Year | Single | US | Album | Artist | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | "Call Me at Midnight" | – | Beauty's Only Skin Deep | Cherie Currie | |
1978 | "Beauty's Only Skin Deep" | – | Beauty's Only Skin Deep | Cherie Currie | |
1978 | "Love at First Sight" | – | Beauty's Only Skin Deep | Cherie and Marie Currie | |
1978 | "Science Fiction Daze" | – | Beauty's Only Skin Deep | Cherie Currie | |
1979 | "Since You Been Gone" | 95 | Messin' with the Boys | Cherie and Marie Currie | [62] |
1979 | "Messin' with the Boys" | – | Messin' with the Boys | Cherie and Marie Currie | |
1980 | "This Time" | – | Messin' with the Boys | Cherie and Marie Currie | |
1980 | "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)" | – | Messin' with the Boys | Cherie and Marie Currie | |
1989 | "Instant Karma!" | – | Mono! Stereo: Sgt. Shonen's Exploding Plastic Eastman Band Request | Tater Totz featuring Cherie Currie | |
1998 | "Cherry Bomb" | – | Maximum Overdrive | The Streetwalkin' Cheetahs meets Cherie Currie | |
2013 | "Life's a Gas" | – | Beautiful Disaster | Shameless featuring Cherie Currie | |
2013 | "Some Velvet Morning" | – | Single only | Glenn Danzig featuring Cherie Currie | |
2013 | "Rock This Christmas Down" | – | Single only | Lita Ford and Cherie Currie | |
2015 | "Believe" | – | Reverie | Cherie Currie | |
2018 | "When We Need Her" | – | Fanny Walked the Earth | Fanny | |
2019 | "The Motivator" | – | The Motivator | Cherie Currie and Brie Darling | |
2019 | "Get Together" | – | The Motivator | Cherie Currie and Brie Darling | |
2020 | "Black Hole Sun" | – | Single only | Cherie Currie and Brie Darling | |
2020 | "What the World Needs Now Is Love" | – | Single only | Cherie Currie and Dave Schulz | |
Year | Album | US | US Indie | Heatseekers Album | Artist |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Beauty's Only Skin Deep | - | - | - | Cherie Currie |
1980 | Messin' with the Boys | TBA | - | - | Cherie and Marie Currie |
1997 | Messin' with the Boys (Re-released) | - | - | - | Cherie and Marie Currie |
1999 | The 80's Collection | - | - | - | Cherie Currie Cherie and Marie Currie |
2015 | Reverie | - | - | - | Cherie Currie |
2016 | Midnight Music in London | - | - | - | Cherie Currie |
2019 | Blvds of Splendor | - | - | - | Cherie Currie |
2019 | The Motivator | - | 48 | 18 | Cherie Currie and Brie Darling |
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1974-1975 | American Bandstand | Background Dancer, Herself | |
1980 | Foxes | Annie | |
1982 | Parasite | Dana | |
1983 | Twilight Zone: The Movie | Sara | Segment #3 |
1983 | Wavelength | Iris Longacre | |
1984 | Murder, She Wrote | Echo Cramer | TV episode: "It's a Dog's Life" |
1984 | The Rosebud Beach Hotel | Singing Maid Cherie | Her twin Marie Currie played Singing Maid Marie. |
1990 | Matlock | Renee Thorton | 2 episodes: "The Informer: Part 1" and "The Informer: Part 2" |
1991 | Betsy Rhodes | TV episode: "The Suspect" | |
Rich Girl | Michelle | ||
1992 | Dr. Giggles | ADR voice | |
2004 | Getting the Knack | Herself | documentary |
2005 | Edgeplay: A Film About the Runaways | Herself | Film by former Runaways bassist Victory Tischler-Blue documenting the Runaways' musical history. |
2013 | Hansel and Gretel: Warriors of Witchcraft | Ms. Thoman | Direct-to-DVD release |
Warehouse 13 | Herself | TV episode "Runaway" | |
2014 | Keeping up with the Kardashians | Herself | |
2014 | Glory Days | Herself | |
2017 | Under the Influence – Glam Rock | Herself | documentary |
2018 | Bad Reputation | Herself | documentary |
2019 | Suzi Q | Herself | documentary |
Year | Book | L.A. Weekly | author(s) | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | Neon Angel | - | Cherie Currie, Neal Shusterman | author |
2008 | Cherry Bomb | - | Carrie Borzillo-Vrenna | contributor |
2010 | Neon Angel (Re-released) | 9 | Cherie Currie, Tony O'Neill | author |
2014 | The Narrow Road of Light | - | Marie Currie | developer |
Japan 1977
| |
---|---|
| |
Studio albums | |
Live albums | |
Compilation albums | |
Songs |
|
Films | |
|
General | |
---|---|
National libraries | |
Other |
|