Listen to this story being read by Mia Freedman, here.
Olivia Newton-John has died, aged 73, and the news is still sinking in.
When someone as famous as Olivia dies, it’s a very specific feeling. It’s a type of sadness but it’s also a feeling of nostalgia as we’re instantly transported to all the times in our life that intersected with them.
This morning, as I turned on my phone and read message after message in my group chats with the single word “Olivia”, I thought immediately about Grease.
I thought about being seven years old in 1978 and going to the movies for the first time in my life to see a ‘grown-up’ film and the lifelong effect it had on me.
It’s hard to overstate how iconic that film would become or how it would come to define the lives of its stars, Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta.
The film was a bit nuts, really. Certainly the casting was.
A group of actors in their twenties and thirties, playing high school students. Olivia was 28, John was 23 (Stockard Channing, who played Rizzo, was 33!) and Olivia’s character was inexplicably Australian because she told the director she couldn’t do a plausible American accent.
“Oh well, we’ll just make Sandy Australian then,” he said.
And they did.
Olivia was a pop star then, widely successful all over the world. And Hollywood wanted to try to harness that fame to make movies.
That’s how she came to star in one of the most iconic films, in the most iconic roles of all time.