The American
band Counting Crows once sang: “When everybody loves
you, you can never be lonely”. It is a line drenched
in irony, inferring that the quest for fulfilment
through public adoration is inevitably futile. Nancy
Agram, the Lebanese singing sensation, proudly
informs me that despite having very few friends she
never gets lonely.
“I have all
the fans that love me and that is more than enough,”
Agram innocently proclaims.
The fact
that the incongruity of those sad words completely
escapes her is testament to her youth and naivety.
Looking at Agram and listening to her speak the
controversy surrounding her age is immediately
rendered null and void. Agram could easily pass for
the nineteen years she claims. But then, Agram is
the consummate actress. The girl in the “Akhasmak
Ah” video is brassy, sassy, seductive and
sophisticated. The girl sat in front of me in an
expansive Hilton suite is just that – a girl. An
opinion shared by those who work with her. With
Agram out of earshot her drummer tells me:
“She’s just
a kid. I mean if the rest of the boys in the band
and I are messing around playing games she’ll want
to drop everything and join us. But she’s a very
smart kid!”
A chance
meeting the next day with the man who directed her
Dream Park concert last month confirms what had been
said earlier: “Yes she’s talented but the fact is
you’re dealing with a child.”
Girlishly
demure, surprisingly quiet and at times verging on
awkward, Agram is the first to admit that it’s all
simply make believe.
“I’m just
acting,” she explains matter-of-factly. Then with an
innocent slightly confused look, a far cry from the
come-to bed eyes she’s perfected on screen, she
adds: “the director asks me to be a certain way and
I do it. That’s all.”
Suddenly,
and rather irritatingly, all the questions that I’d
prepared with regards the criticism she’s received
for being so overtly sexual seem entirely
irrelevant. Physically, the difference between Nancy
Agram the singing sensation and Nancy Agram the girl
with whom I’m conducting the interview are striking.
Nancy has earned a reputation for her sensational
curves glorified in ‘that’ dress - the infamous
tight fitting black number that’s arguably the true
star of the music video that catapulted her into
stardom. In reality Nancy is remarkably thin, but
like she says: “TV makes you look different”.
However, one
thing the camera doesn’t exaggerate is her beauty.
Interviews with international stars habitually give
the interviewer the opportunity to begin with the
immortal words: “Her hair scraped back, dressed
simply and without an ounce of make-up on she is
still beautiful.” Of course with an Arab woman the
situation is entirely reversed. Agram is
immaculately made up, in fact her make-up artist
hovers close-by throughout the interview. She wears
skin-tight golden jeans, a matching off-the-shoulder
top and on her feet are skyscraper sparkly sandals;
her hair is of course just a little too “naturally”
tousled. But still, Nancy is undeniably stunning; no
doubt testament to the plastic surgery to which she
freely admits.
“I have no
problem talking about it, I mean it’s just normal.
I’ve had a nose job for example”.
It’s the use
of the words “for example” that I find startling,
but no matter how much I coax she won’t explain just
what the other “examples” might be. Nancy speaks of
her journey to stardom in the practiced and polished
manner of a professional performer, well accustomed
to the never-ending barrage of interviews to which
she is subjected. Like all stars that are used to
dealing with the press, Nancy is a challenging
interviewee, keeping her answers to a bare minimum
and volunteering only the very bare facts. The fact
that her manager keeps a watchful eye throughout
inevitably hinders her willingness to openly express
herself.
“I first
started singing at home when I was nine. My
grandmother would sing old songs and I would copy
her.”
Following in
the footsteps of other teen stars such as Britney
Spears, Nancy’s first foray into the public came in
the form of a televised talent competition.
“There was
this show in Lebanon called Stars of the Future
and I won,” she explains. “Straight after that I
released my first CD called Mahtaglak (I Need
You).”
Nancy was 14
at the time and has been recording and performing
ever since. Little wonder that her academic career
has been sacrificed in the process, not that Agram
sees it that way.
“I’m at
university,” she says. “Gamat el Andioub in Lebnon,
studying Radio and Television.” I ask her how she
could possibly fit it all in and once again she
replies with surprising casualness: “I just go
whenever I have time”.
Which brings
me to the very real possibility that Agram, the
superstar as we know her today, may just be the
by-product of one beautifully directed but very
sexually charged music video. The very real
possibility that Agram may just be a one hit wonder,
in which case her sporadic academic attendance may
leave her with very little to fall back on. For the
first time I sense a hint of aggressiveness in her
voice:
“My priority
is my art, for me singing is more important, my
future depends on it. As for my success I’m not
worried because the next video is going to be
amazing.”
Saying that,
Agram has no aspirations for world stardom.
“The Arab
world is enough for me,” she says, noting that the
Egyptians are her biggest supporters. “The reaction
I got at the Dream Park concert was just incredible,
I was completely blown-away, they were just so
supportive.”
Interestingly, a member of her band has a slightly
different story to tell. “Nancy doesn’t know but us
guys in the band had stones thrown at us during the
concert. I think the reason is that boys come to see
her with certain expectations based on what they’ve
seen in her sexy video. When they find out that she
is a singer and nothing more they get frustrated and
take it out on us!”
Stones or
not, the fact is Agram is taking the Middle East by
storm, and for now at least, her career is on the
right track which brings us to her personal life. Is
there a boyfriend lurking in the background? Does
she have her sights set on the marriage and kids
scenario?
“I don’t
have a boyfriend right now,” she tells me. “If I did
it would have to be somebody who is prepared to
accept my career, I refuse to give it up for anyone.
Anyway that stuff’s is a long long way off, I’m not
thinking about having kids anytime soon.” The
reason? “I’m just a kid myself!”
With that
her manager urges me to wrap the interview up. This
kid has got a meeting to get to in Alexandria and
she’s already running late. Agram the nineteen
year-old gets up, walks over to the mirror,
re-touches her lipstick, puts on her designer shades
and saunters out the hotel room as Nancy Agram -
brassy, sassy, seductive and sophisticated. It’s as
easy as child’s play.