The China Mail - Sinead O'Connor, a troubled Irish icon

USD -
AED 3.672499
AFN 66.379449
ALL 81.856268
AMD 381.47003
ANG 1.790403
AOA 917.000228
ARS 1450.509134
AUD 1.489982
AWG 1.80025
AZN 1.704186
BAM 1.658674
BBD 2.014358
BDT 122.21671
BGN 1.660403
BHD 0.377309
BIF 2957.76141
BMD 1
BND 1.284077
BOB 6.926234
BRL 5.544023
BSD 1.00014
BTN 89.856547
BWP 13.14687
BYN 2.919259
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011466
CAD 1.36637
CDF 2200.000043
CHF 0.78828
CLF 0.023092
CLP 905.90234
CNY 7.028498
CNH 7.00402
COP 3697
CRC 499.518715
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.513465
CZK 20.589598
DJF 177.719509
DKK 6.3454
DOP 62.690023
DZD 129.697253
EGP 47.553819
ERN 15
ETB 155.604932
EUR 0.849303
FJD 2.2692
FKP 0.740887
GBP 0.739891
GEL 2.684953
GGP 0.740887
GHS 11.126753
GIP 0.740887
GMD 74.499646
GNF 8741.153473
GTQ 7.662397
GYD 209.237241
HKD 7.771355
HNL 26.362545
HRK 6.400896
HTG 130.951927
HUF 329.363498
IDR 16772.3
ILS 3.19263
IMP 0.740887
INR 89.805299
IQD 1310.19773
IRR 42125.000056
ISK 125.729873
JEP 0.740887
JMD 159.532199
JOD 0.709013
JPY 156.525019
KES 128.949782
KGS 87.425033
KHR 4008.85391
KMF 417.99982
KPW 900.007297
KRW 1442.330024
KWD 0.30716
KYD 0.833489
KZT 514.029352
LAK 21644.588429
LBP 89561.205624
LKR 309.599834
LRD 177.018844
LSL 16.645168
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.412442
MAD 9.124909
MDL 16.777482
MGA 4573.672337
MKD 52.273789
MMK 2099.762774
MNT 3557.834851
MOP 8.011093
MRU 39.604456
MUR 45.949797
MVR 15.450032
MWK 1734.230032
MXN 17.902497
MYR 4.0485
MZN 63.909852
NAD 16.645168
NGN 1451.089623
NIO 36.806642
NOK 10.01107
NPR 143.770645
NZD 1.717622
OMR 0.384612
PAB 1.000136
PEN 3.365433
PGK 4.319268
PHP 58.709643
PKR 280.16122
PLN 3.580505
PYG 6777.849865
QAR 3.645469
RON 4.321499
RSD 99.687487
RUB 79.007431
RWF 1456.65485
SAR 3.750695
SBD 8.153391
SCR 14.462231
SDG 601.497151
SEK 9.14707
SGD 1.284096
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.074983
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 570.585342
SRD 38.335503
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.777943
SVC 8.75133
SYP 11056.849201
SZL 16.631683
THB 31.069737
TJS 9.19119
TMT 3.51
TND 2.909675
TOP 2.40776
TRY 42.823049
TTD 6.803263
TWD 31.395001
TZS 2469.999936
UAH 42.191946
UGX 3610.273633
UYU 39.087976
UZS 12053.751267
VES 288.088835
VND 26291
VUV 120.294541
WST 2.770875
XAF 556.301203
XAG 0.012608
XAU 0.000221
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802508
XDR 0.692794
XOF 556.303562
XPF 101.141939
YER 238.449959
ZAR 16.66875
ZMK 9001.198093
ZMW 22.577472
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.05

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    77.64

    +0.19%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.12

    +0.15%

  • BCC

    0.4200

    75.13

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    82.24

    +1.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.56

    +0.19%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5500

    80.71

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.09

    +0.3%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    41.11

    +0.05%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    49.08

    +0.24%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.11

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    0.0300

    57.27

    +0.05%

  • AZN

    0.4500

    92.9

    +0.48%

  • BP

    -0.0400

    34.27

    -0.12%

Sinead O'Connor, a troubled Irish icon
Sinead O'Connor, a troubled Irish icon / Photo: © AFP

Sinead O'Connor, a troubled Irish icon

Sinead O'Connor will forever be remembered as the Irish singer who made Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U" her own, turning it into an anthem for the broken-hearted.

Text size:

With a simple video shot in winter at a deserted park on the outskirts of Paris, she delivered a song of real and raw emotion encapsulating perfectly love and loss.

Staring at the camera, her mesmerising elfin features accentuated by a distinctive shaven head, her real tears powerfully embodied a life and soul stripped bare.

In public and in private, it was a characteristic of her celebrated, eclectic and often controversial career and life.

From the 1980s, she released 10 solo albums, from the multi-platinum "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" to 2014's "I'm not Bossy, I'm the Boss", drawing on everything from traditional Irish music to blues and reggae.

Born in 1966 in County Dublin, Sinead Marie Bernadette O'Connor was the third of five children born to parents who went through a bitter divorce.

She described herself as a child "kleptomaniac" in 2013, a way of dealing with abuse she called "Sexual and physical. Psychological. Spiritual. Emotional. Verbal" in a 1992 interview.

She was arrested several times before being sent to a church-run correctional facility where a sympathetic nun encouraged her to pursue music, buying her a guitar.

O'Connor began busking on the streets of Dublin and singing in pubs, where a need to be heard above the din helped her to develop her commanding voice.

She moved to London and produced her first album aged 20 while heavily pregnant. A request from her record company to soften her image backfired and cemented her punk style.

"They took me out to lunch and said they'd like me to start wearing short skirts and boots, grow my hair long and do the whole girl thing. What they were describing was actually their mistresses," she told the Daily Telegraph.

A trip to a Greek barber followed and O'Connor asked him to shave her head.

"He didn't want to do it, he was almost crying," she recalled. "I was delighted with it."

Her 1987 debut "The Lion and the Cobra" became a cult sensation, followed three years later by "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" which contained her breakthrough hit.

"I suppose I've got to say that music saved me," she said in 2013. "It was either jail or music. I got lucky."

She began playing to sold-out gigs -- her striking appearance and unmistakable voice making her a star around the world.

- Controversy -

O'Connor quickly developed a name for inflammatory outbursts and caused an international controversy in a 1992 performance on US television show Saturday Night Live.

While dressed in a white lace dress and performing Bob Marley's "War", O'Connor sang the words "child abuse" before tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II and declaring "Fight the real enemy!"

The abuse of children by Catholic priests in Ireland was not yet widely known and O'Connor's gesture sparked widespread criticism.

A steamroller crushed a pile of her CDs and tapes in front of her recording company's office in New York, and the incident dealt a blow to her popularity. Following albums failed to reach the commercial success of her previous work.

In the mid-1990s O'Connor's personal life began to draw more attention than her music, including a bitter custody battle over her young daughter with a former partner.

In 1999 she was again the centre of an uproar when she was ordained a priest by a dissident bishop in a ceremony not recognised by the mainstream Catholic Church, which does not accept women priests.

A year later O'Connor signed a new deal with Atlantic Records and released a series of new albums, including the traditional Irish-inspired "Sean-Nos Nua" and reggae album "Throw Down Your Arms".

An announced retirement from music in 2003 did not last long.

- Unfiltered -

O'Connor was married four times and had four children, the eldest born in 1987 and the youngest in 2006.

She gained a reputation for colourful public statements, writing a column in the Irish Independent in 2011 explaining that her love life was so bad that "inanimate objects are starting to look good" and soliciting applications from potential partners.

"Must not be named Brian or Nigel," she specified.

Her 2014 album "I'm Not Bossy, I'm the Boss" was well received but she was forced to cancel touring in mid-2015, citing exhaustion.

Her posts on social media became increasingly unfiltered, often threatening legal action against former associates, referring to physical and mental health difficulties and discussing troubles with her family and children.

In November 2015 she announced on Facebook that she had "taken an overdose" while booked anonymously into a hotel, but was found safe by police.

And in June 2016, Chicago police received a tip she might have been threatening to jump off a bridge, but she dismissed the rumours as "false and malicious gossip".

The musician converted to Islam and changed her name to Shuhada' Sadaqat in 2018.

Towards the end of her life she had reportedly been dividing her time between Ireland and Britain and in 2022 her son Shane died from suicide aged 17.

G.Fung--ThChM