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Billy Idol details near death experiences involving heroin and motorbikes
Billy Idol details near death experiences involving heroin and motorbikes

Yahoo

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Billy Idol details near death experiences involving heroin and motorbikes

Rock star Billy Idol has opened up about a slew of near death experiences he went through during the mid-Eighties and early Nighties. The 69-year-old 'Dancing with Myself' hitmaker, real name William Broad, just premiered a documentary about his life, Billy Idol Should Be Dead, at the Tribeca Festival. As the film's title suggests, Idol had multiple scrapes with death in his youth due to heavy drug use. In the first scene, he references a near-fatal overdose in 1984 where he took heroin with some friends in London. After taking multiple lines of the Class A narcotic, Idol turned blue and was resuscitated in an ice bath. 'I nearly died that night. And the next day, we're on Top of the Pops doing 'Eyes Without a Face',' he told the iPaper of the incident. Idol moved to New York City in 1981 to pursue a solo career in music. His debut studio album Billy Idol (1982) became a commercial hit in the US with singles 'Dancing with Myself' and 'White Wedding'. He hadn't received the same warm reception in the UK and wanted his 1983 Rebel Yell album to be a hit at home, selling millions of copies like his music had done Stateside. 'I'm just glad I didn't die,' he said, 'because I had this great album and I wanted to come back to England and say – 'Now what do you think?' I nearly blew that. So I'm glad I lived through it.' Idol had so many near-fatal overdoses in the mid-Eighties that his father, an accountant, flew to America and staged an intervention. 'I needed someone to show me they loved me beyond the music,' Idol reflected. Yet, his father's love couldn't: 'I suppose when you're that young, you just don't see the red flags that much,' he said. In 1990, Idol was involved in a severe motorbike accident he was lucky to survive and almost saw him lose a leg. While in hospital, he was put on a main box that injected him with pure morphine every 12 minutes, which ironically helped him give up drugs. 'I thought, 'When are you ever going to be on something this pure again? Never,' he said. 'How high can you get? I think I'm there.''

Billy Idol wasn't shocked to find out he had a secret son
Billy Idol wasn't shocked to find out he had a secret son

Perth Now

time24-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Billy Idol wasn't shocked to find out he had a secret son

Billy Idol wasn't surprised to discover that he had fathered a child during the 1980s. The White Wedding rocker found that he was dad to son Brant Broad after his daughter Bonnie – who he has from his relationship with Linda Mathis – discovered her half-sibling through a DNA test and admits that the news wasn't a huge shock due to his hedonistic behaviour at the height of his fame. In an interview with The i newspaper, Billy said: "Maybe a little bit, but the more I thought about it, I guessed there must be something like that, because we were going around in the 80s, and 70s, just having knockdown, drag-out sex with a million people you didn't know. A lot of people in the rock world got children beyond their usual relationships." Idol has forged a close bond with Brant - who lives in New York and works in the construction trade like his father and uncle did. The 69-year-old rocker said: "We're quite good friends, and I love him. He's a nice guy." Billy recounts in the documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead – which premiered at the Tribeca Festival earlier this month - how he almost died from a heroin overdose and was relieved that he cheated death so he could enjoy the success of his 1983 album Rebel Yell, which reached the top 10 in the US Billboard charts. The Eyes Without a Face singer said: "I'm just glad I didn't die, because I had this great album and I wanted to come back to England and say – 'Now what do you think?' I nearly blew that. So I'm glad I lived through it." Idol, whose real name is William Broad, struggled with drug addiction during his time in the spotlight and admits that his problems were worsened by the fame that came with music success. He explained: "You start being known by the general public who don't necessarily give a s*** about your music. They just know that spiky blonde hair and go, 'Hey it's Billy!' "That's where the pressure came in, as gradually your world closed down. You're stuck in tiny rooms trying to expand your life beyond that. You might as well be as high as a kite doing that." Billy will celebrate his 70th birthday in November and is now happy to be a doting father and grandfather after overcoming his addiction issues. He said: "I'm all set up for that. I'm in a better place in my life. In lots of ways, I've done everything I wanted, at least to my own satisfaction. And now I'm not a drug addict, I can really be there for them."

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