An Interview with All Saints!


 Natalie Appleton, the Canadian quarter
          of Britain's new pop divas All Saints, has
          been so busy promoting the group's debut
          album in Europe, that she wasn't aware of
          the controversy surrounding Canadian Olympic
          snowboarder Ross Rebagliati and his
          marijuana mishap. 

          "Every time I put on the news, it's about
          Clinton and Iraq. That's all I ever see,
          `cause when you're away, you get into CNN,"
          she says, on the phone from Hamburg,
          Germany, still a little curious about the
          story of his revoked gold medal. 

          "It's not like pot would have helped him
          anyway," she says, echoing the feelings of
          many Canadians. "What's the big deal? It's
          not even like it's a steroid or anything
          where it enhances his performance." 

          "So he got it back?" she asks. "Cool." 

          Appleton, 24 -- whose younger sister Nicole,
          22, is also in All Saints which includes
          Shaznay T. Lewis, 21, and Melanie Blatt, 21
          -- is a proud Canadian. Born in Mississauga,
          Ont, to British parents, she recently got a
          tattoo in Los Angeles of a red maple leaf,
          but admits the only thing she remembers from
          her formative years in Toronto are Hostess
          sour cream and onion chips. 

          "I can't wait to go back there," she
          enthuses. "I went there once to see my
          cousins when I was 17, and I haven't been
          back since. I'm going there next month (to
          do press and appear on MuchMusic's SnowJob
          in B.C.), so I'm really excited." 

          The group currently has a top 10 hit in
          Canada with the single, "I Know Where It's
          At" (the single "Never Ever" has already
          sold over a million copies in the U.K.). The
          album won't hit the stores until next week. 

          When Appleton's parents divorced when she
          was a kid, her father went back to England
          and her mother tried to stick it out in
          Canada. Appleton always wanted to sing,
          inspired, she says, by the metal group Kiss.
          "I'd pretend I had my fake guitar and put
          the make-up on," she recalls. "It never
          looked the same. I'd put talcum powder on
          for the white face." 

          Her mother finally relocated the family
          (four sisters) to London, England, before
          marrying an American gentleman and uprooting
          again to New York. Appleton attended high
          school there and eventually quit to sing
          standards and pop classics in a country club
          in the Catskills. 

          "I quit school to do that," she says, joking
          how she learned to play tambourine and
          maracas for the bill. "What else to you play
          in a nightclub bar? When I do get time, I'm
          going to start learning how to play the
          guitar." 

          After several years in New York, she
          returned to London and joined All Saints,
          after her sister Nicole had run into her old
          friend Blatt from her days at Sylvia Young
          Theatre School (whose alumnus includes Emma
          "Baby Spice" Bunton). 

          "We spent a lot of time in the studio just
          putting demos together, working for
          producers who would do us favours because we
          had no money at the time," Appleton
          recounts. 

          "When Spice Girls first came out, it was hot
          and new and fresh and whenever we did
          showcases record labels expected that. We
          couldn't change who we are and be who they
          wanted us to be, it wouldn't have lasted." 

          "A tape ended up in the hands of friends of
          friends of friends and eventually to London
          Records. Half way through listening to the
          song, (the A&R rep) called us in to a
          meeting and signed us up." 

          Quickly the tabloids started invading these
          young women's private lives. Old beaus
          talked and All Saints became instant celebs
          of a stature that was not always welcome. 

          "It's strange how people can be so into your
          personal life. It's so stupid," says
          Appleton, whose former husband distorted the
          truth about their marriage which yielded a
          daughter, now 5. 

          "I feel stupid that I used to read and
          believe that shit. I like trashy stuff. I
          like Jerry Springer. I wouldn't go as far as
          the Enquirer. But I do like to read the
          tabloids, I like gossip, but when it's about
          you, it's not real. 

          "It's totally changed my whole view of the
          press. Everything I read now, I take with a
          pinch of salt," she says. 

          She's also a little taken aback by the
          treatment she receives from strangers, since
          her newfound fame. "I was out with nay
          friend the other day and I'm not used to
          people looking at me and knowing my name and
          shouting at me. I was quite scared. I've
          also had a few people singing outside my
          door. It's weird. If I was home a lot, maybe
          I'd get used to it. 

          "I hear from family members I've never met
          before and I don't really like that. They
          didn't care for me before, why should they
          care for me now? It's just a job." 

          A job that's going to make this Canadian
          quite rich and famous. 

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