Kevin
was born on October 3'rd '71. For those of you who believe that he was born in
1972. Kevin is Brian's cousin and lived on a farm until he was 9 years old.
Later he lived in a log cabin until he was 18. When he was a kid in school he
played little league football, rode horses and dirt bikes. He got his first
keyboard when he was a freshman and was a member of the school's drama club and
chorus. Before he joined BSB, he worked at Walt Disney World in Florida.
His
favorite color is royal blue. His favorite food is "mom's cooking". He
likes to make the most of the little time that he has so that he can concentrate
on getting his personal life in order.
Kevin
says that he would like to work on his sleeping habits. He is so busy that when
he does get some free time, he doesn't want to waste it sleeping! When he gets
back to his hotel room after a concert he likes to watch TV, read, write music
and play video games with Nick. There's just no time for sleep!
Full Name: |
Kevin Scott Richardson |
Birthday: |
October 3, 1971 |
Birthplace: |
Lexington, KY |
Astrological
Sign: |
Libra |
Pets: |
A black cat named Quincy |
Favorite
Colors: |
Blue, Black and Purple |
Hobbies: |
Playing keyboards, water skiing, swimming, surfing, basketball and hockey |
Favorite
Food: |
Mexican and anything Asian |
Favorite
Music: |
R. Kelly, Prince, Baby face and Teddy Riley |
Favorite
Movies: |
Top Gun and The Shaw shank Redemption |
Favorite TV
Shows: |
Roseanne and Martin |
Favorite
Book: |
Interview with the Vampire |
Favorite
Film Stars: |
Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman |
Favorite
Foreign Country: |
Sweden |
Unique
Talents: |
Ballroom dance instructor |
What he
looks for |
|
Dream Date |
Nice restaurant then maybe dancing or a movie afterward |
Profile
Kevin Richardson: The eyes have it
By
Heather Svokos, HERALD-LEADER POP CULTURE WRITER
Published
Sunday, November 21, 1999, in the Herald-Leader
Maybe
it's those emerald eyes. The way they just stare at you from under those
caterpillar eyebrows, as if to say: ``People magazine called me the sexiest pop
star alive, but I'm just a really shy guy who likes to sing.''
Maybe
it's his Backstreet Boys reputation as The Smooth One. The Serious One. The
Gentleman.
Whatever
it is, it just doesn't scream ``killer.''
But
according to his old football coach, there were two Kevin Richardsons. ``He was
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde on and off the football field,'' said Hoover Niece, who
coached at Estill County High for 25 years and still teaches there.
Off the
field Richardson was shy, congenial, gentlemanly ... ``It was: `Yes, sir,' `No,
ma'am,' '' recalled Niece.
But on
the field, he was an animal. ``I loved contact. I loved hitting people,''
Richardson said with a laugh from the BSB's Cincinnati tour stop. ``I think it
was just a release for me.''
Give him
a few seconds, and another of his personas will burble to the surface: The
Perfectionist.
``Now
that I look back, I wish I would've played more of a mental game because
sometimes I was over-aggressive and I would overrun a play. I would've been a
better player if I could've controlled it a little more. But I was just out of
control.''
Now, it
seems, Jekyll and Hyde have made their peace within. On stage, his suave,
in-control persona makes room for his inner-maniac.
At 27,
Richardson is the veteran of the group, but he still bolts around the stage,
pumping and bumping and grinding with the other guys like there's no tomorrow.
``I dance
real aggressive, real hard,'' he said. ``There are songs that are hard dance
routines where you dance hard and real physical, and there are routines where
you dance smooth, where you're like a cool cat, a Fred Astaire type vibe.''
The
music in him
Of
course, Richardson will be bringing Jekyll, Hyde and Mr. Astaire to Rupp Arena
next weekend, which gives him a special thrill.
Through
the years, he's taken in an array of Rupp shows: AC-DC, Bon Jovi, The Judds,
Poison, Cinderella, and Garth Brooks....
``My
first ever, ever concert was Ike and Tina Turner, when my mom was nine months
pregnant with me,'' Richardson said. ``I think I felt vibrations from that and
it triggered my love of music.''
For the
record: ``my first real concert that I attended in the flesh was Donny and
Marie.''
Kevin's
early years with his family father Jerald, a construction worker who helped
build Kincaid Tower; mother Ann, then a homemaker, and older brothers Jerald and
Tim were spent in Harrodsburg on a 10-acre farm, complete with ponies, cows and
chickens. The family grew their own vegetables and raised pork and beef.
The boys
were always outdoors, in the winter playing tackle football on a frozen pond.
``All three of them absolutely loved it there,'' Ann Richardson said. ``I'm so
glad I raised them in the country.''
As with
her brother's (Harold Littrell, father of Brian) family, church was a constant,
and Kevin sang in the choir. But he was a shy kid, so ``he was always the one
hiding in the back,'' his mother said.
In 1981,
the family moved to Estill County, where Jerald Sr. managed a summer camp.
That's when Kevin discovered the piano in the mess hall. He started goofing
around and taught himself to play. Ever since, he’s rarely been seen without a
keyboard.
``Kevin
was always pulling his music out,'' recalled friend and former teammate Jeremy
Niece (coach Niece's son). ``He would always write songs and sing them to us. He
made tapes, played the piano and synthesizer. We said, `Man, that's pretty good
stuff, you oughta turn that in.' ''
Playing
the part
He also
got plenty of encouragement from one of his mentors, Kathie Bettler, who then
taught drama at Estill County High. (She's now at Madison Southern High in
Berea.)
``She was
one of the first to inspire and believe in me, who first recognized that I had
acting ability,'' Kevin said.
A proud
Bettler remembers Kevin's natural talent and hard work. And she remembers him
bringing down the house as Conrad Birdie in Bye Bye Birdie. ``There was a scene
where all the girls in the audience had to faint,'' she said, ``and I was afraid
that would really happen and I would have to stop the play.''
It's
easy, Bettler said, for kids in the arts to think: `` `I'd love to do this, but
I can't.' I just encouraged him to try it. I always thought that he had
everything it took to make it big. And he certainly did.''
Throughout
high school, he toyed with several career ambitions flying was always a dream,
so he thought about joining the Air Force band, and he would occasionally talk
about coaching high school football. But his performing side was tugging too
hard. After graduation he was ready to head for the New York American Music and
Dramatic Academy in Manhattan.
Bound
for Backstreet
Then he
heard about performing opportunities in the Magic Kingdom.
``He and
his friend Jimmy Durham thought they would leave Kentucky,'' Ann Richardson
said. ``Being from a small town, they knew there weren't as many opportunities.
They wanted to get out and see the world.''
And
Disney was an oasis of gigs: tour guide, performer, Goofy, Aladdin, Leonardo (as
in Ninja Turtle) ... .
With his
career on the rise, this should have been a glorious time for Kevin, but the
early '90s were marked by personal tragedy. In October 1990, his father was
diagnosed with colon cancer, which worsened in June 1991.
``So we
called Kevin, and he decided to come back home,'' Ann Richardson said. He got a
job and stayed for the family. His father died in August that year. After that,
Kevin had to go back to what he knew, Ann Richardson said.
``I think
(work) helped him get through it. He had to lose himself. He does miss his dad,
I know that.''
Not long
after moving back, Kevin ran smack-dab into the opportunity of a lifetime:
Backstreet Boys.
Since
then, it's been a whirlwind rise to fame, and Kevin and cousin Brian Littrell
are glad they've been able to share the craziness known as BSB.
``He's
the general out here,'' Brian said. ``He has really taken me under his wing. Six
years ago ... he had been on his own a little longer, so I looked up to him as a
decision-maker. Our relationship has grown to the point where we make our own
decisions man-to-man. We both respect each other very highly, and sometimes we
have very, very different opinions.''
Said
Kevin: ``I can't think of it without him. We complement each other. When I'm
uptight he loosens me up; when he's lackadaisical, I help focus him.''
The same
can be said for Kevin with the rest of the group. ``Now I know what I put my
older brothers through,'' he said, laughing.
Since BSB
skyrocketed to superstardom in the United States, the guys and their families
have learned to deal with the pitfalls and perks of fame.
``I'm
sure he's proud,'' said his friend Jeremy Niece. ``But he'd love to be able to
walk into a Wal-Mart, too, and have nobody attack him.''
One of
the perks, of course, is the money (Kevin bought his mom a Mercedes for her
birthday. ``He made me get it,'' she said, rolling her eyes, smiling.)
especially now that they'll be seeing more of it. In May, the group sued its
former manager, Louis J. Pearlman, and others in his company. BSB accused
Pearlman of snagging $10 million of its revenue, leaving the quintet with a
grand total of $300,000.
Now,
under new management, with a renewed contract with Jive Records speculated to
pay up to $60 million, Richardson is resting a bit easier.
``Now
that we have new management, we communicate and it's like a team,'' he said.
Superstardom
is nice and all, but this Richardson says he'll never be far from his roots.
``I'm always gonna have a place -- a farm -- in Kentucky. My old Kentucky
home.''