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It's been HOW LONG? Celebrating 25 years since Freddie.

Posted by Laura on


The world lost musical genius  Freddie Mercury 25 years ago today. Laura Imbruglia shares with us her story of an honorary school production, action figures, and a tattoo on her right forearm. 

I don’t normally find myself in the habit of commemorating death anniversaries, but in the case of Freddie Mercury, I only really became aware of him in the mass grief surrounding his death. 

As he’s now my favourite singer of all-time and a personal hero of mine, I guess it’s a date worth reflecting on.

I was 8 years old and watching some afternoon tv, when a flamboyant man burst onto the screen during the news. It was live footage of Freddie from the 70s. He was prancing around in a Zandra Rhodes costume. As the news was (in my young mind) the most boring tv show in the world, I was quite curious as to why this certainly-not-boring space alien with a suitably otherworldly name was on a boring tv show.

My Mum walked into the room as the news was delivered and I asked her “Mum, who is Freddie Mercury?” Her face dropped as she realised what they were reporting on and she said “Oh no, he’s died!…he was a really great singer”.

That tiny moment is etched in my mind, but I didn’t really think about him again for another 5 years until I was in high school music class and our teacher played us “Bohemian Rhapsody” which I recognised as the epic song from the feature scene in “Wayne’s World”. 

My tiny mind expanded some more but I still didn’t do any more investigation into Queen (however, this was pre-internet, so maybe I’d have gone home and nerded out on youtube if it had been available to me).

A few more years passed and I was prepping a school stage production for the annual “Year 10 teacher take-off concert”. 

We had a maths teacher who rode to school every day, and I knew there was a Queen song about wanting to ride one’s bicycle. I walked around asking all my year 10 schoolmates if anyone had a Queen greatest hits cd I could borrow. One boy said “My sister has a tape, I’ll bring it in”. 

He brought it the next day, I took it home and decided to just press play and listen through til I got to the song. 

I thought I didn’t know many of their songs and might be confused if I tried to fast forward ahead. 

An instant love affair was cultivated. 

It turned out I did know these songs! Most of them anyway, and the songs I didn’t know blew my mind. 

I found the “bicycle” song, but lost my train of thought and played the tape past it. “Don’t Stop Me Now” arrived - it was the best thing I’d ever heard. I flipped the tape and “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” played. I’d previously thought that was an Elvis song! 

“Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy” came on and I had never heard anything more camp. Men like Freddie did not exist on the Central Coast of NSW and I was now incredibly fascinated by this man who was somehow simultaneously ultra masculine AND ultra feminine!

I never looked back. 

Freddie is now tattooed on my arm and my house holds 3 x action figures, many cds, dvds, books and records featuring his greatness. 

I LOVE YOU FREDDIE! COME BACK!


Freddie Mercury Tattoo


 Laura Imbruglia is an Australian singer-songwriter. Her latest creation is the devilishly clever arts web series “Amateur Hour”. You can also hear Laura sporadically on 3RRR radio show, “Word Nerds”.