NewsBite

The juiciest confessions from Elton John’s tell-all book

From stripping naked on drug-fuelled binges to fighting with Princess Diana, the singer does not hold back in his new book.

Rocketman trailer

From stripping naked on drug-fuelled binges to rowing with Princess Diana and sharing a joke with the Queen, Sir Elton John does not hold back in his new autobiography, Me.

Coming hot on the heels of his musical biopic Rocketman, the brutally honest memoir delves into every nook and cranny of the 72-year-old star’s extraordinary life.

From the sordid to the embarrassing, the funny to the heart-rending, it is a candid look at a man whose career has spanned 50 years.

The Sun’s Kate Jackson picks out some of the best bits.

Elton John certainly has lived a colourful life. Here he is all dressed up for his belated 50th birthday party.
Elton John certainly has lived a colourful life. Here he is all dressed up for his belated 50th birthday party.

ON COCAINE, BOOZE AND GETTING CLEAN

For 16 years, cocaine gave Elton the false confidence he needed to blend into an “elite little clique” he had never felt part of as “nerdy” Reginald Dwight.

But along with his heavy drinking, it also fuelled some extreme and violent behaviour, including the time he stripped naked and punched then-manager John Reid on the set of the video for I’m Still Standing.

It was while high on cocaine that the rocker hijacked a Rolling Stones gig after joining them on stage and mistook Bob Dylan for a gardener and offered him an outfit so he could change out of his scruffy clothes.

He writes: “My appetite for the stuff was unbelievable — enough to attract comment in the circles I was moving in.

“Given that I was a rock star spending a lot of time in Seventies Los Angeles, this was a not-inconsiderable feat.”

In 1990, then-boyfriend Hugh Williams entered rehab, plunging Elton into a fortnight-long cocaine and whisky binge. He writes how he isolated himself, did not wash, barely ate and, when he did, would vomit afterwards.

It was at this point that he realised he would either have a heart attack or an overdose if he carried on.

“I had no idea how to live, but I didn’t want to die,” he writes.

So on July 29, 1990, he checked into rehab in Chicago at the age of 43. It was the first time in his pampered life that Elton learned how to operate a washing machine.

Elton has now been clean for 29 years.

RELATED: What Rocketman changed about Elton’s life

RELATED: True story about Elton John’s rift with his mother

Elton John with the Spice Girls in 2000.
Elton John with the Spice Girls in 2000.

ON HIS FAMOUS FRIENDS

Over a 50-year career, Elton has rubbed shoulders with pretty much every celebrity going.

He once gave John Lennon a rather rude cuckoo clock — where the bird had a wooden penis that popped in and out.

He writes how actress Liz Taylor would charm him into giving her his expensive jewellery.

And he was once gobsmacked when the Queen gave him a conspiratorial wink before jokingly slapping her nephew Viscount Linley around the face.

Rod Stewart, who adopted the alter ego of “Phyllis” to Elton’s “Beryl” in their friendship, sent him a domed hair dryer, like the sort used by pensioners in salons, when news of Elton’s hair loss hit the headlines.

Their banter and friendly rivalry led to Elton arranging for a blimp advertising one of Rod’s gigs to be shot down — and he suspects it was Rod who later stole one of his own promotional banners.

But one star he does not have much affection for is Tina Turner, after she criticised his clothes, hair and even the colour of his piano ahead of a planned joint tour in 1997.

The straw that broke the camel’s back was a heated argument over her song Proud Mary, when Elton told her to “stick her f***ing song up her ar*e”.

Not surprisingly, the tour was cancelled, although the pair did later make up.

Tina Turner and Elton John performing together in 1995.
Tina Turner and Elton John performing together in 1995.

ON BEING A DAD

Elton and husband David are parents to Zachary, 8, and Elijah, 6, who were both conceived using the same donor eggs and surrogate.

But fatherhood was not something Elton had yearned for, especially considering his own troubled childhood.

In the book, he writes: “If you’d tried telling the Elton John of the Seventies or Eighties that he could find more fulfilment on a deep and profound level in changing a nappy than in writing a song or playing a gig, you’d probably have had to exit the room at high speed immediately afterwards, with crockery flying past your ears.”

So it was a surprise when he found parenting such a pleasure.

He writes: “I even found the toddler tantrums weirdly charming. You think you’re being difficult, my little sausage? Have I ever told you about the time I drank eight vodka martinis, took all my clothes off in front of a film crew and then broke my manager’s nose?”

And it is the simple pleasures, such as going to see a family movie or taking them to watch his beloved Watford FC, that he enjoys the most.

So much so he is winding down from music to spend more time being a dad. It was when David presented him with their sons’ school schedule, charting their lives, that he realised he could not be an international rock star as well as the kind of dad he wanted to be.

Having taken pride in still performing 120 gigs a year, he planned for retiring from the stage.

He is currently in the middle of a 300-date Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour, ending in 2021.

He said earlier this year: “By the time I finish I’ll be at least 75. That will be a chance to reassess what I want to do. I just owe it to those children to be there for them.”

He also writes in the book about the time he was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 and needed surgery to remove his prostate.

When a subsequent infection left him 24 hours away from death, he prayed to live to see his kids again. It was as he was recovering that he realised he had to stop touring.

He writes: “Music was the most wonderful thing, but it still didn’t sound as good as Zachary chattering about what had happened at Cubs or football practice.”

Elton John and his husband David Furnish at the 2019 Vanity Fair Oscar Party. Picture: JB Lacroix / AFP
Elton John and his husband David Furnish at the 2019 Vanity Fair Oscar Party. Picture: JB Lacroix / AFP

ON HIS FRIEND PRINCESS DIANA

Elton first became friends with Princess Diana in 1981 at an awkward 21st birthday party for Prince Andrew, and he recalls how he found her company and thirst for gossip irresistible.

He tells a fascinating story about a party years later, after she had separated from Prince Charles, during which Hollywood A-listers Sylvester Stallone and Richard Gere competed for her attention.

Elton’s husband David found the actors “squaring up to each other” and preparing to trade blows.

Action-man Sly then stormed off, saying: “I never would have come if I’d known Prince f***in’ Charming was gonna be here.”

Addressing his fallout with Diana, Elton reveals it was over a photography book featuring nearly naked men, by fashion designer Gianni Versace — the proceeds of which were going to Elton’s Aids Foundation.

Diana had agreed to write the foreword but he says she pulled out at the last minute.

The pair made up in July 1997 after Versace was shot and killed. It was just seven weeks before Diana herself lost her life.

Elton famously played a special tribute of Candle In The Wind at her funeral, but admits he has only listened to that version once since.

He also says he felt uncomfortable that the single, which is the biggest-selling UK song of all time, stayed at Number 1 for five weeks as it meant footage of Diana’s funeral was repeated on Top Of The Pops.

Elton and Diana in 1993. Picture: Richard Young / Rex Features
Elton and Diana in 1993. Picture: Richard Young / Rex Features

ON LOVE

He lavished his love interests, including ex Hugh Williams, with expensive gifts, before tiring of them after a few months — and getting someone else to ditch them.

He writes: “It was absolutely dreadful behaviour. I’d have one leaving at the airport at the same time as the new one was flying in.”

He even attributes the time he overdosed on Valium pills as probably due to “some catastrophic love affair gone wrong”.

In 1993, he met filmmaker David Furnish. The pair entered a civil partnership on December 21, 2005 — the day the UK’s Civil Partnership Act came into effect. That partnership has now been converted into marriage.

The happy couple at the Rocketman UK premiere. Picture: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images
The happy couple at the Rocketman UK premiere. Picture: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

ON HIS MOTHER SHEILA

When he was 13, Elton’s parents split up. Many of their arguments had been about his upbringing, so Elton blamed himself for their toxic relationship.

His own relationship with his mum Sheila was also turbulent. He describes how she often delivered hidings and even toilet-trained him by beating him with a wire brush.

Yet he says she could also be fun and was supportive of his career and of him when he came out as gay.

But when he married David, things took a turn for the worse.

He recalls how she turned up to their civil partnership at the Guildhall in Windsor “in character as a raving sociopath”.

She proceeded to moan, snap, storm off and complain about everything to everyone she met.

X Factor judge Sharon Osbourne, a guest at the bash, told Elton: “I want to kill her”.

He also describes having to tiptoe around Sheila, never knowing what would enrage her next.

Towards the end of her life, they had a bitter falling-out, which lasted seven years.

According to an interview with Sheila in 2015, it was sparked when she said to him: “You think more of that f***ing thing you married than your own mother.”

Sheila then auctioned off many of the gifts he had given her — and even hired The Ultimate Elton Tribute Band for her 90th birthday.

The pair reconciled ahead of her death, aged 92, in 2017.

Elton John with David Furnish, his mother Sheila and stepfather Fred Fairebrother outside Buckingham Palace after being knighted by the Queen.
Elton John with David Furnish, his mother Sheila and stepfather Fred Fairebrother outside Buckingham Palace after being knighted by the Queen.

Me, by Elton John, will hit shelves in Australia on October 15

This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission

Originally published as The juiciest confessions from Elton John’s tell-all book

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/entertainment/the-juiciest-confessions-from-elton-johns-tellall-book/news-story/3280d2262b87f61ff93e1c26d39a90e0