AIDS was one of the most avoided topics in the 90s. Especially so in country music, as people despised even the thought of it. However, Reba is open-minded and liberal in her thinking. In her album, “Read My Mind,” is the song “She Thinks His Name Was John,” which tells of a woman who was drunk and slept with someone from whom she got AIDS. This song wasn’t even her most controversial song, as the gutsy singer had a number of them.
Reba is truly a remarkable, unique, and revolutionary artist. She speaks her mind and heart through her music. She was brave enough to have songs with very sensitive and controversial content such as domestic abuse, mercy killing, illegal immigration, and much more.
Her Dedication Album
After the disastrous accident, Reba dedicated “For My Broken Heart,” which was her sixteenth album, to the band members she lost. The album was released in October of 1991. It contained many sorrowful songs and mournful ballads about love that is lost. Alanna Nash of Entertainment Weekly even described it as “all measure of suffering.”
The album might have been about sadness, but it was quite a hit. In fact, it sold more than four million copies, making it one of Reba’s best-selling albums. The album itself reached the number 3 spot on the music charts, while two of her songs reached number 1. For Reba, the album was “a form of healing for all our broken hearts,” as she wrote in the liner notes.
Her Emblematic Red Dress
It was in a 1993 performance of Reba’s, with Linda Davis, at the CMA Awards, when they won the Grammy, that she wore this iconic red dress. The two sang in duet, “Does He Love You.” While their voices wove around each other beautifully, the audience seemed to be more awe-struck by Reba’s look that night than her performance. It was evident the moment she stepped into the stage.
It was a red turtleneck dress with jeweled bodice and flared sleeves, yet it was very revealing, because the neckline was an almost transparent lunging V. Reba’s friend, Sandi Spika Borchetta, designed it, and she said she felt like Cinderella that night. Reba’s father jokingly asked her though if she was wearing the dress backwards (classic dad joke). Reba wore the dress once again in her 2018 Academy of Country Music Awards performance with Kelly Clarkson, singing the same song.
Harsh Times
In 1995, Reba released her nineteenth studio album, “Starting Over.” The album was a collection of all her favorite songs that were original records from the 50s to the 80s, paying tribute to her favorite artists. For so many years, Reba had been releasing newly recorded albums, but this album was more like a compilation and a throwback. The intention of the album was to celebrate Reba’s twenty years of making music.
However, many music critics found it less appealing than her previous albums. The album was considered a "rebirth" for Reba, but it seemed like some songs were recorded merely for entertainment only, as critics commented. Nonetheless, the criticisms didn’t affect Reba and in just two months from its release, the album was even made Platinum. One song on the album, "Ring on Her Finger, Time on Her Hands" went top 10 as a hit single.
She Was Almost In "Titanic"
Reba was almost part of the movie, Titanic, in 1997. It was considered one of the greatest movies ever made. With her acting experiences over the years, Reba was supposed to play the role of the “Unsinkable” Molly Brown. However, conflict in her schedule made her decline the offer of director James Cameron. At the time, she had booked performances wherein tickets were already sold. She just couldn’t cancel them.
Director, James Cameron, himself actually chose Reba to play the role, but Reba had a good reason for saying no. The schedule of her tour and performances were already in place, and she could no longer fit the shooting of the movie in or around it. The role was given to Kathy Bates instead, which was still a good decision on Cameron’s part, because Bates won for her portrayal of the role a Blockbuster Entertainment Award. The movie was, for quite some time, the highest gross film of all time. It took many years (and the arrival of the Marvel franchise) for it to be knocked down on the list.