Within minutes of our meeting, Susan Boyle breaks the ice with a playful jab about Britainโs Got Talent judge Piers Morgan โ or as she affectionately calls him, โPiersy Baby.โ With a mischievous twinkle in her eye, she asks if I know him.
When I say yes, she springs into the famous Susan Boyle Wiggle, throwing herself onto the sofa with youthful energy.
โAsk me whatever you want,โ she says.
So I ask: Do you really have a crush on Piers?
โYouโve got to admit he is dead handsome,โ she gushes, going starry-eyed.
Susan, now 48 and single, was once the never-been-kissed church volunteer living alone with her cat in Blackburn, West Lothian โ until her jaw-dropping rendition of โI Dreamed A Dreamโ turned her into an overnight sensation.
Global sensation and the heavy cost of fame
Just days after her televised audition, Susan became a global internet phenomenon. But with that fame came immense pressure.
She eventually checked herself into The Priory clinic in North London, igniting widespread media debate about the exploitation of reality TV contestants and the emotional toll of fleeting fame.
Susanโs history includes a difficult birth that caused mild learning difficulties due to lack of oxygen.
Yet, the woman sitting before me today is anything but broken.
Her debut album, I Dreamed A Dream, soared to the top of Amazonโs bestseller list three months before its release on November 23.

The transformation of Susan Boyle
Physically, Susan looks remarkably different. Sheโs lost weight, waxed away the โHairy Angelโ label cruelly given to her early on.
โI was fed up being called that,โ she says bluntly.
โI didnโt know what I looked like on TV until I saw myself on Britainโs Got Talent. I saw this wee wifey with mad hair and bushy eyebrows and thought, โHmm, not really telegenic.โโ
So she transformed herself:
โWhen I look in the mirror now, I see this sophisticated lady. Iโm still a bit like that wee wifey inside, but more refined in some ways.โ
True to form, Susan pulls no punches.
โWould you want to look like the Hairy Angel? I donโt think so.โ
Susanโs struggle with fame and breakdown at The Priory
This is Susan Boyleโs first in-depth interview, and sheโs determined to be utterly honest.
โEverything had built up, and I was exhausted,โ she admits.
โMy life ceased to be normal when Britainโs Got Talent went live. There were press people, TV cameras, strangers outside my door. It was overwhelming. I thought, โGod, whatโs happening here?โโ
At one point, the media attention became unbearable:
โI couldnโt even go outside. American TV crews camped outside my house. I had to draw my blinds, but they still hammered on my door.โ
She had no security, only a BGT production assistant sent to stay nearby.
โI was frightened. I was vulnerable. Phone calls came 24/7, keeping me awake for three weeks until I changed my number.โ
Susan notes:
โI donโt think Paul Potts ever got this level of attention. It was like being inside a pressure cooker about to explode.โ
The night of the Britainโs Got Talent final
By the final, Susan was exhausted.
โSimon Cowell sent for me. He asked if I still wanted to sing that night. Of course I did โ Iโd waited my whole life for that moment.โ
Simon reminded her:
โRemember what you said at the audition? You said youโd make the place rock. Now go out there and make it rock.โ
She performed but finished second.
โI donโt remember much after. I was exhausted, couldnโt see properly, hadnโt eaten or slept for days. It was like looking through glass. Extreme exhaustion made me snap at everyone.โ
Ultimately, she was taken to the Priory:
โI needed sleep. I was too tired to even think straight. Iโm much stronger now, though.โ
Turning disability into ability
Despite her struggles, Susan is determined:
โLots of people with hidden disabilities audition. I donโt think they should be discouraged. I can now turn my disability into ability. I have far more talent than people realize.โ
Born the youngest of nine children in Blackburn, Scotland, Susan grew up facing bullying:
โThey called me Sambo because of my curly black hair and Simple Susie. It chipped away at my personality.โ
Home was her safe space. Dolls became her imaginary friends until music took over as her ultimate refuge.
After leaving school with two O-levels in History and English, Susan worked in a canteen, then studied to work in the voluntary sector.
She also sang at her church, entertaining the elderly and disabled.
Love, loss, and new beginnings
Susan had a brief romance:
โI had a boyfriend, John, who proposed after seven weeks, but he got cold feet. It made me feel unattractive, but I stayed optimistic.โ
In 1999, her father, Patrick, passed away at 80. Susan was devastated but stayed strong for her mother, Bridget.
Bridget depended on Susan until her own passing at age 91.
โI was her main carer for years. Watching her die was unlike anything I had ever experienced. She smiled moments before she passed โ a sign she was at peace.โ
Susan grieved deeply:
โAfter she died, I felt lonely. Music helped heal me again. Faith helped too. Her physical presence is gone, but her spirit remains with me.โ
The start of the fairy tale
Shortly after her motherโs death, Susan saw Britainโs Got Talent on TV โ and noticed Piers Morgan.
โI thought, โHmm, nice. I like him.โ I wondered what would happen if I auditioned.โ
On January 21, Susan donned a gold dress and auditioned in Glasgow.
Despite the snickers, once she sang, she stunned the audience.
After her audition aired, crowds gathered outside her home.
โThatโs when it all began,โ she says.
Susanโs album is now outselling Whitney Houstonโs comeback, and her Americaโs Got Talent appearance added five million viewers.
Asked why the world loves her, Susan reflects:
โItโs a Cinderella story, isnโt it?โ
And, like all great fairy tales, Susan Boyleโs story is destined for a happy ending.