Country Music's Power Couple Vince Gill and Amy Grant Pose For the Cover of AARP The Magazine and Candidly Discuss Their Separate Paths to Stardom, the Battle To Be Together and How They Stay "Crazy In Love"
Country Music's Power Couple Vince Gill and Amy Grant Pose For the Cover of AARP The Magazine and Candidly Discuss Their Separate Paths to Stardom, the Battle To Be Together and How They Stay "Crazy In Love"
WASHINGTON, March 24, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --Grammy Award-winning power couple Vince Gill and Amy Grant risked more than their reputations to be together. The beloved duo -- a Contemporary Christian pop singer and a Country Music Hall of Famer -- speak exclusively with AARP The Magazine in a revealing conversation about their journey to become a couple, diverse upbringings, and the key to making marriage last. "It was hard," Gill said on the public speculation following both his and Grant's divorces. "The kids, the popularity of our lives, a lot of tongues waggin'." Eleven years later, Gill and Grant find themselves more in love than ever.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20070209/NYF043LOGO)
The following are excerpts from the upcoming AARP The Magazine cover story featuring Vince Gill and Amy Grant, available online NOW with behind the scenes video footage of the cover photo shoot, at www.aarp.org/magazine.
Gill on his ongoing attraction to Grant
"What's funny is I see old photographs of Amy in her 20s, and she's much prettier these days. She still does it for me."
"It never fails to amaze me how captivating the sound of her voice is."
"We felt about music and we felt about fame and we felt about career the same. Which was, we kind of always just loved the music part of it and the other stuff just comes and goes..."
Gill on feeling his best at 50+
"I think it gets better, it feels better at 50 than it did at 40."
"Your muscles hurt a little more, you don't get around like you used to, but the trade off (is that), I wouldn't trade it for any other period of life."
Grant on her marriage to and divorce from gospel singer Gary Chapman
"It had been rocky from the get-go. I'd been holding steady for 15 years in something that was not easy to hold steady."
"[It was] awful. Awful! Killed me for him. How painful to be married to somebody you know is so captivated by another human being."
Grant on her instant connection with Gill
"I knew from the tips of my toes that he was unlike anybody I had ever met, and that I related to him on such a cellular level. I was just so overwhelmed by him as a person that I finally came up behind him and wrapped my arms around him and said, 'I've needed to do this all night.' "
"[Vince] just made a profound mark on me every time and confirmed there was somebody out there who gets me."
Gill on their struggle to be together
"We were both married, and though we were crazy about each other, we thought, 'Well that's not our life.'"
"The hard truth was that we never thought for a minute that we would end up together."
Gill on defying age stereotypes
"The past pales in comparison to what I am doing now. I feel reborn, in a sense."
Grant on being in love now
"Having that baby at 40 really shot my stomach, and I was just having a good cry about it. Vince came in, and I was drooling and snot was coming out, and I said, 'Women get invisible.' And he said, 'I love you, and you're more beautiful now than you were when I first met you. I can't wait to see what you look like with a head full of gray hair.' And he meant it."
Gill on Grant's habits
"She can't multitask. She'll start the bathwater and then forget it."
Gill on the birth of their daughter Corrina
"[She's] the glue of this whole family. She bonded all of us in a blood way that really did connect us."
Grant on what life would be without Gill
"Oh, my goodness. I would miss him every day."
About AARP The Magazine
With nearly 35 million readers nationwide, AARP The Magazine (www.aarpmagazine.org) is the world's largest circulation magazine and the definitive lifestyle publication for Americans 50+. Reaching over 23 million households, AARP The Magazine delivers comprehensive content through in-depth celebrity interviews, health and fitness features, consumer interest information and tips, book and movie reviews and financial guidance. Published bimonthly in print and continually online, AARP The Magazine was founded in 1958 and is the flagship title of AARP Publications.
About AARP
AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization with a membership that helps people 50+ have independence, choice and control in ways that are beneficial and affordable to them and society as a whole. AARP does not endorse candidates for public office or make contributions to either political campaigns or candidates. We produce AARP The Magazine, the definitive voice for 50+ Americans and the world's largest-circulation magazine with nearly 35 million readers; AARP Bulletin, the go-to news source for AARP's millions of members and Americans 50+; AARP VIVA, the only bilingual U.S. publication dedicated exclusively to the 50+ Hispanic community; and our website, AARP.org. AARP Foundation is an affiliated charity that provides security, protection, and empowerment to older persons in need with support from thousands of volunteers, donors, and sponsors. We have staffed offices in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Island.
SOURCE AARP
Photo:http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20070209/NYF043LOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/
AARP
CONTACT: Laurie Bella, Coburn Communication, +1-212-536-9820, Laurie.Bella@coburn.ww.com; or Michelle Alvarez, AARP, +1-202-434-2555, malvarez@aarp.org
Web Site: http://www.aarpmagazine.org
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