Lesley Gore found her signature tune ("It's My Party") 47 years ago. Last month, she finally discovered her anthem. "I felt so strongly about 'It Took a Long Time' when I heard it in the film 'Precious' that it was literally in my act the following weekend," Gore said of the 1974 number recorded by the vocal trio Labelle. "I'm doing it because after all these years in a business that's been good and bad to me, I'm in a place that I really want to be in. And it took a long time to get there. So it's kind of my theme song right now."
Gore's new anthem will be part of her shows tonight and Monday at the Dakota Jazz Club. So will "It's My Party," the 1963 classic that made the then-16-year-old New Jersey high schooler a pop star.
"I'm not one of those people that likes tomatoes thrown at them after the show for not doing 'It's My Party.' I happily do it," Gore, 63, said cheerfully last week from New York.
She'll also probably do "You Don't Own Me," her proto-feminist hit from 1964, and "Out Here on My Own," which she co-wrote with her brother Michael Gore for the movie "Fame." New versions of both tunes appear on 2005's "Ever Since," Gore's first album in nearly three decades.
"I'm sorry I waited 30 years," she said. "But I'm glad I did the album."
From No. 1 to college
Gore has never made predictable career moves. At the height of her popularity, she went to Sarah Lawrence College to study English and American literature.
"I was involved in a business that was very selfish and fickle, and I always had problems with that," said Gore, who continued to work while in college. "At 16, you could see that people who had never spoken to you before were now looking to be your best friend. You don't have to be a genius to piece this stuff together."