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Holly Near

Born
June 6, 1949
in Ukiah, CA 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by William Ruhlmann
Entering the field of topical songwriting after the activism of the 1960s, Holly Near promoted a variety of left-wing political causes with music that touched on folk, rock, and the musical theater, starting in the early 1970s. Beginning with her work against the Vietnam War, she turned to radical lesbian feminism before again expanding her concerns to include international issues.



A red-diaper baby of leftist parents, Near grew up on a ranch in the small Northern California town of Potter Valley. At age seven, she sang at a VFW talent show, attracting the attention of a voice teacher; at ten, she auditioned for Columbia Records. She attended UCLA for a year, 1967-68, then dropped out and moved to New York, where she studied singing and dance. Returning to Los Angeles, she was cast in her first film, Angel, Angel, Down We Go, released in the summer of 1969. She also made The Magic Garden Of Stanley Sweetheart, released in the spring of 1970. During the 1969-70 theater season, she appeared in the musical Hair on Broadway. She had two more film roles in 1971, in The Todd Killings and Minnie And Moskowitz, then in November joined Donald Sutherland and Jane Fonda's anti-war tour of Southeast Asia, later appearing in the documentary F.T.A.. Back in the U.S., she appeared in the film Slaughterhouse-Five (1972) and had parts in such TV series as The Partridge Family, All In The Family, and Mod Squad.

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