close
close

Stevie Nicks says abortion saved Fleetwood Mac from ‘destruction’

Stevie Nicks says abortion saved Fleetwood Mac from ‘destruction’

Stevie Nicknames She speaks from personal experience defending a woman’s right to choose.

The iconic singer-songwriter returns to the fight for abortion access with her latest single, “The Lighthouse,” and she discussed the issue in a new interview. CBS Sunday Morning. Emphasizing the importance of women having options, Nicks talked about her own surprise pregnancy. rumorsHis 1977 blockbuster album Fleetwood MacWhen the group achieved great fame.

“I got pregnant and I thought: ‘Why? I have an IUD. I’m completely protected. I have a great gynecologist. How did this happen? What’s going on?'” Nicks recalled. “I said, ‘This can’t be happening. It’s Fleetwood Mac’s third year. And this is a big deal. And we’re going into our third album. We said, ‘Oh no, no, no, no, no, no.’

Stevie Nicks.

Will Heath/NBC via Getty


At the time, Nicks had ended her relationship with her Fleetwood Mac bandmate. Lindsey Buckingham and I was dating the Eagles singer Don Henley. He said having the baby with Henley would “destroy” Fleetwood Mac for more reasons than one.

“I would do my best to get through being in the studio every day waiting for a child,” she said. CBS Sunday Morning. “But for the most part, having a child with Don Henley wasn’t a big deal in Fleetwood Mac when Lindsey and I were around; we’d been separated for two or three years. That would have been a nightmare scenario for me to go through.”

He added that ultimately he felt the choice was his. “And you know what? If people want to be mad at me, let them be mad at me,” he said. “I don’t care. If I had made the other choice, if I had gone the other way, I would have been a great mother. I went this way and I did great.”

Nicks also addressed her decision in a new statement. Rolling stone profile where he explains the thought process behind it. “‘What do I do now? I can’t have kids,'” she recalled. “I’m not the type of woman who would hand my baby over to a nanny in a million years. I mean, we’d drag a baby around the world on tour and I wouldn’t do that to my baby. I’m not just saying I need nine months, I’m saying I need a few years and that would break up the band, period.” , so I decided to have an abortion.”

Nicks would cement her place in music history with Fleetwood Mac before reaching new heights as a solo artist.

Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham.
Lester Cohen/Getty Images

The singer has long been an outspoken advocate for reproductive rights and expressed a similar sentiment in 2020 when she argued against the former president’s re-election. Donald Trump. “Abortion rights, that was truly the fight of my generation,” she said Guard. “If President Trump wins this election and appoints the judge he wants, he will absolutely ban it and push women into backstreet abortions.”

Turning to her own experience, she emphasized how important it was that she had the opportunity to take responsibility for her body and terminate the pregnancy. “There was no way I could have children at that time, working as hard as we did all the time,” she said. “And there were so many drugs. I was doing so many drugs… I would have had to walk away.”

He added, “And I knew that the music we were going to bring to the world was going to heal a lot of people’s hearts and make people very happy. And I thought, ‘You know what? This is really important. There’s no other band out there in the world with two lead female singers, two lead female writers. .’ This was my world’s mission.”