
Dionne Warrick-Don’t Make Me Over @ TIFF 2021

Rising up to the top and losing it all, the ups and downs of her life, career and calling her own “shots “! Walk On By,” “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” “Do You Know the Way to San Jose” — are regarded as definitive. Her activist work for the Black and LGBTQ communities has had a profound impact, yielding her 1985 version of “That’s What Friends Are For,” sung with Gladys Knight, Stevie Wonder, and Elton John, which raised over $3 million for AIDS research. Warwick’s life and work, encompassing the Black American experience over the past six decades, is the subject of Dave Wooley and David Heilbroner’s inspiring documentary portrait.
The core of the film is Warwick herself. Very outspoken, calling herself “crazy” and stylish, she’s still doing what she wants, chronicling her New Jersey roots, formative experiences singing in church, and early success at Harlem’s famed Apollo Theater. She also toured the southern US with Sam Cooke at the height of segregation, fighting back against racist humiliation on a daily basis. Her string of hits with Bacharach and David later took her to Europe, where she discovered haute couture with Marlene Dietrich and found that her music could bridge cultural divides — a revelation confirmed when she became the first Black artist to win a Grammy in the Pop category (with “San Jose” in 1969, repeated in 1971 with “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again”).

Warwick’s testimonies are complemented by a galaxy of colleagues and admirers: Bacharach, Gladys, Stevie, and Elton, but also Quincy Jones, Alicia Keys, Bill Clinton, Carlos Santana, and Warwick’s cousin, the late Whitney Houston (in archival material). And then there’s Snoop Dogg, who tells a story about being invited to Warwick’s house for donuts at 7am in 1993, with a crew of fellow rappers-Suge Knight and Tupac in line about “Gangster Rapping”, and that beautifully illustrates Warwick’s being brazen aspiration and her wisdom. It’s no wonder she’s become the queen of Twitter lately. Every chapter in Don’t Make Me Over had people had fans clapping throughout the movie . Dionne Warwick was in attendance with the director, a pleasant surprise for the audience during TIFF.