Entertainment

Singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie retiring from live performances due to health concerns

Buffy Sainte-Marie says she's retiring from live performances. A statement announcing her decision cites factors including travel-induced health concerns and performance-inhibiting physical challenges.

82-year-old was 1st Indigenous person to win an Oscar, inducted into Canadian Music Hall of Fame

Indigenous woman with wide smile, black shirt and jacket with long feather earrings and necklace
Academy Award and Juno-winning musician Buffy Sainte-Marie said she is pulling out of her scheduled live performances 'for the foreseeable future' because health issues have made it 'no longer possible to perform to [her] standards.' (Courtesy Lunenburg Doc Fest)

Buffy Sainte-Marie has announced that she's retiring from live performances.

A statement announcing her decision cites factors including travel-induced health concerns and performance-inhibiting physical challenges.

In a statement on social media on Thursday, Sainte-Marie described having arthritic hands and a shoulder injury that "have made it no longer possible to perform to my standards." 

An upcoming music festival in British Columbia has already announced plans to replace her.

The City of Burnaby says American indie-folk band Fleet Foxes will take Sainte-Marie's spot in the Burnaby Blues + Roots Festival, which takes place Aug. 12. "We, along with all of her fans, wish her all the best for her health," the city said in a statement.

LISTEN | Tom Power in conversation with Sainte-Marie:
 

The singer-songwriter suggested in September that her performances in Ottawa and Vancouver were part of what were "probably going to be her last tour."

Sainte-Marie said at the time she was cutting back on flying after a rough summer that included a bout with COVID-19 and being stranded at the airport at least twice as airlines experienced countless delays and cancellations.

"I'm not saying that I'm never going to perform again," she said. "It's not like: 'She's going to retire.' I'm not in the business world. I've retired many times without ever calling it retirement.

"I'm just going to hang it up."

The 82-year-old Cree artist and activist has roots in the Qu'Appelle Valley in Saskatchewan and was adopted by an American family in Massachusetts.

In 1982, Sainte-Marie became the first Indigenous person to win an Oscar as co-writer of Up Where We Belong for An Officer and a Gentleman.

She has also won multiple Juno awards and the Polaris Music Prize in 2015 for her album Power in the Blood.

She was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1995.

WATCH | Sainte-Marie speaks with The National's Adrienne Arsenault:

Buffy Sainte-Marie: ‘I don't care about an apology’

2 years ago
Duration 7:38
Songwriter and activist Buffy Sainte-Marie talks to The National’s Adrienne Arsenault about using her platform to educate, the path to reconciliation, and what it would take for a papal apology to have real meaning for Indigenous people.

With files from CBC News