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Singer Morrissey Says He Has Had Cancer Treatment

English singer Morrissey performs during the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo in December. The musician told a Spanish newspaper, in a stoic discussion about his health, that he has undergone treatments related to cancer.
Daniel Sannum Lauten
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AFP/Getty Images
English singer Morrissey performs during the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo in December. The musician told a Spanish newspaper, in a stoic discussion about his health, that he has undergone treatments related to cancer.

Steven Patrick Morrissey, the singer who formerly led The Smiths and is on a solo tour in Europe, has undergone treatment for cancer, he tells a Spanish newspaper. Morrissey did not specify what ailment he had been suffering from, saying only that he had undergone "cancer scrapings."

The singer, 55, was asked about his health in an interview for Spanish newspaper El Mundo.

"I have had four cancer-scrapings, but so what. If I die, I die," he wrote in the email interview, according to a translation by the BBC. "If I don't, then I don't. As I sit here today I feel very well."

In June, more than a dozen dates on Morrissey's recent U.S. tour were canceled because of the singer's health problems.

Morrisey told El Mundo journalist Javier Blanquez that he understood concerns that have been raised about his appearance, as fans worried over his health:

"I know I look quite bad on recent photographs, but I am afraid this is what illness does to the overall countenance. I will save relaxation for when I'm dead."

In the interview, Morrissey spoke about the novel that he's writing (he published another book, Autobiography, last year). And while he didn't dwell on the ramifications of his cancer treatment, he did take a question about his reputation for being a very self-sufficient person. Here's what he said:

"I have no social life — I don't need it. I'm happy in quiet solitude. Fun is an artificial construct, and if you don't have a sex life (and I have none at all) it is impossible to deal with people, because people only talk about sex. If you don't have a partner, people look at you suspiciously."

When asked if he found anyone particularly odious and useless in the world, Morrissey said, "I do not hate people, I am a loving and sensible man, but I cannot stand David and Victoria Beckham."

He said that the "tragic importance" that's been given to that couple's lives by the British media "has converted us into a nation of zombies."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.

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