You have a new album of Christmas songs, Wilde Winter Songbook. Is the festive theme connected to what happened last December, where a video of you wearing glittery reindeer ears singing on a commuter train went viral?
Were you really quite drunk then?
Twisted. I was absolutely larruped. I don't drink cocktails any more, so I didn't even think about the trouble I was getting myself into with these vodka and lychee liqueurs, or whatever they were, slipping down my neck. I just don't know how I got away with it. I still can't bring myself to watch it. Because initially it could have gone either way: it was either going to completely bury my career or not. And I seem to have gotten away with it.
On the new album, you have duets with Rick Astley and Nik Kershaw. Did you go out with any of your male contemporaries back in the 80s?
Yeah! Not many of them though. I did have a few delicious dates with Adam Ant once. I say delicious because the thought of it now, me, Kim Wilde at that time, and him, Adam Ant at that time, and both of us sitting in a restaurant eating chocolate mousse is a delicious memory. He looked after me for a little bit, took me out for some lovely meals in very swanky restaurants. I was still living in Hertfordshire at the time with my mum and dad.
Your first song, Kids in America, was a huge hit in 1981, but before that your younger brother, Ricky, was a teen heart-throb. How did you feel when it was him and not you who made the breakthrough?
I was happy for him, but I do remember thinking, not that it should be me, but that one day it will be me. I always had this strong sense of where my destiny lay, that I was going to be a singer. Not because my dad was Marty Wilde, it was just an absolute truth that I lived with from a very young age. Maybe a part of me was quite psychic, because we have strong psychics in my family, especially on my father's side.
Is there anything else you've predicted?
I am tuned into it, a little bit. I don't see ghosts and stuff, but I did see something very unusual in the sky once, which I can only say was a UFO. But there were lots of witnesses, it was in the local paper, it wasn't just me.
Was that at home in Hertfordshire?
If I told you, you'd just laugh at me, because everybody does! It was 26 June, the day after Michael Jackson died, and me and my mate were in the garden and we saw bright lights in the sky. I have to say there's not a day gone by that I don't think about what the hell it was. It was so huge, two of them, going zigzag for 10 minutes and I could feel the momentum and I knew it was really massive. It could be some very clever thing that someone developed somewhere, but I've got a feeling it wasn't.
In 1987, your cover of You Keep Me Hangin' On went to No 1 in America. Is it true that you never went there to follow it up?
We didn't, no. In retrospect, there was a missed opportunity, for sure. I'm not saying it would have happened and I'd have become like Madonna. But you never know... Madonna's career, for instance, you can see how much she wanted it. And I just didn't want it all the way and more, so I'll never know how big my career could have been. But I'm quite happy with the medium-size career I've had. I love the fact I can walk anywhere without bodyguards and jump into Tesco and buy the Christmas turkey.
Later on, Madonna became a near-neighbour of yours in the country. Did you ever discuss this with her?
No, I never met her, but I do remember thinking, this county ain't big enough for the both of us.
You supported Michael Jackson on his Bad tour in 1988. What was he like?
I only met him once to do a publicity photograph. I got taken into the den and there he was with the lights dimmed and then his "uncles" as I called them – these older men who seemed to control a lot of what was going on around him – they positioned me so I was looking in the right direction for the camera. We had our photograph taken and then I was gently persuaded to leave. So nothing very normal about that, but there you go. I really have no more insight into him than any person you'd ask on the street.
In the mid-1990s, you stopped making music. You got married, had two kids and became well known as a gardener. What inspired that?
It was a combination of things. I really wanted to have the chance to be something else that wasn't all about being Kim Wilde and running off pursuing success. I really wanted to have a family, I wanted to wake up with my old man and pick up his underpants and take the kids on the school run. That's basically what I wanted: to pick up my husband's underpants.
Was the gardening career as much of a surprise to you as it was to the rest of us?
No, it wasn't a huge surprise to me. I remember growing up watching The Good Life thinking, that's how you live life! As close to the earth as possible and away from all the bullshit.
So I tried to recreate The Good Life, I guess, with me as Barbara. It all turned out great and now I'm back in music and I'm happier than I've ever been.
You continue to have a lot of success abroad, but this is your first UK album for more than a decade. Should we expect more?
Well, I'll certainly be releasing more albums next year, whether in the UK or not. I hope people want to hear them here, but I won't force anything on them, I promise.
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