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I Was Baking Pies for Hospice Patients

In the 1970s, Brian Connolly lit up stages as the frontman of The Sweet, blasting out glam-rock anthems like “The Ballroom Blitz” and “Block Buster!” With 50 million records sold and hit after hit, he embodied the glitter and fire of the era—charisma up front, thunderous riffs behind, and the look of someone who belonged to the spotlight.

But his story began far from the stage. Born in 1945 as Brian MacManus, he was abandoned as an infant and only later discovered he was half-brother to actor Mark McManus. By the mid-’60s he was hustling gigs across the UK, eventually co-founding The Sweet and riding a rocket of fame, fortune, and excess.

Behind the glam, though, alcohol and health troubles pulled him down. By the early ’80s he had left the band, suffered multiple heart attacks, partial paralysis, and crushing financial woes. He toured on as “Brian Connolly’s Sweet,” giving everything he had even when his voice frayed and his body broke down. His final show was in 1996; just months later, at 51, he was gone.

What remains is more than glitter. Connolly’s life is a story of resilience—an orphan who fought his way to the world’s biggest stages, fell hard, but never stopped performing for the fans who loved him. Play “The Ballroom Blitz” now and you still hear it: the feral whoop, the wink, the charge. The fame has faded, but the spark endures—and so does the reminder that the brightest lights often come with the heaviest price.

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