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Helen Reddy’s ‘I Am Woman’: The Story Behind The Song
Udiscovermusic ^ | Rachel Brodsky | May 1, 2026

Posted on 05/01/2026 3:14:27 PM PDT by nickcarraway

A song that became a symbol of profound change, one that lives on decades after its release.

It’s strange to think that Helen Reddy’s now-iconic women’s empowerment anthem was not initially a hit. Once the 70s burgeoning second-wave feminist movement found it, though, “I Am Woman” evolved into so much more than just a song: it became a symbol of profound change, one that lives on decades after its release.

Co-written with Ray Burton, “I Am Woman” was Reddy sounding off about the entertainment industry and all of the demeaning comments made to her by men in positions of power. Reddy, who had secured a recording contract in 1971 with Capitol Records, was becoming interested in the burgeoning feminist movement but could not find a song that articulated anything about women’s strength. So she decided to write a song of her own.

“I thought about all these strong women in my family who had gotten through the Depression and world wars and drunken, abusive husbands,” Reddy told Australia’s Sunday Magazine in 2003. “But there was nothing in music that reflected that. The only songs were ‘I Feel Pretty’ or that dreadful song ‘Born A Woman.’ These are not exactly empowering lyrics. I certainly never thought of myself as a songwriter, but it came down to having to do it.”

What does female empowerment sound like?

As far as Reddy could tell, no one had quite answered that question yet in pop music. When Capitol Records asked her for a collection of songs to prepare an album, one of the ideas she sent was a tune written with Australian musician Ray Burton, who had performed in the Delltones and the Executives. Reddy needed an outlet to express her irritation at the way “women have always been objectified in showbiz,” she later said, not to mention the difficulty in getting her career off the ground in the 1960s.

Legend has it that Reddy visualized the song’s inspiring lyrics – “I am strong, I am invincible, I am woman” – while lying down in bed. “And I thought, well, this has to be a song,” she told NPR in 2014. After setting it to music with Burton, Reddy faced another uphill battle getting her label to release it and radio stations to give it air time. Reddy’s husband Jeff Wald summarized the response he heard from the label: “That women’s lib crap is gonna kill her. Why are you letting your wife do this stuff?”

Woman, she roared

Wald, who was also a film producer and Reddy’s manager, kept pushing for radio play, taking “I Am Woman” to a small station on the outskirts of Washington, D.C. Once they finally got it on the air, the station received tons of phone calls with listeners asking to hear it again. The next year, “I Am Woman” was selected to soundtrack the opening credits of the 1972 feminist comedy Stand Up and Be Counted, which starred Jacqueline Bisset as a reporter who returns to her hometown to write an article about the women’s liberation movement. “The decision-makers at Capitol Records thought that, in case the film was a hit, they should release ‘I Am Woman’ as a single,” Reddy would later write in her 2006 memoir.

Because the original song was short, under two minutes, the label asked Reddy to write another verse for “I Am Woman,” which she did:

I am woman watch me grow
See me standing toe to toe
As I spread my lovin’ arms across the land
But I’m still an embryo
With a long long way to go
Until I make my brother understand

By the end of 1972, “I Am Woman” had risen to number 1 on the Billboard charts (Capitol’s first number one single since “Ode to Billie Joe” by Bobbie Gentry in 1967), and Reddy won a Grammy for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. In her acceptance speech, Reddy famously thanked God, adding, “Because She makes everything possible.”

The future is female

In the years following the enormous success of “I Am Woman,” Reddy would continue to release top 40 hits, such as Alan O’Day’s “Angie Baby” and Alex Harvey’s “Delta Dawn,” both of which hit number 1 upon release. Her first hit, though, has attained a legacy that stretches through decades of history and pop culture (“I Am Woman” was memorably referenced in a 1975 episode of The Carol Burnett Show where Jean Stapleton says, “I am woman!” to which Harvey Korman replies, “I know. I heard your roar”). And in 1973, National Organization for Women founder Betty Friedan wrote how a gala in Washington, D.C. closed with the playing of “I Am Woman.” Friedan recalled: “Suddenly, women got out of their seats and started dancing around the hotel ballroom and joining hands in a circle that got larger and larger until maybe a thousand of us were dancing and singing, ‘I am strong, I am invincible, I am woman.’ It was a spontaneous, beautiful expression of the exhilaration we all felt in those years, women really moving as women.”

Though it is synonymous with women’s empowerment, Reddy always maintained that “I Am Woman” was not intended to just be about a feminist message. “It’s not just for women,” she said in 2003. “It’s a general empowerment song about feeling good about yourself, believing in yourself. When my former brother-in-law, a doctor, was going to medical school he played it every morning just to get him going.”


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: 70s; helenreddy; music; womanslib
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To: HartleyMBaldwin
“I am woman, hear me snore.”

I am gray, blue and white.
I only surface late at night,
'Cause I don't want to end up in a dog food can.
21 posted on 05/01/2026 4:59:44 PM PDT by Dr. Franklin ("A republic, if you can keep it." )
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To: plain talk
That Sheena Easton song ‘Morning Train’ -”My baby takes the morning train” made me want to vomit.
22 posted on 05/01/2026 5:00:07 PM PDT by neverevergiveup
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To: Fiji Hill

Here is a real abuse song from the 50s.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvErkA_u_BI
Knoxville Girl - The Louvin Brothers


23 posted on 05/01/2026 5:02:44 PM PDT by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: nickcarraway
Troglodyte (Cave Man)
24 posted on 05/01/2026 5:10:30 PM PDT by bankwalker (Feminists, like all Marxists, are ungrateful parasites.)
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To: nickcarraway
You can get an amusing effect by singing it in a German accent and substituting "German" for "Woman".

... I an strong. I am invincible ...

25 posted on 05/01/2026 5:44:57 PM PDT by Salman (The Democrats have seceded from the human race. It's time for Trump to go full Pinochet.)
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To: nickcarraway
,,, broadly, feMANism saw so many women ushered into supervised employment, just like men. They thought they were winning because they had store and credit cards in their wallets and warmed to the concept of the group dynamic, breaking free of control by men. Guys slowly woke up to the social shift though and the tide turned, with many single women left on the shelf, wondering why they couldn't secure committment from a partner. Guys probably didn't need to have perceived control as much as their need to steer clear of a minefield.
26 posted on 05/01/2026 5:55:24 PM PDT by shaggy eel (A long way south of the border.)
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To: nickcarraway

My young niece, daughter of my feminist sister, used to sing this song .

She would sing: I am strong. I am in vegetables…..lol. That was over 50 years ago……. It is still funny!


27 posted on 05/01/2026 6:08:06 PM PDT by HerrBlucher
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To: kawhill

“Delta Dawn” Did she write that tune?


I believe that was Tanya Tucker.


28 posted on 05/01/2026 6:09:15 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: shaggy eel

29 posted on 05/01/2026 6:11:18 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: kawhill
Delta Dawn--Tanya Tucker (1972) Helen Reddy's cover came out a year later.
30 posted on 05/01/2026 6:13:31 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Fiji Hill

Wasn’t Tanya 16 years-old then?


31 posted on 05/01/2026 6:15:14 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: dfwgator

Tanya Tucker was born October 10, 1958, so she wasn’t quite 14 when she charted.


32 posted on 05/01/2026 6:33:52 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: ansel12

Still was a catchy song though. And if I remember the lyrics correctly, she was a widow, toning down the feminist aspect.


33 posted on 05/01/2026 6:37:49 PM PDT by power2 (JMJ)
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To: ansel12
Johnny Jones did a deed similar to the one by the guy in Knoxville, got caught, and is doing 99 years on the Rock.

Home on Alcatraz--The Rolling Crew (1955)

34 posted on 05/01/2026 6:40:09 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: neverevergiveup

Better than idiotic “I Am Woman”


35 posted on 05/01/2026 6:41:19 PM PDT by AbolishCSEU (Amount of "child" support paid is inversely proportionate to mother's actual parenting of children)
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To: power2

The crack about it being a feminist song was a bit of just a wisecrack, but it could be interpreted today as a song of the left (in a way), or a form of feminist song, but back then (1968) it was just seen as humorous.


36 posted on 05/01/2026 6:46:15 PM PDT by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: ansel12

I watched the video you posted. She was a great country singer. Thanks for linking it. Haven’t heard that song in awhile.


37 posted on 05/01/2026 7:04:16 PM PDT by power2 (JMJ)
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To: AbolishCSEU

Either could be used by the CIA to force someone out of the embassy they are hiding in. I’ve just always felt that Morning Train was an anthem for lazy women.


38 posted on 05/01/2026 7:26:01 PM PDT by neverevergiveup
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To: Rockingham; ebb tide; Liz

I doubt the “women” proudly singing this song at pro-abortion rallies ever considered their words. Nor do they care about the 66 million of their girls, sisters, mothers, and grandmothers they killed by abortion since 1973.


39 posted on 05/02/2026 4:58:25 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE
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To: Robert A Cook PE

All too true.


40 posted on 05/02/2026 5:44:31 AM PDT by Rockingham
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