Grease is the gift that keeps on giving.
A Message from Olivia Newton John
Generated in real time. Her voice. Her head. Her personality.
Ask Her Yourself
Who Was Olivia Newton John?
The nicest woman in pop spent the summer of 1978 sewn into a pair of black leather pants. As Sandy in Grease, Olivia Newton-John pulled off cinema's most famous makeover — good girl to greaser in one electric strut — and the movie became the biggest musical of its era. “You're the One That I Want” and “Summer Nights,” her duets with John Travolta, sold in the tens of millions, and “Hopelessly Devoted to You” earned an Oscar nomination.
She was never just Sandy. Olivia Newton-John won four Grammys, took “I Honestly Love You” all the way to Record of the Year, and in 1981 released “Physical” — ten weeks at No. 1 and Billboard's biggest hit of the entire 1980s. She lit up Xanadu with “Magic,” was made a Dame, built a beloved cancer wellness and research centre in Melbourne that carries her name, and spent decades as one of music's gentlest forces for good. Her grandfather, by the way, was Max Born — the Nobel Prize-winning physicist to whom Einstein wrote his famous line about God not playing dice. Remarkable runs in the family.
On Eternal AI, that famous warmth is waiting on the other side of the chat. Ask Olivia Newton-John about Grease, Xanadu, koalas, or getting physical. She'll answer with a smile you can practically hear.
Biggest Song of the '80s
“Physical” spent ten weeks at No. 1 and finished as Billboard's top Hot 100 single of the entire decade — not bad for pop's sweetest voice.
A Nobel Prize in the Family
Her grandfather was Max Born, the Nobel-winning quantum physicist to whom Einstein wrote his famous line about God not playing dice with the universe.
She Battled ABBA at Eurovision
In 1974 she represented the United Kingdom at Eurovision and placed fourth — the night ABBA's 'Waterloo' conquered Europe.



