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Ann Wilson Opens Up About 70s Rock Sexism as New Documentary Debuts

Ann Wilson of Heart performs in concert at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Florida.
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The Heart singer's film ‘Ann Wilson – In My Voice' premiered May 11 in Seattle, with a short North American run of appearances now underway.

Ann Wilson is speaking candidly about the sexism she and sister Nancy faced breaking into hard rock in the 1970s, timed to the premiere of her new documentary ‘Ann Wilson – In My Voice.' The film debuted May 11 in Seattle and is narrated by Wilson herself, drawing on home movies, photographs, journals, and previously unseen footage from her years with Heart. A short North American tour supporting the film's release is now underway.

Ann Wilson on the Sexism Heart Faced in the 1970s Rock World

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Wilson described a recurring dynamic she experienced as a woman trying to establish herself in the male-dominated hard rock scene. ‘This phenomenon would happen where you would build yourself up and do something really great, and you'd feel really good about it,' she recalled. ‘Then you could get put down and squashed down very easily by the rest of the men. They could make you feel like you were really silly for even trying.'

Wilson acknowledged that she and Nancy had support around them, but noted that other women entering rock at the same time had a harder road. ‘We were lucky enough to have great people around us, but I know other women who were starting up close to our time that had to rebel as hard as they could to get anything happening at all.'

The roots of the Wilson sisters' ambitions trace back to February 9, 1964, when a 13-year-old Ann and 9-year-old Nancy watched The Beatles make their US television debut on The Ed Sullivan Show at their grandmother ‘Maudie' Wilson's house in La Jolla, California. The broadcast drew approximately 73 million American viewers. As Nancy later recalled in the sisters' autobiography ‘Kicking and Dreaming: A Story of Heart, Soul, and Rock and Roll,' the two did not want to be Beatle girlfriends. They wanted to be Beatles. A decade later, they were playing together in Heart.

The Documentary: Ann Wilson – In My Voice

The film traces Wilson's journey from childhood through her rise to stardom with Heart, using her personal archive of home movies, photographs, and journals alongside previously unseen footage from the band's history. Wilson narrates throughout.

‘This film is my story in my own words, told the way I've always wanted to tell it,' Wilson said. ‘It's about finding my voice, keeping it alive, and sharing the journey with the people who've been part of it all along.'

North American Tour Dates

Wilson has launched a short North American run of appearances tied to the documentary's release. The schedule includes stops at intimate venues as well as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland:

  • May 12 — Rio Theatre, Vancouver, BC
  • May 17 — City Winery, Chicago, IL
  • May 18 — Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Cleveland, OH
  • May 20 — City Winery, Nashville, TN
  • May 27 — City Winery, New York, NY
  • May 29 — Bethel Woods Events Center, Bethel, NY
  • May 30 — The Opera House, Toronto, ON
  • Jun 1 — City Winery, Boston, MA

What we know

  • The documentary ‘Ann Wilson – In My Voice' premiered on May 11 in Seattle and is narrated by Wilson.
  • The film draws from Wilson's personal archive of home movies, photographs, journals, and previously unseen footage from her years with Heart.
  • Wilson gave a new interview to Rolling Stone in which she discussed the sexism she experienced in the 1970s hard rock community.
  • Ann and Nancy Wilson first saw The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show on February 9, 1964, at their grandmother's house in La Jolla, California.
  • Nancy Wilson recalled in the sisters' autobiography ‘Kicking and Dreaming' that the two wanted to be Beatles, not Beatle girlfriends.
  • Wilson has begun a short North American tour with dates running from May 12 through June 1.

The take

Ann Wilson has spent decades being underestimated, and her willingness to name that experience plainly in 2025 carries real weight. Heart were among the very few women-led acts to crack the upper tier of arena rock in the 1970s, a genre that was almost entirely male in its gatekeeping infrastructure. The fact that Wilson frames her survival partly as luck, crediting the people around her while acknowledging that other women had to fight harder, is a more nuanced accounting than the triumphalist narrative that often gets attached to Heart's story in retrospect. The documentary format suits this moment well. Legacy rock artists have increasingly turned to film to reclaim their own narratives on their own terms, from the Foo Fighters' archival deep dives to more intimate confessional projects. For Wilson specifically, a film she narrates herself, built from her own journals and home movies, is a deliberate act of authorship. The tour routing is also worth noting: City Winery dates in Chicago, Nashville, New York, and Boston place her in listening-room settings where the conversation around the film can breathe, while the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame stop in Cleveland and the Bethel Woods date add symbolic weight. Bethel Woods sits on the original Woodstock site, a location that carries its own complicated history for women in rock.

Why it matters

For Heart fans and anyone who follows the history of women in rock, Wilson's documentary and the candor she's bringing to its rollout represent something more than a career retrospective. The 1970s hard rock world she describes was genuinely hostile to women in ways that have been softened or romanticized over time. Wilson naming that dynamic clearly, while also tracing the full arc from a nine-year-old watching the Beatles to fronting one of the era's biggest bands, gives younger listeners a more honest picture of what that path actually cost.

What's next

Wilson's North American tour runs through June 1, with the final date at City Winery in Boston. The Cleveland stop at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on May 18 and the Bethel Woods Events Center date on May 29 are among the higher-profile appearances remaining on the schedule.

Frequently asked questions

When did Ann Wilson's documentary premiere?

‘Ann Wilson – In My Voice' premiered on May 11 in Seattle. Wilson narrates the film herself.

What is Ann Wilson's documentary about?

The film traces Wilson's journey from childhood to stardom with Heart, drawing on her personal archive of home movies, photographs, journals, and previously unseen footage from her years with the band.

Where is Ann Wilson touring in 2025?

Wilson is on a short North American tour with stops including Vancouver, Chicago, Cleveland, Nashville, New York, Bethel, Toronto, and Boston, running from May 12 through June 1.

What did Ann Wilson say about sexism in rock?

In a Rolling Stone interview, Wilson said men in the hard rock community could easily undercut women's confidence, noting that she and Nancy were fortunate to have support while other women starting out at the same time had to fight much harder to be taken seriously.

When did Ann and Nancy Wilson first become interested in rock music?

Both sisters trace their musical ambitions to February 9, 1964, when they watched The Beatles debut on The Ed Sullivan Show at their grandmother's house in La Jolla, California. Ann was 13 and Nancy was 9 at the time.

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