Viewers accustomed to seeing Katey Sagal as hapless housewife Peg Bundy on "Married ... With Children" must have suffered a minor case of whiplash with the 2008 premiere of "Sons of Anarchy," a series in which she plays a tough-minded matriarch of a drug-smuggling motorcycle gang.
Fans who attend a special "Sons of Anarchy" event at Mill City Nights in Minneapolis this Saturday may be in for another shocker. After jazz singer Curtis Stigers performs the series' theme song and cast members Theo Rossi (Juice) and Ryan Hurst (Opie) answer questions from the audience, Sagal will take on the role she was born to play: pop singer.
Long before she was chasing Al Bundy around the couch, Sagal made her living backing some of the biggest stars of the '70s and '80s, including Bette Midler, Olivia Newton-John, Gene Simmons and Tanya Tucker.
"I'm surprised that people are still surprised," said Sagal, 59, just a couple of days before shooting a guest appearance on "Glee" as Artie's mother. "My perspective is that I've been doing it so long that people should know by now."
Raised in California, where her father directed everything from the miniseries "Rich Man, Poor Man" to episodes of "Columbo," Sagal started taking voice lessons at age 5 and picked up guitar and piano by the time she reached her teenage years.
At 18, she was touring with a Broadway production of the rock musical "Two Gentlemen of Verona."
"I always thought that singing would be what I'd do for a living," she said. "That's where I was headed."
Not all her gigs worked out. She spent six weeks rehearsing with Bob Dylan in 1978, only to be fired along with the other backup singers just a week before the tour hit the road.