Suzi Quatro
S5 / Episode 8
About this episode
To a generation of Americans, Suzi Quatro is best known as Leather Tuscadero on the 1970s sitcom Happy Days and for her 1979 smash duet with Chris Norman, “Stumblin’ In.”
But long before she stepped onto a Hollywood soundstage or crossed over to American pop radio, Suzi Quatro had already detonated the rulebook.
Emerging from Detroit in the early 1970s and breaking first in the UK and Europe, Quatro became one of the first women in rock history to front a hard-driving band while playing her own instrument — slinging a Fender bass low, clad head-to-toe in black leather, and commanding arenas with unapologetic authority. With chart-topping hits like “Can the Can,” “48 Crash,” and “Devil Gate Drive,” she didn’t just make hit records — she became the reference point for artists including Joan Jett, Chrissie Hynde, and Debbie Harry, who all followed her lead into unapologetic frontwoman territory.
Working with hitmaker Mike Chapman during the height of glam’s glitter and grind, Suzi fused Detroit muscle with razor-sharp British pop instincts, building a transatlantic career that has now spanned more than five decades and over 50 million records sold worldwide. Today, she continues to headline major venues across Europe and Australia — proof that her following never faded and her fire never dimmed.
Beyond the stage, Quatro is also a prolific author, with multiple books to her name — from candid memoir to fiction — extending her voice beyond the amplifier and onto the page.
In this conversation, Suzi reflects on what it meant to walk into a male-dominated industry and refuse to ask permission, the discipline that sustains longevity, her Detroit roots, and the mindset required not just to open doors — but to kick them off the hinges.