How does one find humanity in sex, drugs and rock and roll?

Well, Grammy artist and singer Ruth Pointer is going to give it the old college try and explain it in her own words, and in person.

ASU’s Project Humanities is hosting “A Conversation with Ruth Pointer of the Pointer Sisters” as part of its spring 2016 kickoff for its campaign, “Humanity 101: Creating a Movement.” The event starts at 6 p.m., Feb. 11 at the First Institutional Baptist Church, 1141 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix. Admission is free and open to the public. A limited number of VIP tickets will also be sold, which includes a reception from 4 to 5:30 p.m., a signed copy of Pointer’s new memoir, “Still So Excited!,” and a reserved seat for the main event. Go here to reserve your seat.

During this campaign, Project Humanities will host a wide range of events and activities at the ASU campuses and at different community events around the Valley; bringing together students, staff, faculty, alumni, emeriti and the public to engage critically with these seven values – respect, integrity, compassion, forgiveness, empathy, kindness and self-reflection.

“We are extremely excited about and honored to host Ruth Pointer’s visit,” said Dr. Neal Lester, who is the founding director of ASU’s Project Humanities and Foundation Professor of English. “So many across the country grew up on the Pointer Sisters’ musical energy and admired their vintage dress style. It will be interesting to hear her story of triumph and challenge and triumph from an important perspective we don’t necessarily witness every day.”

Few musical acts have seen the extreme highs and lows of the Pointer Sisters. From their humble beginnings in West Oakland to the center of the pop music scene in the 1970s and 1980s, they’ve endured more than 40 years under the harsh heat of the media spotlight. Their music entertained and brought joy to millions of fans around the world, but for Ruth Pointer, the journey wasn’t always a happy one.

The group’s immense popularity and multiple hit songs (“I’m So Excited,” “Jump,” “Automatic,” “Neutron Dance” and “Slow Hand”) thrust the sisters into international stardom, winning four Grammy awards, a slew of MTV “Moon Man” trophies, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

While their stratospheric success the sisters enjoyed may have served as an introduction to the good life, it was also the introduction to the ‘high life’ of limos, champagne, white glove treatment and addictive habits that were the norm in the high flying ‘70s and ‘80s.

Though it sounds like all the makings of a thrilling life, it was also one filled with heartbreak, inner demons and years of struggle for Ruth Pointer, whose devastating drug and alcohol abuse took her to the brink of death in 1984.

“There are certain truths we must all face about ourselves, and sometimes you don’t always like what you see when looking into the mirror,” Pointer said. “In my case, there were a lot of things I didn’t like in that reflection. I would like to say that I saw a stranger, but what I saw was a true reflection of who I was – an alcoholic and drug-addicted woman who was more concerned about getting high than tending to her family’s needs. But the beauty of being broken is that it allows you to pick up the pieces of your life.”

Pointer says she eventually found recovery through a pair of 12-step programs, embracing a sobriety through structure and measure that she has stuck to for more than three decades.

“Today, my life is filled with both blessings and heartaches, but the blessings far outweigh the other,” Pointer said. “I’m so excited … and I just can’t hide it.”

Project Humanities is an award-winning university-wide initiative at ASU involving all four campuses – Tempe, West, Polytechnic, and Downtown Phoenix – with the expressed goal to show the interactions among humanities and other areas of scholarship and human endeavor. Through public programming and scholarship, Project Humanities seeks to make visible locally and nationally the excellence, range, and impact of humanist thinking and practice.

For more information, call 480-727-7030 or visit https://humanities.asu.edu/