The
first
trailer
of
'Amy'
a
documentary
on
the
life
and
music
of
late
British
singer
Amy
Winehouse
has
been
released.
The
teaser
for
"Amy:
The
Girl
Behind
the
Name",
set
for
release
on
July
3,
features
early
footage
of
Winehouse
talking
about
how
her
music
career
was
born
and
where
she
believed
she
was
headed.
"Singing
has
always
been
important
to
me,
but
I
never
thought,
'I'll
end
up
singing'
or
'I'll
be
a
singer'," Winehouse
said.
"I
felt
like
I
had
nothing
new
that
was
coming
out
at
the
time
that
really
represented
me
or
the
way
I
felt,
so,
you
know,
I
just
started
writing."
Winehouse,
known
for
her
bluesy
voice,
bouffant
hairdo
and
numerous
tattoos,
struggled
publicly
with
drugs
and
alcohol
during
a
career
in
which
she
recorded
two
albums
and
won
six
Grammys
(one
posthumous).
She
died
from
alcohol
poisoning
at
the
age
of
27
on
July
23,
2011.
Her
biggest
hit,
"Rehab",
chronicled
the
efforts
of
those
around
her
to
get
her
to
submit
to
substance
abuse
treatment.
"Amy"
seeks
to
"truly
capture
not
just
the
great
artist
that
she
was,
but
also
the
funny
and
loving
person
that
most
people
didn't
get
a
chance
to
know,"
the
filmmakers
had
said
after
announcing
the
film
in
2013.
The
trailer
conveys
Winehouse's
ambivalence
about
fame.
"I'm
not
a
girl
trying
to
be
a
star
or
trying
to
be
anything
other
than
a
musician.
I
don't
think
I'm
gonna
be
at
all
famous,"
Winehouse
tells
an
interviewer
early
in
her
career.
"I
don't
think
I
could
handle
it.
I
would
probably
go
mad.
Do
you
know
what
I
mean?
I
would
go
mad."