AT HOME
PEOPLE: TOYAH'S TREASURES Fresh from her 80s revival tour, Toyah
Willcox takes Steven Smith around her London home
You bought the house in West London eight
years ago for £117,000. What was it like when
you moved in?
An empty shell and a garden that had seen better
days. I couldn't wait to get started on the place.
I'm a DIY queen and don't like builders and
decorators getting their hands on my property. I
painted the walls in a warm yellow and bought the
floors from the old Sadlers Wells Theatre, which
means stars of the Royal Ballet have actually
danced on my living room floor! The whole place
is now worth between £500,000 and £600,000, but
I have no plans to sell it.
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Why did you choose
Chiswick?
Fate! It
used to be a record company office. The owner ran
into financial difficulties and needed cash
quickly. I had the `readies' at the time so, as
luck would have it, here I am. You have other homes, too, but where?
I have a
home in San Francisco which I share with my
husband, Robert Fripp, who's a rock musician.
We're a very close couple but we live apart and
can go months without seeing each other. It works
so well because we give each other our own space.
I have another couple of homes in Worcester. I
call one the office, the other my country retreat.
I also plan to buy a property in Corfu because I
love it there, it's so beautiful. It'll be nice
for my parents to use it during their retirement.
We hear you
had the place Feng Shui'd?
Yes, I did.
Feng Shui is a Chinese art. The basis is living
in harmony with our surroundings. The first thing
I had to do was remove any cacti from the house
as they give off bad energy. They're great
outside as they protect the home. I also had to
re-paint the black spiral staircase blue as black
can cause chaos in the home. Any furniture with
sharp edges had to go, too.
How do you
relax at home?
I have a
beautiful little garden filled with Buddhas and
plants. I love to spend time gardening and
relaxing. Indoors, I like to read, particularly
biographies. I also love to do my aerobics at
home - it's more private than going to the gym
and I can choose my own music. I work out to
Madonna,
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the Chemical Brothers
and Fat Boy Slim. I watch TV, especially fly-on-
the-wall documentaries. Louis Theroux is great,
he came on tour with us. He wanted us to be a
whole pile of washed out 80s icons, suffering
from depression and alcoholism. When he found
that most of us were successful business people
he left after three days, never to return. Where do your knick-knacks come from?
I did BBC's
Holiday Programme for a year and collected bits
in the Far East. The Buddhas come from Thailand,
Malaysia, all over. I'm a Buddhist myself, more
of a lapsed one, although I am very spiritual.
At 44, how
do you manage to keep in such great shape?
I've never
gone down the pop star drink and drugs route - in
fact I gave up drinking altogether four years ago
as it made me irrational and emotional. I've also
given up dairy products and cut my calories down
to 1,500 a day. We don't need to eat as much as
we get older and excess turns into fat. I can't
tell you how good I feel.
You're
touring in Calamity Jane. What made you do it?
The theatre
is my first love. I was an actress at the
National Theatre when I was 18 and I've been
waiting to play Calamity all my life. I've learnt
to use a whip, a lassoo, even a gun. The cast is
full of great youngsters who treat me like a dame
of the theatre, which makes me laugh because I
still feel 18. I even have Gwyneth Paltrow's
bodyguard looking after me. There's talk of
taking the show to Broadway, which I would love.
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Toyah
Willcox's favourite things -
BIG
BUDDHA
This is the
focal point in my garden. I saw it in a garden
centre and the owners told me that, if I could
lift it, I could have it. I was back an hour
later with three guys.
GLITTER
ROLLER SKATES
I wore
these when I played Puck in Midsummer Night's
Dream at Regent's Park Theatre. Puck is meant to
fly, but in this modern version I had roller
skates and a skateboard.
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MOUNTED
DISCS
This is
great - a fan sent it to me and I love it as it
reminds me of all the wacky hairdos I had back in
the 80s. It could take days of preparation, with
all the hair pieces. PAN
It was 1981,
and I was on my way to record Top Of The Pops as
It's A Mystery was a hit. On the way through
Harrow, I saw this statue of Pan, the god of
music, in a shop window and I made them stop the
car. I bought it for £20 and took it to Top Of
The Pops with me.
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CALAMITY
JANE PICTURE
I look so
much like my good mate Julie Peasgood in this
picture and I just love the fact I'm doing the
show.
People
Magazine - 27th October 2002
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