| Marriage suits Toyah
Willcox - until the bank manager asks to speak to
her husband! It is the only note of
dischord in an otherwise harmonious chat about
the wedded state. And in particular about Toyah's
own state of wedded bliss. Married to musician
RobertFripp she may be, Toyah Willcox,
individual, she remains.
No one had
warned Toyah about the loss of identity which
banks, insurance companies and the like presume a
bride accepts along with her wedding ring.
"I reacted
very badly against it. I didn't like bank
managers saying I had to have a joint account or
saying 'Hello, can I speak to your husband?'
Spiritually
Based
"I just
didn't expect it," she says with a grin. But
that didn't mean she accepted it.
"We have
seperate accounts, seperate lawyers, seperate
accountants! Our marriage is a very spiritually
based thing which is nothing to do with material
things."
Toyah is in
Sheffield, hard at work on a production of Peter
Shaffer's Amadeus playing Constanze, wife of
Mozart. Robert is in New York.
It is not a
situation she would have chosen.
"We don't
enjoy being apart. It gets harder to be apart
because we have grown closer."
They married
five years ago and the partnership which may have
seemed unlikely to some - the marmalade-haired
actress and singer once dubbed "the princess
of punk" and the professor of rock -goes
from strength to strength.
The couple did
after all, have royal approval!
"We were
introduced by Princess Michael of Kent at a rock
industry lunch in aid of Nordoff Robins Music
Therapy.
We didn't meet
again until the following year when Robert asked
me to work with him on a record for an American
children's charity.
He said that as
soon as he saw me he knew that I would be his
wife," she says, pure pleasures splitting
her delicate features from ear to ear.
What's more he
proposed within a week. Toyah attempted to be a
little more circumspect.
"I said
surely we should try this out and live together.
He just got a bottle of champagne out of the
fridge and said 'okay'." For "okay"
read "marriage".
Toyah today is
a brimmingly happy lady. Her relationship with
Robert clearly central to her life.
"He's been
a remarkable influence on my life. He's helped me
deal with a lot of adverse things in my nature."
And her
influence on Mr Fripp?
"Intellectual
people live in their head a lot and I think I've
helped him come down to earth and live life a lot
more!"
She admits that
outside the world of music and work they have
very different interests. "I would rather do
an assault course as a form of relaxation and he
would rather read a book. He can read all day but
that would be enough to make me slit my wrists."
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Not that she has time to
worry about how to fill any days they may be
apart. The Compass Theatre
production of Amadeus is a highly complex one.
The cast is totally involved and not just in
acting.
"We are
moving scenery as well. We are taking it in turns
when we are not on stage to move parts of the
scenery. It's not just a case of remembering your
lines but whether or not you are supposed to be
moving scenery!"
Her Best
Critic
The role of
Constanze, Mozart's wife and most loyal
supporter, has proved quite a challenge.
History's view of her appears to be that she is
all but invisible.
"In
Mozart's letters to his wife she is not even
named. There is only one book in existence about
her life and it's out of print. It can only be
got from a library in Surrey and when I went,
somebody had taken it out - for the first time in
20 years."
Her view of
Constanze is a clear one. "Mozart was
obviously totally dependant on her being there.
She's his best critic and supporter, the person
he can talk to. She can deal with the mundane,
she can manage him."
Just as clear
is her view of the other woman she is preparing
to play during the Compass tour, a woman much
less able to cope than Constanze.
Toyah will be
working in a series of prisons performing a one-hour,
one-woman show based on the short and tragic life
of rock star Janis Joplin.
The show is
packed with Joplin's songs and tries to put her
life and the pressures she faced into perspective.
As Toyah points out, Joplin faced the "so-called
sexual liberation of the Sixties" plus a
host of other temptations. "It was like
letting a child loose in a candy store."
Almost too much
then to occupy her mind and her time. How many
more weeks before husband Robert is due back from
America?
"He will
be back in England in two weeks' time and I will
be happier then. We seem to be working from 11am
to 11pm at the moment and if he were here I
wouldn't be able to give him the time he deserves."
Both seem
acutely aware of time and the need to look ahead.
In the New Year they will be working together in
America on an album, plus a tour.
Robert enjoys a
massive reputation in America partly because of
his work with King Crimson as well as with Brian
Eno and David Bowie.
"Where
he's been brilliant is that in every interview,
he's given the person an album of mine and said
'You should review that'
Then after a
pause and a hoot of laughter: "I don't think
I'd have done the same for him."
Huddersfield
Daily Examiner - 24th September 1991
Thanks to Jenny
Parkin for providing this.
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