| It's 10 years to the
month since Kings Heath born singer Toyah broke
into the singles charts with It's A Mystery. Her
flamboyant, brash personality and vivid sense of
image firmly establishing her as a pop phenomenon.
And to her satisfaction she was also able to
develop her talent as an actress, the career
she'd originally embarked on after leaving school
in 1976. A stunning role in Derek
Jarman's interpretation of The Tempest and the
leading role in the West End production of
Trafford Tanzi, confirmed her dramatic abilities.
But as the years passed and fashions changed,
Toyah began to recede from the headlines.
Although albums
continued to fare reasonably well, hit single
success was no longer guaranteed and acting work
became less frequent, less newsworthy. But Toyah
has not, like many of her generation, slipped
silently away. Instead she has consolidated and
matured her talents, learned from her
experiences, reassessed her ambitions and re-emerged
as determined, as strong and with as much to say
worth hearing as ever.
We've met to
discuss her new album, Ophelia's Shadow. But
seated in the Rep Cafe Bar, talk inevitably turns
first to acting. It was here, after all, that her
stage career arose phoenix-like with a spirited
performance in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
"That was
the first step up a very long ladder for me,"
she reflects. "In the past year I've found I
want to do more stagework than anything. I have
enough offers to work in the theatre every day
for the next six years, although obviously you
need to find projects that attract you and avoid
typecasting. But it hasn't been easy. People's
perception of me is always a problem because of
the hit singles days. You need to persuade them
that you've moved on. I had to prove to directors
how committed I am to my work."
It was Robin
Midgeley, (the Dream's director and also director
of the Cambridge Theatre Co with whom Toyah
toured in Taming of the Shrew) who broke the
barrier. Then last year she worked with Pip
Broughton in Nottingham in Therese Racquin, a
play about adultery with heavy on stage sex
scenes and very demanding acting. It was, she
says, the best stuff she'd ever done and
certainly opened the doors.
But, as well as
having the abilities, Toyah says she also learned
that it's who you know and the quality of the
relationships you have that count.
"That's
not the casting couch syndrome, it's about
proving your commitment and the quality of your
relationships in working with people. It was
something I had to learn. That you have to leave
your ego at the back door and become part of a
team, which is just the opposite to how you work
with music. I had to readapt.
"Everyone's
image of me is that I'm very rich, very arrogant
and very lazy. There are so many brilliant actors
in this country desperate for work that directors
can afford to be choosey. You have to prove So I
phoned people up and went to meet them face to
face. That won me a lot of work."
But if acting
is a passion, it's only half the story. The other
is her music. More sophisticated these days but
as potent a voice as ever. And like acting, it's
also a vital part of understanding herself and
her inner turmoil.
"It's soul
baring, the most expressive part of my work. It
has to be personal. In the past my music and I
were just a product. It was all about accountants.
I began to feel I wasn't developing as a singer
or a writer, and certainly not as a person. I
became a fashion victim. I had to get back to
being responsible for my own actions. People were
putting out product under my name and I was
taking the criticism for it. I felt I could no
longer live with that. I had to give something
that was more a part of me and then, if it was
criticised, I could handle it because I knew I'd
given of my best. Whether it sold or not, it was
my true voice."
The first most
striking evidence of this new self-determination
was the Prostitute album. A potent exploration of
the roles women play, most often imposed on them
by men or by their perceptions of what men expect.
It was a cry for women to be themselves, to
discover their feminine (as opposed to feminist)
principle. And for Toyah it was a response to the
rage she felt at being musically prostituted.
|
"I can't say how
angry and adulterated I felt at the time.
Everyone's expectations were that I had to be
marketable, a sex-object making easy going music.
But all the time all I felt was rage. I didn't
want to be part of that system. I didn't want to
starve myself for six months to make a video when
I'm naturally a podgy person. I felt insulted. I
have always felt that if the quality of work is
good then people will be attracted to it. "I'm very happy with Prostitute and
Ophelia's Shadow because they aren't brash
statements from an egotistical child demanding
attention. That was what I felt my career had
come to eight years ago. I got very lost. The
hits took me over and ego got in the way. Looking
back at myself I was a bitch. The biggest thing I
had to learn to deal with was jealousy and
resentment because that makes you cruel. I had to
learn to admire other people without feeling
belittled or threatened."
Prostitute was
a challenging, stimulating album, yet for many
men it's very title was incredibly alienating.
People walked out of sales meeting, refusing to
deal with the word. It was a lesson that taught
Toyah that women have to face such male
aggression without giving up on their beliefs.
"Woman are
realising that they have to motivate their own
future. I was never taught to be self-motivating.
I always relied on others for ideas, or to take
the initiative. Part of my journey has been to
become independent in those areas. My record
company treats me with brutal honesty and I have
to learn to deal with that. Women have to learn
to take humiliation in areas they don't
understand and not react aggressively to it. That
way you don't get degraded."
Ophelia's
Shadow expands the themes of Prostitute,
exploring not so much roles but identity and the
fact that however much one may search for it, it
remains illusive, transient. What matters, says
Toyah, is that you are true to yourself at the
time.
"I dont
want any of this Western idea of lying about your
age (she's 32) and having to pretend to be young
and vibrant. I want to be my age. I want the
right to that progression. I think you should be
seen for what you are, what you do and how. Age
should be respected but irrelevant.
"I don't
think I'll ever be an utterly serious artist.
I'll always have a girlish flamboyance, I'll
always have a sense of mischief. It's in my
character and I hope it's always there. But that
doesn't mean I'm immature. Maturity seems to be a
dirty word. I want to be accepted for what I am.
Which is why I have arguments about publicity
photos. I don't look like I used to so I don't
photograph in the same way. There are lines
there, there's a slightly sagging in the neck.
But my record company says they won't use those
photos. But that's how I look and I don't want to
pretend otherwise."
One senses that
in both acting and music, Toyah is seeking to
discover a deeper understanding of herself and
her relationship to the world she lives in. Where
then does ambition lie?
"To be
honest I'm not sure I know where to go. That path
isn't yet laid and I'll make it as I go along,
feeling with my hands. I just need to make myself
available and trust my instincts. The biggest
thing at present is my self-education. Time and
tastes change and you have to change with them in
order to inform your opinions. I feel more rooted
and more determined now than ever. My ambition is
furious, but not for its own sake. Fame was fun
but it was also very demoralising. I could never
allow it to happen again. Creatively I'm like a
woman who has to have a child. I've got to find
what I'm trying to say or it'll eat me up."
Birmingham Post
- 1991
Thanks to Mike
Davies, who interviewed Toyah, for providing this.
|