| This is the person to
have round for those "can't be bothered"
moments. This panto run of two
shows a day, six days a week for four weeks she
calls a "holiday" from the touring
production of Calamity Jane.
"We were
touring Calamity for three months doing eight
shows a week. I had a week off and into this.
Then I have another week off and it's back into
Calamity Jane." There's a look of sheer
delight when she talks about this workload,
particularly the prospect of getting back into
buckskins.
"I love
Calamity Jane. I love it to death. When I was
approached to play it last year I had to say yes,
but with the rider that I couldn't go down the
same road as Doris Day. I mean, come on . . .
"But this
production has a beautiful, no-nonsense approach.
There's no glitter, no camp dance steps, and it's
back to the nitty gritty. It's intended to be a
little more historically accurate. We've
forgotten about technology and gone back to how
humans would have behaved being stuck in this
desert town."
Certainly, they
would have behaved pretty badly. Willcox becomes
even more animated when talking about the real
Calamity.
"Did you
know she was a real person? A really dubious
background, too. She was an occasional
prostitute, but then again, I think most people
were then.
She was an
Indian scout for the army, though." Fans of
the Doris Day/Howard Keel love match may wish to
look away now.
"She never
got together romantically with Bill - there were
questions about her sexuality - but it seems that
she may have had a child by him.
"She did
join his wild west show, though, and it seems she
died of alcoholism after touring Europe."
Audiences in 1953 would have choked on their
popcorn if Doris had chosen to go down this
route, but for Willcox her Calamity has to be
slightly more spit and sawdust.
One thing it
does have in common is the physicality. Doris Day
was injured on the set while being thrown around
the saloon by Howard Keel. After watching
rehearsals, Toyah's lawyers insisted she made a
will.
"I get
caught, I get thrown. Things get really rough.
Then I get hoisted up on to rafters." The
fact that all this is said with an ear-to-ear
grin leads you to suspect that this is what
attracts her to the role.
"Well, I
presume that my Calamity is chaste, so all that
pent-up energy goes into aggression and
physicality." Physicality is a word that
comes up with alarming regularity.
"I love
throwing myself into things. I'm a huge fan of
Theatre de Complicite. They haven't asked me to
join, although I've done the workshops.
"I'm well
aware that I'm not a typical female heroine. I
can't just stand there and open my mouth, my
voice isn't velvety enough for that, so I've
always over-compensated.
"I'm more
confident when I'm being physical. I'm short,
very muscly, and I have no pretensions to be
feminine." This does seem strange as Toyah
is more conventionally pretty than at any other
time in her career.
"Well, I
haven't cut my hair for two years. I didn't want
to wear a wig and we had to think of a way that
Wild Bill could see Calamity as a real woman for
the first time. When I tear the ballgown off, I
stand there semi-nude.
My hair has
fallen down and tumbled down over my shoulders. I
think long hair tumbling down like that will
always be a turn-on." Her single-minded
approach to work seems to be an antidote to
depression which is alluded to.
"Work
keeps me physically and mentally fit. I think
most artists have a tendency to depression and
extreme physicality is how I deal with it. Even
when I'm working I end every day with an hour of
aerobics.
"I'm 44
now and loving my forties. My thirties were a
different matter - the most miserable time of my
life. I was going through changes, I got very
overweight and I didn't have any kind of
spiritual base. I really felt I was never going
to fight back."
The importance
of conventional beauty in showbusiness is
something that Willcox returns to and names
actors such as Billie Whitelaw and Judi Dench as
inspiration. "When I was a pop star I didn't
think beyond 30. In the area I was working in, it
seems that you're written off after about 25. I
also know that at my age, I'm seen as difficult
to cast."
But one way or
another Toyah Willcox has survived and thrived,
probably in areas that hardened fans of her early
albums are appalled by, but still, she's working
while contemporaries are nothing more than TOTP2
fodder.
Many of her
contemporaries, however, are still working and
still relevant. Siouxsie Sioux, Kate Bush, Debbie
Harry were all women who inspired a generation of
teenage girls with more than platform soles,
branded lollipops, and girl-power soundbites.
"I think
at the time people like us were still struggling
in a real male area. I think we had work to do:
the women of the 1960s, I feel, were exploited by
the sexual revolution.
|
"I do think that
people who liked me really suffered for it.
Everything I did came from inside my head in a
darkened room, so I probably attracted like-minded
folk, whereas someone like Kate (who is Toyah's
best friend) was very good at researching her
music and lyrics." Apart from theatre, there
has been TV acting and presenting. "I think I'm still working because
of my personal approach. I'm pretty fascistic in
my work and I think that reputation spreads.
"I like to
be off script at first day of rehearsal, I love
the tradition of theatre and like to be silent on
the wings. I do sell my soul while I'm working.
"TV is
fine. It gets you into living rooms and it
reminds people you're still there, but theatre is
by far the most satisfying. It's the only job
where I can go home at night and feel truly
satisfied. Nothing else does that for me."
Not even live
music. Despite an enjoyable Here and Now eighties
tour, live music performance is nerve-racking.
"With live
music you have to be yourself, and I don't like
that. I've always been very nervous with that and
I always will. I reason I love doing something
like Calamity is I know that everything I'm good
at, I can put into the character.
"Music is
forced torture for me. Oh my god, I shouldn't say
that, I can see the headline now 'Torture that
cuts both ways'."
The demands of
an extensive theatre tour (and the possibility of
a west end run) mean that there's little time to
return home to Worcester and husband Robert Fripp.
While any
marriage between Toyah and the King Crimson
guitar guru would hardly be conventional, she
admits that their nomadic lifestyles mean they
rarely see one another.
"I don't
get home much, but I don't want to. We are both
very much travellers. He was here last week and
I'll see him again soon, but we're happy that way.
"He has a
new King Crimson album out in March and he'll be
away promoting that. Actually, there's a great
buzz about it. They're saying it's the best in 20
years. Even I like it."
There are more
conventional aspects to the relationship, however.
When they're invited to parties, there's always a
note at the bottom saying "bring your guitar"
and Fripp spends time with the in-laws when Toyah
is away.
"Where we
live in Worcester, we're right on the Avon so my
parents can reach us quickly by boat. We see as
much of them as possible. Robert lost his parents
about 10 years ago, so mine have really taken him
under their wing.
"If I
phone and I can't get hold of Robert I phone my
dad's mobile and find out that they're off to a
museum or the cinema or something." One
thing the parents can forget about is any Willcox/Fripp
collaborations.
"I've
never wanted children, but what I'm realising now
is there's something in the genetic structure
that I nickname the death gene. I think I have
inherited a gene somewhere that tells me that
this is where this line ends.
My sister's the
same. She's 54 and has no interest in children.
"Robert's
take on it is that by stopping the family line,
you free yourself from the earthly plain. Your
spirit has evolved enough and you can go straight
to Nirvana. But that's the Buddhist take on it. I
just have no maternal instincts."
There's a
pattern of contradictions with Toyah.
Contradictions or keeping her options open.
Whichever, it seems to be the smart move.
No maternal
instincts, but great success voicing the
Teletubbies and playing a ghost in the children's
show Barmy Aunt Boomerang for BBC Scotland.
Despite
management pressure, she's also fighting to keep
panto as part of her schedule, too.
She sees
organised religion as highly political but has
fronted Songs of Praise and the Heaven and Earth
Show.
She's also
launching herself back into torture again with
new music. The Little Tears of Love EP will be
released around May, or when she has time to
promote it.
"2003 is
actually my 25th year in the business, so there
will be one big concert and a mini-tour. But it
all depends what happens with Calamity Jane.
"I think I
spent far too much time wanting to be famous. Now
that I can enjoy the work. I feel real joy again."
Calamity Jane
is at the King's in Glasgow from January 21 for a
week and the Festival Theatre in Edinburgh for a
week from January 28.
Glasgow Herald
- 7th January 2003
Thanks to Alec
Kelly for this.
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