| Last Easter weekend in
Brighton, Scarborough and Southend, nearly 400
kids, mostly mods and skinheads, were arrested
after violent clashes with bikers, holidaymakers
and police. Said one mod, happily: 'The 60s were
the great time.' In outraged newspaper editorials
the next day you see one word: 'Quadrophenia'. From peeling posters for that film Toyah
Willcox's face stares out, a new Wave icon being
used to paper over the punk-mod gap. Strange to
think just how much the film originally relied on
the life-blood of punk culture; Johnny Rotten was
auditioned for the film's lead and Toyah came to
the film after 'Jubilee'.
Now she is in
the new Derek Jarman film of 'The Tempest'.
Twenty-two this year, brought up in Birmingham,
learning to read only after she had left her (Church
of England) school, Toyah was spotted because of
her crazy hair: 'I told these people to fuck off.
I thought they were perverts...' Now it isn't
just the dirty old men: 'If I'm seen in the
street now they run and try to grab anything on
me. I just cover my hair all the time - it's the
hair which does it.'
'Everyone had
their own interpretation of punk,' she said.
'Kids on the street thought it meant they could
hit people. Kids in bands thought meant they
could be political about fascism. Other kids
thought it meant they could be fascists. But at
the time it was exciting. It gave the 1970s a
reaso nfor being . I thought the 1970s were a
very boring time and I thought punk was
exciting and needed. But like everything that's
really exciting, when it dies, it dies a death,
and everyone puts it down. I forgot about punk
after 'Jubilee' was released. I just started
moving on.
'Quadrophenia'
itself pushed things to a crunch: Lambrettas in,
bondage out. In a pub near the Marquee in Soho,
Easter Friday, the pimps are doing their early
evening drinking. Two girls come in - bleached
hair, bondage gear and tartans. 'Oi!' yells the
barman, brutally pointing the way to the door,
'You know you can't come in here. Out!'
Conversation doesn't even falter
The Album
I listened to
Toyah's album, 'Sheep Farming In Barnet' . On the
radio I had heard she invented the title on the
spur of the moment, but I think it smacks of
calculation. So, after a while, does the music:
electric sounds mocking the electronic age as
Toyah's voice swoops and dives over a synthesizer
background like Patti Smith on speed. What the
angst-laden album cover doesn't prepare you for
is a psychedelic overtone that leaps weirdly back
into the acid culture:
'I believe that
people should use drugs...people abuse drugs,
drugs don't abuse people...and have their freedom
to so what they want with their false happiness.
I was living in an old British Rail warehouse in
Battersea. There would always be goings on there,
like films showing on the roof...it was a place
to go and have a good time. But the police banned
me because I was getting about 1,000 people there
each night, and they were on the roof and
demolishing anything they could lay their hands
on...a riot.
'What I want to
do now is buy a cinema and create a place where
people could come for 24 hours, take what they
want to take, and live out their own fantasy by
having images everywhere. I also want to use it
to do video things, and have bands rehearsing,
for people to get their things together...experimenting
with people's emotions. And also I'd plant
cameras and film these people...'
Money without
corruption...drugs without punishment...and the
world as her oyster: Toyah's dreams have the
ruthless naivety that made Warhol and Mary Quant
the coolest stars of their generation.
The
Interview
Moving to
London, she appeared on TV and in 'Tales From The
Vienna Woods' at the National, and started a band.
Then, in the summer of 1977 she met Derek Jarman,
whose first film, 'Sebastiane', had just been
completed. 'I went along and had tea with Derek,
and read the script of 'Jubilee' and asked Derek
if I could play Mad, and Derek just said yes.
Simple as that.'
'Jubilee' was a
cult success in London, trailing its mildly
scandalous reputation, and Toyah's self-hating
role, through Punk's peak in 1977-78. The move
from stage to screen was one she welcomed.
'Stage acting
as far as I'm concerned is very frustrating,
because it is too set. You do the same thing
night after night for months on end. But on film
you are acting to a make-believe audience and
that excites me totally. You are concentrated
into a machine which has got to go through a
process, and it has got to go out into all these
people's brains. On film it has to be perfect
every time - it really keeps you on your toes...And
I like the camera, I like having to go in front
of it.'
How did she get
her part in 'Quadrophenia'?
'Franc Roddam,
the director, was thinking of casting Johnny
Rotten (Lydon) in the lead role, and I went along
and helped him audition by improvising with him
and being a friend to him. Then the insurance
people refused to insure the film with Lydon in
it. So I thought "Fuck, I've been chucked
because Lydon's been chucked", and I
went along to Franc and told him to give me the
part of Monkey...and I think he was so taken
aback - I was quite rude - that he gave me the
part. Partly because he couldn't think of anyone
else to do it.
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At about that time the
Pistols started on their film, 'The Great Rock
And Roll Swindle'. For a while - when Russ Meyers
was due to direct - Toyah was going to take part
in the movie. Then, like so many names associated
with the project, her role fell through. Derek
Jarman, meanwhile, was casting for his next
project, 'The Tempest'. 'I had read 'the
Tempest' once, and it was truly the only
Shakespeare play that I felt interested in
because the story from the very beginning had
mystique, and I felt I could follow it, whereas
with other Shakespeare stuff you've got to read
it all the way through before the characters
really connect - I find his language so hard to
understand that by the time I reach the end I've
forgotten the beginning.'
Did Jarman
change the language of the play?
'No, but he cut
out the boring bits, which I'm very grateful for,
because Shakespeare doesn't half gabble on. Not
everyone can get into that, and I think by
cutting certain bits Derek has expanded the
audience. I think it's a fabulous film.'
With the
exception of cod-Freud sci-fi film (made in 1956
and entitled 'Forbidden Planet'), Jarman's
'Tempest' is the first celluloid version of the
play. The dreamy magnificence of the original,
with its embittered, exiled magician-king
stirring a tempest of nature and mind to
transform a wrong turning from his past, is
better rendered than in most stage productions.
The film's willingness to fantasize eases the
notoriously compact rhythms of the play. It also
banishes the one major headache of theatrical
versions, the presentation of Ariel, Prospero's
genie, whose appearances, disappearances, and
general magic play a large part in the plot. 'The
Tempest' is one of those rare films in which
every element of production fell into place: the
crew (many of whom had worked on Jarman's earlier
films), the impressive cast, above all, the
mysterious, decaying location of Stoneleigh Abbey
where the film was shot.
The Abbey
'By the end of
the movie almost everyone was living in the abbey.
Each night there used to be cabaret shows.
Everyone would put on a show and get pissed out
of their brains. I was forever exploring the
place, and I remember once it was just before
dawn and there was no electricity in certain
parts of the house, I remember walking into a
cellar and there was just a ray - one beam - of
light...coming out, looking around...and slowly
my eyes became accustomed and it was full of
stuffed animals, stuffed bears, and they were all
facing me. It was early early in the morning, I
was quite pissed, and that moment captured the
whole energy in the place.'
The amazement
in her voice matches her role as Miranda,
emphasized in the film by the deletion of
elements of comedy and intrigue. Miranda/Toyah is
the original wild child enchanted by a brave new
world. Like Toyah's dream of a palace of images,
like the psychedelic ramblings of 'Sheep Farming
In Barnet', like Stoneleigh Abbey, the new world
is a metaphor for imagination, a pleasure dome
through which to wander on the passage away from
childhood.
The Photo
Session
It is Saturday
afternoon in a North London studio. Standing in
the livid red spotlight, in her New Wave haute
couture, Toyah waits patiently. She is 'into art
fashion', and wears regally black clothes, rings,
bronze bangles. Surrounded by four men in the
studio, who arrange and dissect her, it is hard
to tell whether she is the heroine or the victim
of the event. In 'the Tempest' Miranda confesses:
'I do not know/One of my own sex; no woman's face
remember/Save, from my glass my own', an
admission that her sense of innocent wonder is
possibly only because of the island solitude her
father has imposed.
Toyah's
aloofness in the red spotlight is different. It
is a display of self-possession.
'I hate showing
my body...really hate it. I don't mind so much
now, but I have lost almost two stones since that
nude scene in 'The Tempest'. It was very bad at
that particular time. I was supposed to be 16 but
to me I have the body of a 30-year-old. And now I
find, as I am slowly becoming established as an
actress I am being offered things just to show my
face somewhere, phenomenal amounts of money...'
Toyah greases
back her flaming red hair for the last few shots,
and stands sideways to the camera, stubborn not
to lose the pose although she is tired. the
camera whirrs in the stale room. The light
outside fades fast. After the last take we step
fro ma dark interior into a warm and twilight
London. Toyah leaves with her roadie, Jem - off
to the Marquee to do the mixing on her new album.
The photographer stays behind packing his gear.
And The
Future?
'I would only
go to America for a fucking good reason. There
are so many tits hanging around in Hollywood
anyway, and I think they are just there because
the money is phenomenal and they can lead a life
of luxury. I don't want that. I like being on the
move. I watch things and I study things, but I
just live my own life. I want to create my own
image.'
Time Out - 1980
Thanks to Andi for providing this.
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