| Weatherfield's Toyah,
played by Georgia Taylor, arrived on the street
in 1997 as part of the family-from-hell Battersby
clan. Since the character was born in 1982, when
Toyah Willcox's pop career was at its height,
producers asked the singer if they could name the
young girl after her. At first she was
honoured - the unusual name comes from a Red-Indian
named town in Texas.
Now the 43 year
old ex-punk admits: "I hate it. I'll be
reading a book by myself with the telly on and
I'll suddenly hear someone yell: 'Toyah' and I'll
jump out of my seat.
"They
asked my permission, but I'm not sure I should
have let it happen.
"My name
is my luckiest token and I've sort of given it
away - now anyone watching Corrie could call
their children it and I prefer its uniqueness."
Her mother,
Barbara, found the name in the late fifties when
Toyah was born.
Toyah admits:
"The strangest thing is after she told me
that, I looked the town up in a map - and right
next to it is the Willcox Mountains. She never
knew.
"That's
why I know my name is special and helped me get
where I am today."
Toyah is about
to return to her musical roots as part of the
Eighties nostalgia tour Here And Now, which comes
to Glasgow in April with Adam Ant, some of
Spandau Ballet, Belinda Carlisle, ABC, Howard
Jones and China Crisis.
While the rest
have had little fame in the last 20 years, Toyah
has touched all our lives with her various
projects in a multi-faceted and very successful
career.
She starred in
films such as Quadrophenia and has acted with Sir
Laurence Olivier and Katharine Hepburn.
She's voiced
the Teletubbies, been a children's television
star in BBC Scotland's Barmy Aunt Boomerang and
presented TV shows such as This Morning and Songs
Of Praise - and The Good Sex Guide Late.
For many people
it will be hits such as 'It's A Mystery and I
Want To Be Free which make her a fond memory.
Since the Here
And Now tour was announced, much of the publicity
has revolved around Adam Ant's mental breakdown.
The 47 year old
singer -real name Stuart Goddard - has been
sectioned under the Mental Health Act and is in
the Alice Ward of the Royal Free Hospital, North
London.
He allegedly
waved a fake gun at customers during an incident
at the members-only Prince Of Wales bar in
Kentish Town.
Toyah claims
the wayward star is better and is gearing himself
up for the tour and she admits it was Adam who
gave her the big break into music.
She said:
"He's not speaking to anyone at the moment,
but he's absolutely fine, looking forward to the
tour and in good shape.
"When we
go on tour we'll just make sure he knows how
supportive of him we are - he's top of the bill
and important to us all. What's happened is a
blip. He's a creative genius and this is the
price you sometimes pay. It's what makes him
special.
"It's not
about him having a breakdown because he's not
famous anymore - he's got a wild streak and he's
creative and that sometimes can be very bad for
the brain."
Birmingham born
Toyah was a pink haired young 19-year-old
drama student when she was picked to play the
character Mad in Derek Jarman's punk film classic
Jubilee.
The 1977 film
brought her into contact with Adam, who was also
in the film.
She said:
"I told him I wanted to be in a band. We
were in this club and I gave him some lyrics
scribbled on a serviette and the next day he'd
made a song from them and put a band together for
me with his wife, Eve.
"He was a
phenomenal force. He knew what he wanted to do.We
were supposed to do an album, but I'd got my own
solo deal by then and it never quite worked out."
Toyah, the
youngest of three children, left Edgbaston C of E
College with just one 0-Level, saying her own
education suffered because of her dyslexia, which
was dignosed at six.
Her father
Beric, a joinery manufacturer with his own
business, was able to give her the top education
in the area - but she became a teenage rebel,
dyeing her hair pink and hanging out with Hell's
Angels.
Teased at
school because of her lisp she admitted she once
broke a chair over a girl's head, but admits now:
"It's not something I'm proud of."
At school she
dreamed of becoming an actress and started at
Birmingham Old Rep Drama School at 14. By 17 was
there full time.
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She moved to London to
join the National Theatre Company and her work on
Jubilee pushed her into musicals, although she
acted alongside Katharine Hepburn in The Corn Is
Green and as Monkey in Quadrophenia. She became the first punk pop star with
her colourful hair and clothes.
Toyah said:
"I had a good serious career as a pop star
and had good commercial success with it.
"But I
diluted five years of touring up and down
universities as a punk when I hit the charts.
"Some
people said I'd sold out, but I don't care about
other people's opinions.
"What I
was sad about is that, after I'd had a few hits,
it was more about the name and product than the
music.
"I
couldn't turn that around so I don't miss that."
In 1982 she won
Best Female Singer in what was then the Rock
& Pop Awards, now The Brits.
Toyah admits
she's looking forward to recreating the early
Eighties once again.
But she
dismisses claims it's just about money. She said:
"None of us on the bill needs the cash.
"I think
we've all worked constantly. Personally I like
working and don't enjoy having time to myself.
"I was
asked to do this and, since I'd seen the last one
with Paul Young and Kim Wilde and enjoyed it
immensely, I thought it would be a brilliant idea."
But Toyah says
given her age she won't be wearing some of her
more outrageous costumes.
She admitted:
"I think that would look stupid. I'm getting
costumes tailor-made, which look modern. I'm
keeping my blonde hair as it is."
Toyah married
guitarist Robert Fripp when she was 27.The pair
live in Wiltshire, but have never had children.
She admitted:
"Seeing scores of teenage girls pushing
prams around Birmingham on a Saturday morning
affected me.
"I'd
rather have died than gone through that, so I
became phobic about getting pregnant and
developed a terrible distrust of men as a result
of that. So, no children for me."
Instead, Toyah
has stayed somewhat of a child herself. She said:
"I like playing. I'll be sitting with my
husband in a bar and will try out new characters
to see if they make him laugh."
Characters are
something she knows a lot about. Some 10 years
ago she voiced all the characters in children's
favourite Brum. It was created by Anne Wood - the
woman behind the Teletubbies.
Toyah said:
"Anne called me up and told me she was doing
a pilot of Teletubbies in the afternoon and asked
if I'd do the voiceover.
"It's just
a line at the end and at the beginning, but it's
amazing how many people recognise me for it.
"We've now
got two major projects in the pipeline."
However, the
seemingly cosy Toyah still hasn't lost her
ability to shock and admits she wants to be fed
to the pigeons when she dies.
She wants her
body to be cut up, mixed with corn and then fed
to the birds on the Malvern Hills in a Tibetan-style
ceremony. She said: "I would like a sky
burial. In Tibet, the village elders dismember
the body.
"But it is
regarded as the most sacred burial you can have.
"I want
mine held in the Malvern Hills, where I grew up.
I want my father and husband to perform the
ceremony and I want to be fed to the pigeons or
some kind of specially imported vulture."
Despite looking
back to the Eighties, Toyah is still working for
her future.
There is a book
set in a concentration camp which she admits:
"I've not gone near since September 11. It's
a horror book and I just can't face it."
Ther's also an
album. She said: "I don't want to confuse
people by putting out an album of new material.
It's not a retro album, so I'll put it out in
August.
"I'm
slowly getting myself to be more creative - with
more writing, songwriting and painting."
Daily Record
- 1 February 2002
Thanks to Alec
Kelly for providing this.
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