EDP24: Calamity Jane fizzing
with Toyah - 17th March 2003
My last
encounter with Toyah was a very different affair.
A hot, bouncing, noisome affair, in fact. No, not
that. It was the early 1980s. Middlesbrough Town
Hall. Toyah is onstage, dressed like Boudica,
blasting her attractive brand of rebellion to the
rafters. I am on the balcony,
squished in a squash of punk, post-punk, new wave
and blow-waved blokes, watching with faint alarm
as this tiny, demented little firecracker fizzes
about below.
I Wanna
Be Free, she implores. It's a
Mystery, she concludes.
It was a good
night only the second gig I had ever seen,
in fact. The first Bob Geldof's petulant
Boomtown Rats had served up a similar mix
of theatricality and adolescent angst. And both
acts suited the sad glamour of a grand Victorian
building in a broken industrial town.
Building, town
and Toyah are still standing.
An ocean has
flopped under the bridge since then, of course
Toyah has become Toyah
Willcox, 44-year-old showbiz face
but the fizz and the fire have not been
extinguished.
I open the
bidding with a question about following a tough
act in the form of original Calamity Jane star
Doris Day. Toyah practically gnaws my head off:
No, I'm
not. I'm not following a tough act at all. My
performance is 100 miles away from Doris Day's.
Women have moved on 50 years since Doris Day's
rather saccharine performance.
Mmm. Not a
brilliant start.
But as she
elaborates she mellows, even conceding that the
classic, golden age Hollywood musical is an
absolute gift primarily because it
means theatre-goers today arrive pre-programmed
with the story line in their heads and the hum-along-tunes
on their lips.
Oh, and just in
case you have been residing in a Hebridean cave
with nothing but a puffin for company, here is
the Calamity Jane thing:
Calamity, a
tomboy Indian scout, makes an ill-advised pledge
to bring a famous Chicago star to a tiny saloon
bar in Dakota. After much mishap and muddle along
the way, the dainty chanteuse and cross-dressing
heroine become bestest mates and Calamity even
finds her feminine side. And then men go and muck
everything up.
Think rip-roaring,
whip-cracking, gun-toting, tough-talking, hard-riding,
buckskin-slapping fun. Then add rabble-rousing
songs like The Deadwood Stage, Windy City, Black
Hills of Dakota and Secret Love. Get the picture?
Toyah has been
Calamitous for some six months now and, make no
mistake, this is no Panto-style cash cow for her.
She is taking it deadly seriously: I'm
immensely proud of Calamity. I think it's a
massive achievement. Our production is very much
a play with music it's not a kind of
sequined production. It's very nitty-gritty and
very fast.
We are
far more interested in the real historical values
of the people we are playing. Calamity Jane was a
real woman (Martha Jane Cannary, fact fans), a
real pioneer who lived around 1860.
She was a
scout for the army, lived and dressed like a man
and was a hard drinker. She was a real, robust,
bombastic character phenomenally
interesting and wonderful to play.
By all
accounts, Toyah flings herself about the stage
like a pumped-up beach ball. (Check out the
brilliant diary entries on her official website
for alarming descriptions of dislocations and
bruisings.)
Toyah, my old
fruit you must be absolutely exhausted?
It is
exhausting, but very rewarding. We've been on the
road since September and as far as I'm concerned
I'm still very much in love with the show
and I've got hopefully another five months to go
on it.
She might say
this to all the boys, of course, but she proceeds
to swear that she is particularly looking forward
to the Norwich leg: I love it it's a
gorgeous place. I've got some very good friends
up there so I'm often weekending there.
In its 25-year
trajectory, Toyah's career has chopped and
changed its course like one of those fireworks
that chops and changes course a great deal.
She began as an
actress at the National Theatre and first sparked
the public imagination in 1977 when she played a
mad character called, err, Mad, in
Derek Jarman's art-punk movie Jubilee.
Next she
started up her own band but took care to keep up
the theatrics, appearing alongside Katherine
Hepburn in The Corn is Green and in Quadrophenia
and Jarman's The Tempest.
By the early
1980s, singer-Toyah bagged a couple of big hits,
winning Best Female Singer at the British Rock
& Pop awards, and seemed set for popstardom
proper.
But still she
refused to ditch the drama. A string of West End
productions followed, including a starring role
as Sally Bowles in Cabaret at the Strand Theatre,
a spot opposite Sir Laurence Olivier in Granada's
The Ebony Tower, and the perfect Puck in A
Midsummer Night's Dream at Regent's Park.
More recently
there have been a string of TV shows kids
and adults Panto, an Eighties' bands
revival tour and
ahem
the Teletubbies.
This isn't
eclecticism, Ms Willcox, this is complete madness.
I don't
know what it is, but different people like me for
different reasons. I was so lucky that Derek
Jarman treated me like his muse in his early film
years and people like Anne Wood, who created
Teletubbies, thinks I have a great way with
children.
I just
feel incredibly lucky that people trust me in
different genres and I don't know why or what it
is.
And if you had
to choose just one of those worlds?
Acting,
she answers before I've even finished the
question.
Film. But
that's because film is so glamorous. Singing was
great while I was younger but it's not something
I want to do forever.
I must
admit that as I get older I am happier hiding
behind a character than being me.
She admits to
being an utter workaholic, feeling more
alive at work than home. This is
principally because she has no family
and no reason to go home at night,
she says. (Presumably her equally famous musician
husband Robert Fripp is permanently swanning off
around the globe, fiddling about with his guitars
)
Her drive, and
she clearly has Aston Martin amounts, was ignited
during her troubled Birmingham childhood, she
agrees a time of dyslexia, illness, weird
hair and rebellion:
I have a
certain kind of determination because everyone
wrote me off early on and I was very aware of
that as a child.
Because I
wasn't conventionally, physically beautiful, I
was very aware that I was going to have to fight
harder than most.
As they did for
many other ugly young ducklings in 1970s England,
spiked hair and safety pins provided the escape
route. Toyah says she is still madly in
love with Punk philosophy.
I think
it brought generations into a new positive light
and I think that kind of ethic never leaves you.
I feel
wildly enthusiastic about anyone and everyone I
meet because I only see the good in people. That
really was the punk philosophy. I think what I do
today is no different from that. I go into a job
because I want to be in love with it, not just
because I want to earn cash.
Forgive the
indulgent nostalgia, but you don't happen to
remember playing a gig at Middlesbrough Town Hall
in the early 1980s do you?
1981!
she replies, quick as a flash. With the
balcony that bounced. It was a great gig. I can
remember nearly stopping the show because no-one
warned me that it bounced like that.
Told you it was
bouncy!
Liverpool
Echo: Toyah's
Calamity - 13th March 2003
There are
few things Toyah Willcox has not done. She has
been a film actress, rock star, appeared in stage
and television dramas, flown around as Peter Pan
and worked in children's television.
So I put it to
her when we meet that she must be a workaholic.
"No, just very old," she laughs (she's
actually somewhere in her mid 40s). "I
happen to like my work, I enjoy it."
There has been
no career game plan. "It's all been a happy
accident," she says. "I have this kind
of idea that a lot of people say no to work and I
say yes so I always get something good."
That "something
good" at the moment is the starring role in
a new stage production of the film musical
Calamity Jane. That's right - the one that
originally starred Hollywood's Queen of Clean,
Doris Day.
At first glance
it may seem unlikely that Toyah, a punk Goddess
with huge success in the 1980s, would slip easily
into the role.
But that's the
strange thing about Ms. Will-cox - that wild rock
act was just part of a life that has seen her
acting with Laurence Olivier and supplying the
narration for Teletubbies. She began her stage
career at the National Theatre.
But don't
expect a Doris Day-style interpretation of
Calamity Jane when the musical arrives at
Liverpool's Empire Theatre from 1 April for a
week-long run.
"When I
was asked to do this I said I did not want to do
a Doris Day interpretation, I wanted to bring the
show into the new millennium and treat it how
women are today and how I felt women were years
ago when pioneers in America. "I wanted
something gritty which kicked ass a bit more."
As it was, she
was already a fan of the film on which the stage
version was based and had watched it 10 times.
The first stage
production had been tried out in the late 1970s
with - amazingly - Barbara Windsor in the title
role. It toured but never made it into the West
End after Windsor left the production. A later
touring version starred Gemma Craven.
But the latest
version with Toyah is a "brand, spanking new
production, everything is new from top to bottom,"
she says. "It's a completely fresh approach."
It had to be
with a 24-year-old director Ed Smith and a 24-year-old
producer Tristan Baker.
"It's like
the old Cambridge Footlights when you had this
little group of drama school pupils and you knew
they were going to do something substantial.
That's what this team feels like, you know they
are going on and on. They are incredibly young
but they have got their heads screwed on."
Mind you, she
has managed to put some of them back again.
"We are all a creative team, the director
producer, me and my leading man Alasdair Harvey
as Wild Bill Hickock. He was the lead in Beauty
and the Beast in the West End for two years."
The result is
that the show - hopefully heading for the West
End - has been changing all the time since it
began its tour last year. "We have been
perfecting it. It is said it takes a year to
produce a definitive version for a musical so we
have been tightening it up and exploring it."
The story is
set around the love-hate relationship between
Calamity and Wild Bill with various subplots more
than filling out the background.
The hit film
was a wonderful inheritance, Toyah allows. "We
are just giving it a bit more edge and making it
historically accurate."
So there have
been changes. In the film, the rough, tough, gun-shooting
Calamity finally gets into a dress and goes all
girly.
"Well, I
do get into a ballgown but end up tearing it up
and getting back into buckskin," says Toyah.
Funny enough, audiences are divided over that. My
compromise was that I become as feminine as I
think a character can considering she is a free
spirit."
And she does
wear real buckskin. "It's bloody hot,"
she says.
The stage
version does include some new numbers by the
original writing team of Sammy Fain and Paul
Francis Webster. "They are all in the first
scene and they are good songs, in one I crack a
bullwhip and another I am climbing all over the
scenery so visually they are very good.
But film fans
fear not, the opening number is still that
dashing The Deadwood Stage. And Calamity does get
to ride a stagecoach.
The musical
marks Toyah's 25th year in showbusiness and she
is concentrating all her resources into the
production. The music tours are being wound down.
"There is
are some concerts in May and a mini-album which
is really just fan-based. I am planning a big
show in Birmingham and a big show in London, and
that's about it."
It was as a
rock performer that she made here last Liverpool
appearance at the Empire and as was the thing
with such tours it was a matter of arriving,
doing the show and moving on.
But she does
have a closer link with the city. The sculptor
Elizabeth Frink was a close friend and she went
to see her when working on the statue of Christ
for Liverpool Cathedral. "She had very bad
throat cancer at the time and told me that
working on the sculpture was the thing that was
keeping her alive. She died as soon as it was
finished."
So it was on
her death that Toyah drove to Liverpool to see
the sculpture in place. "And there it was,
right above the doorway and looking wonderful."
News Shopper:
Toyah
Interview - 27th February 2003
The multi-talented
Toyah Willcox is about to whip-crack her way to
The Orchard, in Dartford, with a stage version of
Calamity Jane, the film classic immortalised by
Doris Day. And Willcox, who has worked with
Hollywood legends Laurence Olivier and Katherine
Hepburn, says this classic comedy musical is the
most demanding role she has ever taken on.
Considering the
actress starred in ground-breaking and
controversial films such as Jubilee and
Quadrophenia, this is quite a statement.
The former pop
star says she was a fan of the original film but
she added: "I'm not doing a Doris Day
impersonation.
"The
original was a 1950s' period piece. We are trying
to recreate the way it was in the Wild West and
how people behaved without inhibitions. But in a
way Calamity has her inhibitions because she is
hiding her femininity. Our version is a bit more
nitty-gritty, even though the audience will leave
the theatre with a smile on their faces.
"It's
always been one of those parts I wanted to have a
go at. I trained for six months to make sure I
had the stamina, which is just as well because it
is a very demanding role."
The play
follows the adventures of a tough-talking Indian
scout. She was named Calamity Jane by a Major she
saved in war because she always seemed to be
around chaotic situations. She puts her
reputation on the line when she promises to bring
a famous singing star, Adelaide Adams, from
Chicago to Dakota's Golden Garter Saloon.
After a small
matter of mistaken identity, the dainty chanteuse
and our hero become the best of friends until,
that is, the hard-riding, hard-drinking, gun-toting
cow girl realises she may have a rival for the
affections of the Deadwood's two most eligible
cowboys, Lieutenant Danny Gilmartin and Wild Bill
Hickock.
But will the
two gals sort out their differences?
Before this
venture, Willcox was part of the sell-out Here
and Now Tour, where she appeared alongside
Spandau Ballet, ABC and Belinda Carlisle. The 44-year-old
did a 20-minute slot where she belted out her
favourite hits, It's a Mystery, I Wanna be Free
and Thunder in the Mountains.
She says she's
not too concerned today's youngsters will not
remember Toyah the singer.
She said:
"I'm better known for children's shows such
as Teletubbies, Aunt Boomerang and my presenting
work."
Willcox hopes
to see Calamity Jane move to the West End after
the tour ends in June. But she says after that
she has no preference about what sort of work
comes her way she wants to go on doing anything
and everything!
Kent
Messenger: Calamity is her good fortune - 7th February 2003
Toyah
Willcox is heading to Kent in the musical
Calamity Jane. For someone who's not a particular
fan of musicals she's having a great time.
Michael DeFroand found out why.
"It's
fantastic, really great," enthused Toyah
Willcox about her role as Calamity Jane as she
prepared for the second leg of her national tour.
"It's been
getting some really great reviews. It's a high
energy production. There's music, a great love
story, lots of comedy and plenty of action. I'm
not usually a big fan of musicals. I never
thought I'd do one but this is such a good story
and has such a great script."
Calamity Jane
was made famous by Doris Day in the classic 1953
film.
"I've
watched the film so many times over the years,"
said Toyah. "And we re-watched it in
preparation for this tour but this production is
really quite earthy and edgy. It's very Wild
West, there's not a sequin in sight."
It sounds
hectic, too.
"It's a
very physical part. I get thrown about and we've
all had to learn how to handle guns and bullwhips.
The guns are so loud and the bullwhips are really
tricky. It's quite a responsibility handling the
whips, you can easily cut someone if you're not
careful."
The combination
of action, music and excitement makes Calamity
Jane a real family attraction.
Toyah explained:
"We've been seeing an unbelievable age range
in the audience. Before I started the musical, I
thought the audience may be in their 20s and
above but lots of families have been coming and
the children have been really enthralled -
there's lots of fighting and action and plenty to
keep them amused. It ends well, too - it's an
uplifting musical."
Most actors
will tell you that touring is tiring, but Toyah
has a different take on it.
"To be
honest, it's fun," she said. "I
wouldn't like to tour with the Scottish play but
this one is really enjoyable. Plus, I love
Canterbury - I was in panto there in Peter Pan."
So, with a
recent spate in panto and the second leg of
Calamity Jane underway, how does Toyah relax?
"I love
walking," she said. "I'll probably walk
around Canterbury after the show. Also, I spend
about four hours in the bath - two hours in the
morning and two in the evening."
While many
celebrities bemoan the fact that they can't get
on television as often as they'd like, Toyah has
remained a familiar face.
"I'm
lucky," she added. "First of all I've
got a very good agent. Also, I have specialities
that the TV can call upon - I specialise in
alternative remedies, fitness and diets. I
had a nutrition expert with me throughout the
1980s, so I know quite a lot about that."
What lies ahead
for Toyah?
"Well, I'm
keeping the diary open at the moment because I'm
touring with Calamity Jane up until May and then
we might be able to take it to the West End. So,
I'll see."
Romford
Recorder: Plain Talking Jane - 31st January 2003
Barry Kirk
talks to Toyah Willcox about her role as the hard-drinking,
hard-cussing, hard-riding, Calamity Jane,
shooting star of the Wild West.
The gorgeous
Toyah Willcox has put a new slant on the old
theatrical saying "the smell of the
greasepaint" only she reckons it's not just
the aroma of greasepaint on the actors in
Calamity Jane at Westcliff's Cliffs Pavilion.
"I love
this production," she said. "It's very
physical and fast action from start to finish, so
you can certainly smell we are working hard."
Toyah, along
with a whole company of action men and women are
on the road with a huge star-studded production
of Calamity Jane, a true story based on a Wild
West woman, Martha Jane Cannary, who was
immortalised by Doris Day in the Warner Brothers
classic film of the same name.
The tour
reaches the Cliffs Pavilion for six nights later
next month.
Based on
Martha, the true story is wrapped round the myths
and legends of Wild Bill Hickock, who Martha
apparently requested to be buried beside.
Life was tough
in 1850 Nevada, and the legend of Calamity Jane
grew up against the background of American
Indians fighting for their homeland against the
settlers, miners and farmers. That legendary time
in the development of the Western US states
provided the rich backdrop for her story.
Courage
Martha was born
in Missouri in 1848, but moved to Virginia City
where an Indian uprising separated her from her
family at the tender age of 10.
She wandered
from place to place and soon became a respected
scout for the cavalry, showing great courage and
daring the equal of any man, let alone woman.
Her
horsemanship, shooting and skills at swearing and
drinking, along with the daring rescue of a
stagecoach full of men from an Indian attack, and
saving a wounded solder from a battle, ensured
her legendary status, which she built on in the
late 1880's.
A friend of
Wild Bill, Martha, by now nicknamed Calamity Jane
by the soldier she rescued, went into the
entertainment business once the West was well and
truly tamed. She died in 1903 after a drinking
bout.
Her true
story will probably never be fully known, but for
the romantic Americans, the fact that she shot,
drank, rode a horse and was brave, was enough to
produce the film that rocketed Doris Day into
stardom in the late 1950's.
Toyah's
willingness to take on the role was obvious by
the enthusiasm she has for the part.
"It's
pure entertainment and we all literally have to
throw ourselves into the parts.
"I thought
I would have to be nursing my voice with all
those fabulous songs, but I spend more time with
the bruises.
"These
people were pioneers and did not have any
luxuries. It was all do, and make do, so their
life was, by definition, rough."
To prove her
point, Toyah has to leap from the top of the
stagecoach to the stage, and quite literally
throw herself around in fights.
"The last
thing you worry about is fear," she said.
"There's no time, it's all go.
"You
should see my muscles. They are as hard as iron."
The visit to
Westcliff is about midway through the tough tour,
and speaking last week from Edinburgh, Toyah said
that the whole run in the Scottish capital was
sold out.
"It really
has caught the imagination," she said.
"It is a love story basically, but a very
tough love story.
Testing
"Calamity
Jane was no sweet thing in long dresses, she
could out-shoot, out-drink, and out-cuss most
men, so though quite a lot of the story may be
myth, the legend is as strong as they come."
Toyah's multi-skilling
in the theatre is drawn on fully for the role.
With songs such as: The Deadwood Stage; Windy
City; The Black Hills of Dakota and Secret Love,
she has a testing time vocally.
"Funnily
enough there is only one song that I have to belt
out, the rest are a bit like Country and Western,"
she said.
Her last visit
to the area was in a tour of The Live Bed Show
with Joe McGann at the Queen's in Hornchurch.
This Is
South Devon: Toyah breezes in on Bay Stage - 7th November 2002
Toyah, one
of the wilder children of punk? Get away. She's
had a sheltered life, really.
At least,
that's what she says. While other punkmeisters
were messing themselves up with serious drink and
drug habits, poor old Toyah would sit in hotel
rooms and ask herself "where are all the
orgies?".
Amazing. She
had an eight-year career as a pop star and never
once joined the space cadet fraternity. For
"I Want to be Free", read "I want
to marry Robert Fripp but hardly ever see him and
spend almost my entire adult life on the road".
Since 1987
Toyah's been back on stage and screen, where in
fact she belongs. Now 44, she wanted to be a
performer from the age of seven and by 18 was on
stage at the National Theatre. By 20, she was
cutting her first album, Sheep farming in Barnet.
She's always
preferred being an actor to being a pop star,
though. "I liked going back into the theatre
because there, people aren't interested in you
only as an ego, someone who has to perform all
the time. In the theatre you're part of a team.
"I'm much
happier with that."
Toyah was one
of those overnight stars, with massive hits such
as I Want to Be Free in 1981. This was in the
days, too, when celebrity was different. People
wouldn't just say to their friends "oh,
look, there goes Angus Deayton" and turn
back to their cappuccinos, like they do now.
"Pink hair
was just not done in those days. People would see
me from 100 yards away and just know it was me.
Back then people used to go bonkers over
celebrities. I'd be in a car at a set of traffic
lights and get mobbed. I'm not complaining, but
from being anonymous, within 24 hours everywhere
I went I'd see my picture."
Unlike other
stars, though, there weren't any skeletons in her
closet to fall rattling on to the front pages of
the tabloids. "I haven't slept with any
prostitutes and I haven't raped anyone, I'm
afraid.
"The
tabloids would have to be pretty desperate to run
anything on me. I'm amazed at what a charmed life
I led, because all my friends were having a riot.
I was very protected. It was almost a chaste life.
I ended up thinking: "How did all that pass
me by? Where were all the orgies? After a show I
would be just put in a car and taken to a hotel."
She's been an
inspiration to famed art house film director
Derek Jarman, though. Toyah was in his films
Jubilee and The Tempest. "It was lovely
because Derek treated me like a muse. It was the
only time I ever experienced that. I knew little
about Shakespeare and I was ready to turn down
the part of Miranda in The Tempest.
"Derek
taught me so much about Shakespeare, about his
obscure references. It was fascinating and I wish
we'd learnt that sort of stuff at school."
Now, 15 years
after returning to the stage at the Birmingham
Rep, she's playing Calamity Jane in a tour.
"This isn't a sequinned production. We've
tried to make it gritty."
Very different
from the fragrant Doris Day, then. "I
identify with the real Calamity Jane, who lived
around 1850, because her pioneer spirit was more
remarkable than anything that's come since.
"She
survived by pretending to be mad. She was right
on the frontier at a time when the Indians were
fighting the Americans, but the Indians left her
alone because they thought she was crazy."
Calamity Jane
is based on the hard-drinking, tough-talking
exploits of the real-life Martha Jane Cannary.
Calamity, which includes classics such as The
Deadwood Stage, Windy City, The Black Hills of
Dakota and Secret Love is, of course, highly
fictionalised.
But the flavour
of Martha is still there. Toyah, whose name comes
from an Indian tribe, has the same free spirit.
She's been married to former King Crimson
guitarist Robert Fripp for 17 years but the
couple have no children and often pass like ships
in the night. "I've been on the road for 25
years and that's how I like it, so having
children doesn't interest me.
"Robert
and I tend to meet in hotels in exotic locations,
which is why we're still together. Neither of us
can bear being at home." Even when that home
was until recently the beautiful former Wiltshire
residence of photographer Cecil Beaton.
Performing and
touring, being part of a team. That's the way she
likes it.
South Devon
Herald Express: Toyah adds danger to Calamity Jane
role - 7th
November 2002
Death was a
daily occurence where the only law was the law of
the gun
Su Carroll
talks to an ex-punk star stepping into Doris
Day's shoes
The Deadwood
Stage is coming on over the hill, and on board is
Toyah Willcox - playing the title role in a brand
new production of Calamity Jane.
The story is
based on a real life character, Martha Jane
Cannary who was born in 1852, and dressed, drank
and fought like a man.
The musical was
popular as an Oscar-winning film starring Doris
Day and features such classic songs as The
Deadwood Stage, Windy City, Black Hills of Dakota
and Secret Love.
As you would
expect with Toyah involved, this version will be
different. "It's much more real and much
more gritty," explains Toyah.
"It's a
young company and it's a very high energy
production. We've tried to put the sense of
danger back into it which was taken away in the
1950s when Calamity Jane was given a kind of
housewife image.
"Death was
a daily occurrence where the only law was the law
of the gun. Only two people on stage carry a gun
- me and Wild Bill - and both of us kill people.
"It's a
community where anarchy can break out at any time
and we've made the fights much more real -
they're not a comedy stage fight."
Toyah admits
that this dash of realism does surprise audiences
who are expecting a typical musical.
"It is
difficult to portray and it would be easy to slip
in to doing a 'nice musical' but the music
becomes a real celebration of life and is much
more poignant."
It's not known
whether the real Calamity Jane had a romantic
relationship with Wild Bill Hickock, as she does
in the show, but the story goes that she made a
deathbed request to be buried beside him.
The story is
set in Deadwood, a typical wild west town in
Dakota where Indian scout Calamity Jane, is as
hard-riding, gun-toting and as boastful as any
man on the prairie.
She puts her
reputation on the line when she promises to bring
a famous singing star all the way from Chicago to
the Golden Garter Saloon. But the new, and very
feminine, arrival provides competition for the
affections of the town's two most eligible
cowboys, the dashing Lieutenant Danny Gilmartin
and fast drawing Wild Bill Hickock.
"She was
remarkable - she dressed like a man and was a
scout for the army," says Toyah. "She
led a dangerous life and survived.
"The
musical was written as a vehicle for Doris Day
and was a celebration of the role women played
during the Second World War.
"I have
taken things from the Doris Day production - like
the arrangements for Secret Love. We just play
that moment. The rest of the play is very fast
and very aggressive."
Toyah has
enjoyed a wide range of roles from films like
Jubilee and Quadrophenia, stage shows like
Cabaret and Peter Pan and a host of television
programmes including Teletubbies as well as a
career in punk rock music. But she is in no doubt
about the significance of Calamity Jane: "It's
the highlight of my career."
This Is York: Calamity Jane
Interview - 23rd October 2002
In a week
when scripts for six musicals landed on her
doormat, Toyah Willcox cleared the deadwood and
settled on Calamity Jane.
Set in
Deadwood, Dakota, the windy Wild West town where
men are cowboys and women are wholesome, clean-living
gals, this musical story of hard-riding, gun-toting
Indian scout Calamity Jane has always appealed to
Toyah.
"I was a
tomboy as a child, so when I saw the film, I
identified with her, and I was never offended
that she ended up in a gingham dress and got
married. I thought Doris Day's understated
performance had great dignity.
"I knew
the role suited me, I knew it was a part I could
play, and I knew that if I didn't play it now, I
would never play it. It's not just the
physicality involved but a matter of age, and the
more I left it, the more absurd it would be,"
says the 44-year-old singer, actress and TV
presenter, who will be in York next week for
Calamity Jane's touring run at the Grand Opera
House.
"Jobs come
down to timing and the timing is right for me to
do Calamity - and I've put six months into this
already, studying the music, the voice, doing
accent training and bull-whip training with a
cowboy."
The
national tour of Sammy Fain and Paul Francis
Webster's comedy musical opened in Northampton on
September 9 and will run for ten months, a long
commitment that Toyah wanted to explore to the
max.
"I met up
with the producer and said `It's all right doing
something that's so associated with Doris Day
from the 1953 film, but how do we do Calamity
Jane for now?'. So I've had a lot of input into
it," says Toyah, who has decided to look
very dirty in the role whereas Doris Day was the
epitome of Hollywood studio glamour.
"It
was written not only as a piece for Doris Day but
also as a celebration of women in the Second
World War, and it's a celebration of how far
women have come."
From Derek
Jarman's punk movie Jubilee to Kate in Taming Of
The Shrew, from Trafford Tanzi to Sally Bowles in
Cabaret, from Peter Pan to Shakespeare's Puck,
Toyah has played wilful characters. Calamity Jane
is the next in line, a tough-talking prairie
woman who boasts she can bring a famous singing
star from Chicago to Dakota's Golden Garter
Saloon.
The musical may
be a fictionalised account but Calamity Jane was
for real: the story is based on the life of
Martha Jane Cannary (1848 or maybe 1852 to 1903),
who dressed, drank and fought like a man and was
prone to exaggerate her exploits.
"She lived
an incredibly dangerous life, and because of that
atmosphere where men could snap at any time, the
music in this show bursts with energy as a pure
celebration of life," says Toyah, who
believes the musical has as much impact as ever.
"It has
that incredible music, that wonderful love story
and it has topicality because in many ways women
have come full circle: where women had
compromised their role as housewives to go out to
work, now they have now reclaimed the right to
stay at home as a mother."
Where does
Toyah stand on the mother/work issue?
"I'm a
working girl myself, but life is about choice and
what women have reclaimed is the right to choose.
Having said that, I don't think life is that easy
but I have freedom in my life, which I'm grateful
for, and the past 25 years are a testament to me
making choices," says this Buddhist woman
who has presented both Songs Of Praise and The
Good Sex Guide Late.
Her choice
right now is Calamity Jane - she even hopes for a
West End transfer - but unlike Calamity she has
no fixation with cowboys. "No, I loathed
John Wayne movies with a passion, because they
were so male dominated. I much preferred things
where women didn't have to dress up."
She is still
Toyah the tomboy after all these years.
Manchester
Evening News: How the West was sung - 6th October 2002
It's how
the West was sung! A brand-new production of the
classic musical show Calamity Jane whip-cracks
its way to the Opera House, with Toyah Willcox
returning to the stage to play Calamity, a role
immortalised on the Hollywood screen by Doris Day.
"A lot of
people ask me whether it's intimidating taking on
a role that's so famously associated with another
person, but it's not the first time I've done it,"
observes Willcox, who has, for instance, also
played Sally Bowles in Cabaret and Aladdin in
last year's panto at Stockport's Plaza. "It's
certainly true, though, that she made the songs
and the story so famous and it's a show that's
looked upon with great affection, so obviously,
you don't want to mess that up in any way.
"I'll be
singing in character," she adds. "I've
adapted my voice so that it's a bit lighter and
with perhaps ever so slightly ironic."
One thing she's
not looking forward to, though, is donning a
gingham dress.
"That's
not going to happen if I have anything at all to
do with it. You're simply not going to catch me
in gingham," she laughs.
The Manchester
dates are part of a nationwide tour which is, in
Toyah's words, "bloody long! I've never
committed myself to anything for this length of
time before and it might end up being an even
longer commitment as they're already talking
about the show going into the West End.
"That was
something I thought about a lot, I have to admit.
But I also thought that I'm 44 now - which makes
me twice as old as everyone else in the company -
and if I don't play it now, it would start to
look a little ridiculous!"
Meanwhile, her
musical career continues. There's a new album due
to be released any day now and she sounds
terribly enthusiastic when she talks about the
Here And Now tour, on which she shared the bill
with the likes of Belinda Carlisle, ABC and
Spandau Ballet and which came to the Manchester
Evening News Arena this April.
"That was
just a wonderful gig," she shrieks. "What
was so great about that whole tour was that it
put that music back in the context it was written
for, big arena gigs like that. It was so exciting
to step back into the arena experience and see
people enjoying themselves like that. Hopefully,
this show will have a similar effect on the
audience."
Northants
News: Toyah
appeal is no mystery - 12th September 2002
Toyah
Willcox is never one to shy away from a challenge.
In a career that has spanned 25 years she has had
several top 10 hits, wrestled live on stage,
starred opposite Sir Laurence Olivier and has
narrated one of the most successful childrens
programmes ever. Now she is set to tackle the
role of Calamity Jane, the Wild West heroine made
famous on the big screen by Doris Day.
"I had
fond memories of the film because I had seen it
as a child," said Toyah. "The film was
a vehicle for Doris Day, but the script was
written afterwards and is interesting because it
is so much darker. Doris Days performance
was wonderful but things have moved on and women
are perceived as much stronger than in the 50s."
Toyah, who
started her acting career at the Old Rep Drama
School in her home town of Birmingham, has some
very definite ideas about the eponymous heroine.
"I wanted
Calamity to have surrendered her femininity to
survive in the environment that she lived in,"
she said. "This is a small town in middle
America that could easily starve to death and
people who made it there were very tough. Women
are not that common so in order to feel safe she
has taken on this masculine persona."
In this action
packed, rip-roaring show, Calamity puts her
reputation on the line when she promises to bring
a famous singing star all the way from Chicago to
Deadwoods Golden Garter Saloon.
Toyah said:
"You must never lose sight that this is a
lovely fun love story with a man who has always
loved this woman but cant bear her
masculinity. Wild Bill Hickock expects women to
be in petticoats and smell nice but she never
smells nice.
"I wanted
to have the effect that the character hasnt
bathed for three months so when the change comes
it is stunning."
Toyahs
first notable acting role came in 1977 when
director Derek Jarman cast her as Mad in the punk
epic, Jubilee. Her latest role is one of her most
physical but she intends to take it in her stride.
"I
will need stamina and mental agility to get round
the dance steps but I have always been fit,
she said. "I love physical theatre that is
bombastic and robust. In Calamity Jane there
should be scenes where she is thrown through bar
windows because they treat her as if she were a
man."
Toyah had a
successful pop career with hit singles including
Its A Mystery, I Want To Be Free and
Thunder In The Mountains. She is still making
music and releases a new album, Little Tears of
Love in November.
"The music
has a whole different feel," she said.
"It is stripped down and real. I work with a
three-piece band and it is quite naked."
The 44-year-old
spent the 1990s adding another string to her bow
by becoming a television presenter of programmes
such as Heaven and Earth and Holiday. In recent
years Toyah has also been the narrator of
Teletubbies.
"I am best
friends with the creator Ann Wood and when I read
it I said This is the new Magic Roundabout."
Toyah, who
still lives in the Midlands with her husband of
16 years musician Robert Fripp, has been
performing in pantomime since 1984, but still
gets nervous before a stage performance.
"I get
physically sick. Dont come near me half and
hour before the show because I turn into a rabid
monster."
Northants
News:
Toyah takes the Deadwood Stage - 12th September 2002
Actress,
singer and TV presenter Toyah Willcox adds
another string to her bow when she plays the
title role in a new stage version of the hit
musical Calamity Jane.
It will be the
first time in 20 years that the spectacular show,
which premieres at Northamptons Derngate
next week, has toured the UK and the 44-year-old
star hopes it will transfer to the West End after
its ten-month run.
"I was
flattered when they sent me the script because its
quite a young role and I may never get the chance
to do it again," she said. I was a big
fan of the film version and Doris Day was
remarkably clever in the way she took this
character, who dressed like a man and didnt
bath, and made her attractive.
"Most
people dont realise Jane was a real person,
who lived in the 1860s and won medals for her
shooting, and this new interpretation of the
story gets closer to the reality of those times.
In those days gunfights and ambushes were the
norm and people didnt know if they would
live till the next day. For women, it must have
been frightening but also exhilarating."
Toyahs
only previous musical experience was playing
Sally Bowles in Cabaret at Londons Strand
Theatre. In a diverse acting career she has
tackled everything from panto to Shakespeare,
learning the ropes at the Birmingham Old
Repertory Theatre School and becoming, at the age
of 18, the youngest member of the National
Theatre.
On the big
screen, she appeared alongside Katharine Hepburn
in The Corn Is Green, played Monkey
in Quadrophenia and won a nomination for Best
Newcomer at the Evening Standard Awards for her
role as Miranda in Derek Jarmans film The
Tempest. On TV she starred opposite Sir Laurence
Olivier and Greta Scaachi in Granadas The
Ebony Tower.
She said:
"I was always told to diversify with the
roles I accept so you dont get pigeonholed.
I feel very privileged to have worked with such
great names as Hepburn and Olivier, who came from
that lost generation of stars who were so
extraordinary in their eloquence. I wasnt
looking to learn from them I just enjoyed
being in their company, listening to all these
stories about such legends as James Dean, Marilyn
Monroe and Vivien Leigh."
In more recent
years Toyah has carved out a career in
television, from appear-ing in Kavanagh QC to
being guest presenter on The Heaven And Earth
Show, Fasten Your Seatbelts and Holiday. She also
presented an epic series on alternative medicine
for the Discovery Channel and on childrens
TV she voiced Brum and the Teletubbies and played
the title role in two series of the BBCs
Barmy Aunt Boomerang!
"Im
very close to Ann Wood, the creator of
Teletubbies and did just five minutes of
narration on the first episode. But its
probably the most important five minutes of my
career as within three months it was a worldwide
hit!
"Barmy
Aunt Boomerang! is about a ghost from Australia
living with a boy in Glasgow it was all
good experience and great fun to do."
Warrington
Guardian: It's A Mystery! - Toyah tight lipped
over new role - 9th September 2002
Eighties
pop star Toyah Willcox is busy rehearsing for a
rip-roaring roller coaster production of Calamity
Jane.
And after
spending the past 25 years either on stage, in a
television studio or recording hit songs, she
will feel at home at Manchester's Opera House and
The Regent Theatre in Stoke.
The musical is
loosely based on the life of Martha Jane Cannary,
who was born in 1852 in Missouri, and stars Toyah
in the title role.
Featuring songs
such as Windy City, The Deadwood Stage and the
Oscar winning Secret Love, Calamity Jane is a
typical western set in Deadwood, Dakota
Territory, where men are cowboys and women are
clean-living housewives.
Toyah will be
stepping into Calamity's shoes, previously worn
by Carry On star Barbara Windsor and film star
Doris Day, but anyone who is expecting a
production like the 1953 film is in for a
surprise.
Toyah said:
"Calamity Jane is a great production - it's
buzzing and very lively.
"Most
people who will be coming to see the musical will
be expecting something schmaltzy because they'll
have seen the film starring Doris Day.
"I've seen
this version many times and I remember watching
the film as a child. But we've done something
different with the story, which is quite unusual."
Toyah has been
performing on stage for the past 25 years in
productions such as Cabaret and Peter Pan as well
as Shakespeare classics.
Her role in
Calamity Jane is as a hard-riding, gun-toting and
boastful woman who is involved in a love-triangle
with the dashing Lieutenant Danny Gilmartin and
fast drawing Wild Bill Hickock.
The musical is
a fast-paced, action-packed story of gunfights,
passion and saloon life and is set in the highly
charged atmosphere of the Wild West in 1876.
The 30-strong
cast, which has been rehearsing for the past four
weeks, will be appearing in Stoke between
September 30 and October 5 and in Manchester
between October 7 and 12.
Cast members
are hoping the 10-month national tour will end up
in London's West End next summer.
This Is
Bolton: Toyah
takes aim at a career on the stage - 25th August 2002
THERE are
only a select band of celebrities who are known
by one name. Among them is Madonna, Jagger, Bowie
. . . and Toyah writes Beverly Greenberg
The latter
burst on to the scene with violently dyed red
hair and lashings of thick make-up telling us how
"It's A Mystery". Almost 25 years
later, that same "wild child" can be
seen presenting a variety of mainstream
television shows ranging from religion to travel,
and is now embarking on a musical tour playing a
lead role originally made famous by -- Doris Day!
But did she
ever envisage, all those years ago as a young
punk, that her career would take such a diverse
route?
She laughs:
"When I started I never even imagined living
beyond 30.
"In fact,
when I reached my 30th birthday I had to think
'Now what am I going to do?'."
Despite a lack
of formal planning, Toyah Wilcox's career has
gone from strength to strength, with the singer,
turned presenter, turned actress remaining as
enthusiastic as ever.
But are there
any offers of work that she would turn down?
"I would
never want to do a sex scene," she insists.
"I am very, very physically shy. With
presenting, I have avoided anything to do with
shopping and babies. I do not like shopping and
have not had any babies." She adds: "I
only take jobs I want. That keeps me really
enthusiastic. There is nothing worse than having
a big expensive show starring a leading actress
who resents being there.
"It is the
presenting which has kept me in touch with people.
It has allowed me to be slightly journalistic
while looking at the issues.
"And yet
it came about as a remarkable mistake. My agent
told me I had been approached to present an
entertainment programme, but added that he had
told them it was the sort of thing I would want
to do. So I did it!"
Although Toyah
first came to prominence as a singer, she began
her career at the National Theatre at the age of
18. She formed a band with the people she was
working with and spent five years touring pubs
and working men's clubs before enjoying her first
hit record, It's A Mystery.
She said:
"The image was nothing new for me. I was
wearing black and had pink hair when I was 14.
When punk arrived on the scene I felt there was
something finally out there for me.
"I was
obsessed with becoming famous. It was like a bad
habit. My ambitions have changed now. I am more
realistic these days, but I love acting and would
love to be on television or in film, or do more
work on stage."
An on stage is
where you will find Toyah for the next year or
so, starring in Calamity Jane, a part made famous
by Doris Day.
Toyah said:
"The character did exist, living around the
1860s, and yes, she did have to dress and talk
like a man.
"I do like
the music. When you look at the Doris Day film it
is apparent that it was written for her as a
vehicle and represented women of the 1950s. We
are looking at representing these women in the
1860s.
"These
women were pioneers, able to claim their own land.
They would ride out on their own into the
wilderness to claim the land."
"We open
on September 9 and come to Manchester in October.
Rehearsals have just started, which I thoroughly
enjoy.
"I will be
touring with Calamity Jane for 10 months and then
there are rumours that it will go to West End.
There is even the possibility of being invited
for a short run on Broadway. I have had to leave
the next year free, just in case."
Sunderland
Journal: Toyah has a whip hand onstage -
4th
July 2002
For those
of a certain age (over 35), Toyah Willcox will
always be the high priestess of punk, the woman
with the brightly coloured hair and startling
make-up who used to lisp her way through 'It's A
Mystery' and boasted of sleeping in a coffin.
But like the
rest of us, Ms Willcox has grown up. Now in her
40s she can be heard doing voice overs for hugely
popular children's programmes Teletubbies and
Brum, presenting the odd episode of Songs Of
Praise and come September, rip-roaring her way
around Britain as Calamity Jane.
It's hard to
imagine Toyah - the woman who shocked and
delighted the public in equal measures in the
1980s by swearing and spitting, who admitted to
drinking heavily since the age of nine and who,
in the film Jubilee, throttled a man while having
sex with him - taking on the role made famous by
sugary-sweet Doris Day.
But they
say you should never judge a book by its cover,
and this seems to be the case with Ms Willcox.
Now
sporting a sleek platinum blonde barnet ("I
leave having multi-coloured hair to the younger
generation"), a teetotaller, keep-fit addict
and passionate anti-smoker, Toyah, it seems, has
been a lifelong fan of Calamity.
So when five
stage scripts dropped through the door of her
London flat last Winter - including what Toyah
describes as the "most fantastic country and
western musical which I know is going to be big
but wasn't right for me" - she had no
hesitation in signing up for the Deadwood Stage.
When Calamity
Jane opens at Northampton's Derngate Theatre on
September 9, it will be the first time it has
been staged professionally for 20 years. But
Toyah fully expects it to put "bums on seats"
as it moves onto Oxford, Sunderland from
September 23, and then 18 other major cities and
towns.
There will be
few people who don't know at least one of the
songs made famous in the 1950s play and film -
'The Deadwood Stage (Whip-Crack-Away!)', 'Windy
City', 'The Black Hills Of Dakota' and 'Secret
Love', which Doris Day took to the top of the
charts for a staggering 54 weeks.
Ms Day will be
a hard act to follow. For many she is, and will
always remain, Calamity Jane, the Wild West's
most famous, well-meaning but disaster-prone
heroine who dresses like a man, totes a gun and
drives the Deadwood City stagecoach.
Talented as
Toyah is with an impressive list of stage and
film credits to her name, isn't she worried about
taking on such a high profile role? "Not at
all", she says with her familiar lisp.
"I didn't become an actress to say no to
certain areas of work. It will be a challenge,
but one I believe everyone is going to meet head
on.
"I
know a lot of people remember Doris Day, but
remember, it's not just a revival. There is an
audience out there who won't have seen Calamity
Jane before.
"And we
aren't trying to emulate the film. I watched the
movie a few weeks ago and I thought 'no, it is
such a vehicle for Doris Day'. But we are doing a
play and we are doing ot from as much of an
historical perspective as we can.
"Calamity
Jane was a real person so there is a true,
historical element to it. It is a funny story
about a woman who did exist in the Mid-West."
Toyah says she
was attracted to Calamity Jane because "it
is a strong female role".
But there
has been another carrot - if the musical is well
received in the provinces, there is the
possibility of a West End, or even a Broadway,
run. And Toyah fully intends to be there taking
centre stage.
The mind
boggles at how they will react stateside to an
English production of an all-American musical
starring an ex-punk star.
Toyah insists
there is a "very strong possibility" of
Calamity crossing the Atlantic. And the reason is
the September 11 terrorist attacks. "Broadway
has been encountering serious problems following
September 11," she says. "I think there
will be huge novelty value in an English
production of Calamity Jane opening there.
"There
is also the nostalgia factor. People are looking
to the past - and I am one of them."
Toyah has
already been working hard on perfecting her bull
whip technique. She has been trained by an
adviser to the James Bond films, who she says
"told me I had picked it up quicker than
anyone he had worked with".
It will be a
useful skill to add to her CV should anyone be
looking to cast a lion tamer or arch villainess
opposite 007.
Not that Toyah
relies just on singing and acting to keep her
head above water. Married to the American rock
musician Robert Fripp, she has invested in
property in London, the Midlands and the US.
She says fear
of poverty drives her to work hard for financial
success. It is all a long way from the days of
orange make-up and blue hair when she told
everyone "I Wanna Be Free".
Has any of the
old Toyah survived? Some of the old fighting
spirit certainly has. In May this year she hit
the headlines when she joined villagers in
Throckmorton, Worcestershire, to protest at
Government plans to site an asylum centre there.
It is at this
point the interview hits a rocky patch. She has,
she states forcefully, been "completely
misquoted" over the affair in the Press, and
launches into a tirade about journalists who
can't be bothered to check their facts.
She wants it
known that she does not live in Throckmorton,
although her parents' own a house a mile away and
she has a home in a nearby market town. And, she
says hotly, she is not a racist.
"I was
there because the site the Government has chosen
is totally unsuitable. They want to build an
asylum centre on a disused airbase and I felt
compelled to protest not only because the area
can't sustain such a huge influx of people but
because the proposed site lies just yards from
where 130,000 foot-and-mouth infected carcasses
have been buried."
Meanwhile,
Toyah says she is looking forward to coming to
Sunderland and hopes her visit will prove more
auspicious than in April when she entertained the
pre-match crowds at the Stadium of Light, and
witnessed the home side's 1-0 defeat by Liverpool.
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