Oh Boy! (TV series)

Oh Boy!

title screen with logo
Original language(s) English
Production
Producer(s) Jack Good
Running time 25 minutes
Release
Original network ITV
Original release 13 September 1958 – 30 May 1959
Chronology
Followed by Boy Meets Girls (1959)
External links
Website

Oh Boy! was the first teenage all-music show on British TV airing in 1958 and 1959. It was produced by Jack Good for ITV.

Good had previously produced Six-Five Special for the BBC Television, but wanted to drop the sport and public-service content from this show, and concentrate on the music. The BBC would not accept this, so Good resigned.

ABC allowed Good to make two pilot all-music shows, which were only broadcast in the Midlands. These pilots were successful, so the programme was given a national ITV slot on Saturday evenings, from 6.00pm – 6.30pm, in direct competition with 6.5 Special, but starting slightly earlier.[1]

The hosts were Tony Hall, a jazz record producer and critic, and Jimmy Henney, and the artists covered a broad spectrum of music including ballads, jazz, skiffle and rock and roll. The show was broadcast live from the Hackney Empire.

Each week Oh Boy! featured resident artists plus a selection of special guests. The residents included Cuddly Dudley, who sang on 21 shows, Cliff Richard (20 shows), the Drifters (Later to become the Shadows) (17 shows), Marty Wilde (17 shows) and the Dallas Boys (10 shows). Guests included Billy Fury, Tony Sheridan, Shirley Bassey and Lonnie Donegan; with occasional US stars, such as the Inkspots, Conway Twitty and Brenda Lee.[2] The solo artists were supported by a specially created house band Lord Rockingham's XI, who went on to have hits in their own right, including a No 1 single "Hoots Mon". Performers were also supported by the singing and dancing of the Vernons Girls, the Dallas Boys and Neville Taylor's Cutters

Eight episodes were re-broadcast in the US, but only two of the 38 shows (or 40 shows including the two pilots) still exist. The last of these original shows was broadcast on 30 May 1959.[3] The slot was soon taken by another music show produced by Good, Boy Meets Girls, which starred Marty Wilde and started on 12 September 1959.

The show was revived in 1979 for the retro rock and roll stars of the day, this time the show included, Shakin' Stevens, Alvin Stardust, Joe Brown, Lulu, Bogdan Kominowski, Freddie "Fingers" Lee, Les Gray, Johnny Storm (now performing with the Johnny Storm Band), the Shades and Fumble. Joe Brown was the only one of the artists who was performing across the UK in the 1950s to appear on the 1970s Oh Boy! show. Alvin Stardust first emerged on the 1950s scene as Shane Fenton and the Fentones. The presenter of the show was "GBH", alias Scottish actor Billy Hartman.

Following the Oh Boy TV show, a similar series, Let's Rock, was created also by Good. The shows were broadcast across Europe and in the US in the early 1980s.

Jack Good's Oh Boy! (album)

Jack Good's Oh Boy!
Live album by Cliff Richard, the John Barry Seven, the Dallas Boys, Neville Taylor and the Cutters, the Vernons Girls, Vince Eager, Cuddly Dudley, Peter Elliot
Released December 1958
Recorded 19 October 1958
Genre Pop
Label Parlophone
Producer Harry Robinson

Jack Good's Oh Boy! is a live album made up of tracks by various artists featured on the Oh Boy! TV series. It was recorded at Abbey Road Studios before a live audience. Featured artists include Cliff Richard, the John Barry Seven, the Dallas Boys, Vince Eager, Cuddly Dudley, Neville Taylor and the Cutters, Peter Elliot and the Vernons Girls.[4]

Credits adapted primarily from the album's liner notes,[5] while the recording studio was identified from the book Cliff Richard - The Complete Recording Sessions 1958-1990.[6]

References

  1. BFI article on Oh Boy! by Anthony Clark retrieved 9 December 2008
  2. Oh Boy website retrieved 9 December 2008
  3. IMDB article on Oh Boy! retrieved 9 December 2008
  4. "Jack Good's 'Oh Boy!' (1978 re-release)". 45worlds.com. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  5. Jack Good's 'Oh Boy!' (1978 re-release) (liner notes). Various Artists. EMI Records. 1978. NUTM13.
  6. Lewry, Peter; Goodall, Nigel (1991). Cliff Richard The Complete Recording Sessions 1958-1990. London: Blandford. p. 131. ISBN 0-7137-2242-8.

External links

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