Rock Follies

Rock Follies
Genre Musical drama
Written by Howard Schuman
Directed by Brian Farnham
Jon Scoffield
Starring Charlotte Cornwell
Julie Covington
Rula Lenska
Theme music composer Andy Mackay
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Executive producer(s) Verity Lambert
Producer(s) Andrew Brown
Camera setup Multi-camera
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format PAL (576i)
Original release 24 February – 30 March 1976
Chronology
Followed by Rock Follies of '77 (1977)
Rock Follies of '77
Genre Musical drama
Written by Howard Schuman
Directed by Brian Farnham
Bill Hayes
Starring Charlotte Cornwell
Julie Covington
Rula Lenska
Theme music composer Andy Mackay
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Executive producer(s) Verity Lambert
Camera setup Multi-camera
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format PAL (576i)
Original release 4 May – 6 December 1977
Chronology
Preceded by Rock Follies (1976)

Rock Follies, and its sequel, Rock Follies of '77, is a musical drama shown on British television in the 1970s. The storyline, told in 12 episodes, two series, and one TV mini-series running 10 1/2 hours, followed the ups and downs of a fictional female rock band called the "Little Ladies" as they struggled for recognition and success. The series starred Rula Lenska, Charlotte Cornwell and Julie Covington as the Little Ladies, with support from Emlyn Price, Beth Porter, Sue Jones-Davies, Bob Hoskins, Stephen Moore, Derek Thompson, Denis Lawson and Little Nell among others. The series was made with a very low budget for Thames Television, with a style inspired by fringe theatre.

The series was a success, winning three BAFTA Awards and the soundtrack album reaching No.1 in the UK Charts.

Overview

The fictional band was made up on-screen of talented session musicians as well as the three lead actresses who proved they could sing, and the spin-off album of music from the series entered the UK charts at number one (a common occurrence now, but exceptionally rare at that time).[1] The songs were written by Andy Mackay, who was a founding member of Roxy Music. Lyrics and screenplay were written by Howard Schuman.

The second series, Rock Follies of '77, was a continuation of the first, but industrial action during May of that year at ITV, the commercial channel that aired the show, caused the last few episodes to be postponed until November.[2] The second series pushed the style further in an experimental direction: where the first series had a lot of dialogue and "off stage" scenes, the second focused more on the music and fantasy sequences, with additional songs and musical interludes used to move the plot forward rather than relying on dialogue as the first had done. More sophisticated video effects were also used.

The show was a pioneer in that it was one of the first musical dramas in serial form (a TV mini-series), and in addition featured all original songs and music.[3] It laid the groundwork for the later series Pennies from Heaven by Dennis Potter, which followed a similar overall format but did not feature original songs. It was also unusual in portraying strong female central characters, and having an overtly feminist message. Some commentators have also pointed out that its format very much anticipates the age of the music video and MTV, being made at a time when the music video itself was in its infancy. The first series won a BAFTA award in 1977 for Best Drama Series, while Julie Covington was nominated for best actress and Rod Stratfold and Alex Clarke were nominated for best design.[4] The second series was nominated for seven BAFTA awards, winning two; for best lighting effects and for best camerawork in 1978.[5]

The series first appeared in the United States in late 1976 when several episodes from series one were shown on New York City’s WOR-TV Channel 9 as part of a "Thames on 9" programming week.[6][7] Soon after, the first series was shown in the United States on public television, and rapidly became something of a cult, especially in large metropolitan centres like New York and San Francisco. However the second series was felt to be too "raunchy" for the sensibilities of a public television audience, especially as the first had received a lot of complaints from the public in areas outside the larger cities for its frank portrayal of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. As a result the second series did not get shown on US television until 12 years later.

Two albums of songs from the series were released; Rock Follies (1976) was released on Island Records in the UK, and on Atlantic Records in the US. The second, Rock Follies of '77, was released on Polydor Records in both countries. Both albums were re-released on Virgin Records in 2000. The TV series is also available as a 2-disc DVD set.

Also, there were three singles released: "Glen Miller is Missing", "Sugar Mountain" (both on Island Records in 1976); and "O.K.?" (on Polydor Records in 1977). The latter of these became a hit, reaching No.10 in the UK Charts.[8] In addition, the second album reached No.13.[9]

Speaking in 1991, the three stars commented on the gruelling schedule while working on the series, stating that for each episode they had to learn a minimum of five songs, as well as perform the dance routines and learn the script itself in a short period of time. Due to this they were reluctant to do a third series, although they did say that they'd like to do another series at that time, 15 years later. Covington also stated that they were paid £225 per episode.[10]

Cast

The Little Ladies


David Dixon also appears in the first series as a record company A&R man but is uncredited. However, this may have been amended with the release of the DVD, where he is credited. Simon Jones, Stephen Moore, David Dixon and Rula Lenska all later had roles in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

The plot

First series (Rock Follies)

Three struggling actresses (Covington, Lenska, Cornwell) decide to audition for a west-end style play called "Broadway Annie", a nostalgic indulgence of its director. The show flops, despite a last-ditch effort by its producer to update it and make it raunchier. The three girls, who initially do not get along and have very different personalities and backgrounds, are drawn together by their shared catastrophe, and the musical director of the show (Price) tells them they should form a rock band, with him as manager and songwriter. After some convincing, they see the possibilities, and agree. Main songs featured: "Stairway"
The band forms and starts to rehearse. Huggins seeks some financial backing from contacts he knows, but very little is forthcoming. The episode explores the home lives and relationships of the three main characters, and the widespread disapproval they face from their boyfriends and in Dee's case, her fellow commune members. The name "The Little Ladies" is meant to be ironic - the image the band tries to project is a feisty, no-nonsense female rock act. Main songs featured: "Little Ladies", "Daddy"
The band goes on a tour playing pubs, clubs and dive bars around provincial Britain. The band is still raw and often fails to live up to its adopted image of no-nonsense rockers, but despite this the girls realise that playing in front of an audience gives them an incredible buzz, which makes all the travelling and lack of money worthwhile. It's not all plain sailing, as in some venues they receive a very hostile reception. During this time, Anna has a brief affair with Huggins, Q meets Nigel, a freelance rock journalist, and Dee has an admirer in the form of Dave, an audience member who starts to follow the band. Main songs featured: "On the Road", "Good Behaviour", "Lamplight"
After touring comes to an end, little progress has been made. The girls' various affairs create significant fallout with their established partners, and a fair amount of hypocrisy on their partners' parts is exposed. Finances are all but gone, so through a contact of Q's, the girls end up performing in a soft-core porn film. In the meantime, Q's partner Carl has gone through a huge transformation from lazy layabout to cutthroat businessman, due to his meeting a Greek entrepreneur who has decided to manufacture his surfboard design. Carl talks the girls into meeting Stavros who he thinks may be the answer to their financial problems. Jack is discovered in bed with one of Dee's commune girls, and Anna throws him out and he joins the commune. Main songs featured: "Talking Pictures", "Hot Neon", "Sugar Mountain"
Stavros agrees to take on the girls and they sign a contract with him. Almost immediately he changes their image to 1920s-style cabaret singers, far from their previous rock image. The girls immediately regret the decision to sign, but find they are unable to break the contract without ruining themselves. When Huggins voices his complaints too, he is sidelined and image consultants, choreographers and a new songwriter is drafted in. The girls appear as a light cabaret act at Stavros's restaurant/club, Idols. However the place is overflowing with pretentiousness and the public are unimpressed, staying away in droves. Main songs featured: "Biba Nova", "Rock Follies", "Roller Coaster"
Stavros decides that another radical change of image is called for, this time a pastiche of The Andrews Sisters. The 1920s are out and the 1940s are in. He conceives of a new club/restaurant called The Blitz, which reproduces the London underground during WW2, complete with dishes including powdered eggs and bangers and mash, all bought with ration coupons. The girls dress as WAAF officers to sing their numbers on stage. Meanwhile, the commune is falling apart due to a power struggle between Jack and the original leader. In a heated argument, it turns out that despite the supposed socialistic ideals of the commune founder, he owns the property and is just another capitalist landlord. This revelation seals the fate of the commune, who are all disillusioned. At the opening night of The Blitz, there is a bomb threat and the evening is ruined. Shortly afterwards the bomb goes off and the premises are wrecked. Stavros blames his accountant for orchestrating it, as an insurance scam. Stavros's empire is in ruins, and the band find themselves back at square one. Main songs featured: "Glenn Miller is Missing", "War Brides", "Stairway"

Second Series (Rock Follies of '77)

The band are on another pub tour, this time without any manager. Harry Moon (Derek Thompson), a fan and songwriter becomes the band's new musical driving force, although now the girls are writing many of their own songs too. To make ends meet, they do a musical commercial for a range of frozen foods called "Wonder Woman", whose brand image is that of female liberation - though this comes in the distinctly unliberated form of microwave ready meals. Moon knows an established rock star called Stevie Streeter (Tim Curry), and arranges for the band to meet him with a view to becoming his support act. Streeter's act is described as "sub-Springsteen concept rock", but the reality is far worse. Streeter prevents the Little Ladies from getting any sound check or rehearsal time, resulting in their sounding abysmal on their opening tour night with Streeter. This turns out to be a standard tactic to avoid the support act from upstaging the main act. In the end however, they manage to get their sound and act together on subsequent nights, and start to become a success. Streeter is worried that they are "taking his energy", and in a paranoid drunken rage, tries to kick them off the tour. His management, loud American Kitty Schreiber (Beth Porter) and David Maxwell (Gregory Floy), have other ideas, and after seeing the Little Ladies live, decide to sign them up as an act in their own right. Streeter is subsequently dropped, described dismissively by Schreiber: "that Jethro Tull concept crap was over five years ago". Schreiber signs the band to SM records on a standard new band contract which is far from generous. Main songs featured: "The Band Who Wouldn't Die", "Street Signs" (Streeter), "Struttin' Ground", "Wolf at the Door"
The newly signed band meet with Schreiber at a terrible concept restaurant called The Yankee-Doodle Club, where plans to record a single are discussed. Anna and Dee both write songs, but Dee's pop/rock song, "O.K.", is chosen over Anna's more literary effort. Thus begins a growing rivalry between the two friends. Meanwhile, Schreiber outlines her plans to her partner at SM records, revealing her boundless ambition. The band assemble at the distinctly low-rent Galaxy Studios in Camden Town to record the single, their first time in a recording studio. They are unfamiliar with the procedure and even the terminology - someone having to explain that "cans" mean headphones. Q is also terrified of the ordeal ahead. After the band lay down all their tracks, it is the girls' turn to perform the vocals. There are a lot of problems getting the sound level correct in "the cans", leading to an exasperating series of errors and mis-takes. In a clever sequence, as the girls get their act finally together, their private thoughts are revealed as alternative lyrics to the track they are recording. Eventually though, it starts to come together and they begin to enjoy themselves. At the end of the session, Anna and Q leave and Dee is deliberately delayed. She is asked to redo Anna's harmonies, since they feel she is the better singer. She doesn't like to betray her friend, but in the end reluctantly agrees. Nothing is said about this to Anna later. Anna is left to write the B-side, a song called "B-side", which she performs in a fantasy sequence on a huge logo for SM (Schreiber/Maxwell) records. It is clear that the SM is meant to also indicate Servant/Master and Sadism/Masochism. Finally the single is ready and they preview it - Anna gradually starts to notice that it is Dee doing the harmonies and not her, and begins to feel increasingly sidelined and betrayed. Main songs featured: "O.K.", "B-Side", "In My Cans"
The new single is ready to be released, and Schreiber's hype machine kicks into action. There are T-shirts, badges, caps and even a set of Little Ladies dolls. The band embark on a nationwide promotion tour by Inter-City train, accompanied by various freeloaders from the music press and radio stations. In a series of interviews, the distance between the liberated ladies and the distinctly unliberated mainstream media is highlighted - one interviewer insists on repeatedly asking Dee whether she has a "steady boyfriend", while other interviewers are more concerned with showing off their own grasp of the music business than actually finding out what the Little Ladies are about. The band also play a few small venues as part of the promo tour, including The Aggro Club, a venue newly dedicated to the emerging punk rock. Naturally the girls do not go down too well here. Things are not going well, but eventually they play a gig at Cardiff University, which is well received and reminds them that some gigs make the rest of the business worth it. There they meet another pub rock band, Rox and Rawls, and Dee is invited up to sing an impromptu number with Rox (Sue Jones-Davies), which works out well. Dee sees Rox as a kindred spirit, getting back to the essence of what rock music is supposed to be about. Schreiber and Maxwell discuss whether the band are worth keeping on - it is a close run thing but Schreiber decides to press on for now. Main songs featured: "The Hype", "Outlaws", "Roll Your Own", "Round One"
The single flops. Anna decides to try and blame this on the fact that her harmonies had been redone by Dee, something that Q had not realised. Anna writes a new song, "Loose Change", and since the band "owes" her she is given more space to develop it and sing lead - it is very wordy and not terribly good. Meanwhile Kitty strikes a deal with obnoxious entrepreneur Johnny Britten (Bob Hoskins) for them to become the nightly house band at the Electric Empire, Britten's Watford club. The fact that Dee is clearly the best singer in the band becomes evident when, for Anna's song, she performs backing vocals with Q - Kitty subsequently changes the lineup so that Dee sings the main vocal, and things sound much better. However, Anna's ego suffers a blow and this starts to cause the beginnings of her resentment (and her paranoia). Anna hooks up with Jamaican The Angel (Trevor Ward) and starts to smoke dope. As the house band at the Empire, they finally start to get an appreciative audience for the music they really want to sing - rock. However, all the girls start to feel they are being manipulated by Kitty and are losing control. Dee confronts Kitty who makes no bones about it - she has ambitions, and to fulfill them the band must adapt to her vision, or forever remain playing the pubs and clubs. Kitty has other ideas. It is not long before Kitty suggest that the band needs more power, and eventually Dee reluctantly agrees to see it her way. They decide that another main singer is needed, and Dee suggests Rox, the Welsh pub singer she met in Cardiff. Rox is brought down to discuss the idea and Kitty is impressed. For Rox, it is an opportunity for stardom, and she readily goes along with it. Rox is signed, and can't believe her luck. Anna and Q are not involved in the discussions, and become convinced that they are to be dropped from the band. The addition of Rox comes as a complete surprise. Q is ambivalent, but Anna is wholly unimpressed. Main songs featured: "The Loony Tunes", "Loose Change", "The Things You Have To Do", "Money on the Wall"
As Anna is drawn more toward Angel, she is also drawn more and more toward drugs. In time, this leads to total paranoia: especially whenever Rox is concerned. Although Kitty tries to pass Rox off as a balance in the vocals, Anna sees her as a threat. She tries to express this to both Dee and Q. Dee doesn't see it that way and Q is afraid to be the deciding vote. As her unrest grows, Anna tells Kitty that she wants a divorce thereby ending the original Little Ladies. Main songs featured: "Rock Follies of '77", "Territory", "Woman is Mystery"
With Anna out of the group, Q realizes that her vocals are far too weak, especially when compared to Dee and Rox. At first she just fades into the background but then she too decides it is time to leave the Little Ladies. First Q goes into a deep depression but the sudden appearance of her oft-married mother gets her back on track. Meanwhile, Dee visits Anna who, with Angel, has opened a small R&B club. Anna refuses to return to the Little Ladies and Dee is left feeling guilty about the break-up. She reasons that it was for the good of the group. Not even impending stardom and a tour of the United States (and an appearance at Madison Square Garden) stop the feelings. With Rox, the Little Ladies take off and becomes a sensation. Even Q, no longer with the group, is happy for them. But, right before their appearance at Madison Square Garden, Dee has a vision while singing "Welcome to the Real Life" where it is just her, Anna and Q - the Little Ladies. Main songs featured: "Jubilee", "Waiting for Waves", "Little Ladies", "The Real Life"

* NOTE - A two-hour recap episode was screened on 21 November 1977 following the strike. This was a compilation of the first three episodes of Series Two.[2]

Soundtrack albums

References

  1. "Official Albums Chart Top 60". officialcharts.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  2. 1 2 "The Scrapbook". therockfollies.co.uk. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  3. Rigby, Jonathan Roxy Music: Both Ends Burning [Chapter 12: The Talking Pictures] (Reynolds & Hearn, 2005; revised edition 2008) ISBN 1-903111-80-3
  4. "BAFTA Awards". imdb.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  5. "BAFTA Awards". imdb.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  6. "U.S. TV Execs Evaluate the ‘Thames on 9’ Week," Variety, 8 September 1976, pg. 54
  7. "THAMES On 9". exit109.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  8. "JULIE COVINGTON". officialcharts.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  9. Official Charts - Rock Follies of 77 at No.13
  10. Tonight With Jonathan Ross, Channel 4 TV interview, 4 February 1991

External links

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