Reviewed by Chris Arnsby. John Peel: "Hello and welcome
to another half hour of the hardest street sounds around like Hazell Dean and
Frankie Goes To Hollywood."
Richard Skinner: "We've got street-credible Blancmange
and beach-credible Tracey Ullman here's Sunglasses."
[26] Tracey Ullman: Sunglasses. Gordon Elsbury has
been credited as Producer since the start of August. This normally means that
Michael Hurll is off doing something else. In this case something else might be
organising the new series of The Noel Edmonds Late Late Breakfast Show
which starts on 01/09/1984 with an ambitious live cross Channel (English,
rather than BBC1 and 2) extravaganza. Who's going to be directing that outside
broadcast? Oh, it's Gordon Elsbury again, in his ongoing role as hired gun for
Michael Hurll.
Designer Rod McLean and Gordon Elsbury are trying something
different for Sunglasses. They've constructed a new set rather than invite
Tracey Ullman to perform in front of the standard perspex scaffolding. It's
just a blue backcloth with a spotlight shining a sun in the middle but it's
surprisingly effective and it's good to see the production team thinking of
simple ways to ring changes in the presentation.
Also on stage is the world's largest deckchair. Now, Google
tells me that Tracey Ullman is 1.66m tall (that's about 5'4'' in old lengths)
and the seat of this deckchair is at the height of her waist. Why does the BBC
have a deckchair that big in stock? What's it for? Who had it made? And why?
Don't get me wrong, I'm glad it exists. Having impractical and bizarre props on
hand is exactly the sort of thing the BBC should do but I'd love to know what
programme requested the oversized deckchair. A strange Lilliputian version of Summertime
Special?
[20] Windjammer: Tossing & Turning. According to
John Peel, Windjammer have "flown from America just to be with us on Top
of the Pops." I'm not sure the song was worth all that effort. Although it
does have a mildly amusing suggestive title.
[8] Hazell Dean: Whatever I Do (Wherever I Go).
Hazell Dean returns to Top of the Pops with what sounds in places like a
disco version of the Juliet Bravo theme. She's accompanied by dancers
Pinky and Tony who appear to have permanently split from Kelly Marie. That's
show business.
[15] Jeffrey Osborne: On The Wings Of Love. A repeat
from the 26/07/1984 edition (not shown by BBC4 because of D*v* L** Tr*vis).
It's a 1982 single from the originally titled album Jeffrey Osborne. The single
release was delayed until 1984 in the UK. Wikipedia is unclear on the reason
why and Google is also unhelpful due to a large amounts of hits for the 2015
Philippine romantic comedy television series of the same name.
[22] Blancmange: The Day Before You Came. A terrific
performance. Blancmange previously appeared on the 19/07/1984 edition and while
I liked the song at the time, this is one of those occasions when a good song
is really elevated by the staging.
Blancmange appear on the same stage as Hazell Dean and the
small differences between the two performances really add up. Warwick Fielding
is credited with Lighting and he's coloured the stage summer evening yellow,
which better fits the mood of The Day Before You Came. A hint of smoke in the
studio from Visual Effects Designer Peter Wragg (who went on to work on Red Dwarf)
also adds to the atmosphere.
Hazell Dean gets a lot of high energy close-ups and fast
camera moves which fit the pace of her song but feel frantic and exhausting
after a while. It doesn't help that she's jogging up and down on the spot so
even in close-ups she's constantly bouncing around. Blancmange on the other
hand are stationary. When the camera goes in for a close-up of Neil Arthur you
can get a good look at him, rather than a Hazell Dean shaped blur.
The slower pace of the Blancmange song also allows for more
wide sweeping camera moves that give a better view of the studio and the
audience. It's easy to underestimate how important the audience is to Top of
the Pops. In the Hazel Dean performance the audience are visible, but it's
rare to get a long look at them. They're shapes in the foreground, or being
spun off screen by a Quantel video effect. During Blancmange's performance you
can see the audience crowded round the stage dancing and having a good time. It
makes Blancmange's song look like a performance, while Hazel Deans' is more
like a communal aerobics workout.
A candidate then for performance of the week? Yes it
absolutely would be expect for another song coming up later.
[13] Laura Branigan: Self Control. On video.
[1] Frankie Goes To Hollywood: Two Tribes. Nine weeks
at number 1 (seven on BBC4's slightly reduced repeat rate) and five different
studio performances come to an end. It's a barnstorming performance and, as
with Blancmange, it's the combination of song and staging that make this such
an outstanding end to a number 1 run.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood appear on the same stage as
Windjammer, it's now kitted out with a portable air raid warning siren (every
home should have one) and the flags of the USA and Soviet Union. Captions (in the
Top of the Pops font, obviously) appear over a close-up of the siren.
"...THE AIR ATTACK WARNING SOUNDS LIKE... THIS IS THE SOUND."
Followed by a slow pan down to Holly Johnson who is browsing a copy of The
Sun which he slowly and deliberately tears in half.
However, the best is yet to come when Holly Johnson steps
off the stage and WALKS INTO THE AUDIENCE! I can't begin to explain why this is
so indescribably exciting. We've seen performers walk between multiple stages
(Adam Ant with Goody Two Shoes (20/05/1982) and Banarama singing Cruel Summer
across multiple sets (28/7/1983)) but this is different. This is breaking down
the barriers between artist and audience; or something.
I wonder if the intent was to try and recreate the Two
Tribes video in studio? Top of the Pops didn't show the video (probably
due to concerns about imitable violence) but it does start with a close-up of
loudspeakers, and also features Holly Johnson performing directly to a
hand-held camera. The key difference in studio being the lack of two fighting
old men, and the BBC sensibly don't trust Paul Rutherford to handle one of it's
expensive Ikegami HL-79A cameras.
The staging of the walk down is interesting. We start with a
shot of the stage that shows a portable camera operator in the foreground.
Vision Mixer Priscilla Hoadley then cuts to the output of a portable camera but
not, as it turns out, the one we saw in the previous shot; that camera comes
back into view as the operator of our camera moves away from the stage. We
don't cut to the output of the hand-held camera we saw in the first shot until
after a brief cutaway to Paul Rutherford doing whatever it is that he does
(semi-sings and wholly-moves, according to the Liverpool album notes).
The arrangement of shots makes it feel like the production team is concerned
the audience at home won't understand what they are seeing unless the grammar
of the images is very clearly explained.
Holly Johnson's walkabout is notable for the way he's
immediately surrounded by a protective phalanx of audience cheerleaders. They
don't want the real crowd getting too close. But it's still excitingly chaotic.
Holly doesn't appear to have a route planned and at times his random changes of
direction make it appear like he is trying to lose the cameras. Once the
audience realise what is happening they press forwards, and you get a sense of
the small studio size (only three stages used this week, the Sunglasses blue
backcloth, the Windjammer/Frankie stage, and the one shared by Hazell
Dean/Blancmange). At times there is very little space between the camera
operator, Holly Johnson, and the audience.
But it doesn't end there. After Holly Johnson returns to the
stage he excitedly waves his walking stick and clonks the overhead siren. He
looks up to see what he's done, and then deliberately wedges the stick into a
gap in the frame and starts the siren swinging. Fortunately it's firmly
attached to the ceiling because Holly Johnson drags it backwards and forwards
in a way that would never be approved by a BBC safety officer. Finally he
leaves the walking stick hanging from the siren until it appears to fall into
the audience. The performance finally ends with the safe detonation of some BBC
issue thunderflashes (courtesy of P. Wragg Esq.) that send clouds of smoke
billowing up to the ceiling.
Look at that, nearly 700 words just on Two Tribes. And that
boys and girls is why Blancmange don't get performance of the week.
[25] Rod Stewart: Some Guys. There's no way to follow
that, so Top of the Pops plays out to Rod Stewart with the crowd still
waving their free stars and stripes, and hammer and sickle flags. There's a
lovely moment when the camera catches a teenager staring glumly into space
until she realises she's on camera, at which point she starts smiling and dancing.
Performance of the week: Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Two
Tribes.
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