Bermondsey Boy Tommy Steel on Radio 2 Celebrating 75 years
This is available until 2nd January
Don Black
celebrates the 75th birthday of Tommy Steele, Britain's first Rock 'n'
Roll star who has enjoyed a highly successful career in recordings, on
stage and screen, and is still going strong!
Thomas Hicks was born
on 17 December 1936 in Bermondsey, London. He joined the Merchant Navy
after school, and, between trips, would play skiffle in the coffee bars
of Soho. But after hearing Buddy Holly, Tommy turned his back on skiffle
and he would only perform Rock 'n' Roll - at that time, a brand new
sound in the UK.
Tommy was approached by John Kennedy while
performing in a coffee bar. He believed Tommy could be Britain's answer
to Elvis and offered to become his manager. Tommy accepted, gave up the
sea and began working with Kennedy and his management partner Larry
Parnes. The name Hicks had to go though, and Tommy came up with "Steel"
from his grandfather's name of Stil, an "E" was added and Tommy Steele
was born!
Tommy was rushed into the studios and his first effort,
Rock With The Caveman (his own composition) went to the top of the
charts in 1956, quickly followed by a succession of similar hit
recordings. Just a few months later, he was filming his life story and
buying a new house in South London for his parents.
Larry Parnes
once said "Tommy Steele was the greatest entertainer that I ever had on
my books" and he slowly moved away from rock 'n' roll into more
mainstream entertainment, including pantomime, stage and screen. Notable
projects include The Tommy Steele Story, Hans Christian Andersen, Half A
Sixpence, Singin' In The Rain, Some Like It Hot, and Doctor Doolittle.
A
veritable polymath, Tommy also wrote The Final Run, a novel about World
War II, and children's book Quincy. He is also a noted sculptor and
painter who's exhibited at the Royal Academy. As he approaches his 75th
birthday, he's touring the UK once more in Scrooge: The Musical.
Contributors
include Julia Foster, Gillian Lynne, Laurie Mansfield, Michael Reed and
Marty Wilde. And Tommy himself can be heard in conversation with Bill
Kenwright tomorrow night from 10pm.
From BBC iPlayer
I picked Tommy up in my black cab on the Albert Embankment about three years ago, when i told him i was from Bermondsey we spent the whole journey talking about our memories of the old place, hes a top top bloke and very proud to be from the "manor".