Toyah Willcox webchat – your questions answered on punk, rabbits and fighting for her back catalogue

The singer and actor, who is starring in a stage version of Derek Jarman’s Jubilee, on her bucket list, how she’d explain punk to aliens and what she’d like for her 60th birthday
  
  

Toyah Willcox will be answering your questions.
Toyah Willcox will be answering your questions. Photograph: Lorne Thomson/Redferns

Thanks for joining in – that's all for today …

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

This has been great fun! It's enlightening to hear your questions. Thank you so much for your time. Let's do it again! And come and see Jubilee at the Lyric Hammersmith from 15 Feb to 10 March. Be prepared to be offended, to laugh til you hurt, to shed tears at the sheer brilliance and beauty of it.

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Yes, it's still a mystery

resistpopulism2 asks:

Is it still a mystery? I wondered if whatever it was that was had become less so over the years.

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Yes. I'm still searching for a clue! Sometimes it's so far away. Sometimes it's very near. A sound being carried by the wind. Just loud enough to hear. It's a mystery, it's a mystery, I'm still searching for a clue.

melissamyartist asks:

Knowing you and Robert Fripp have spent time in the company of the elusive David Sylvian, and with Robert’s collaboration still an oft-played piece in my collection, do you find inspiration coming specifically from him, or great musicians like him? Does his spirituality infuse your own compositions, or do you remain true to “Toyah”? If so, to what extent, and is that more confined to Robert’s influence particularly?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Melissa, I'm guessing what you're trying to ask me, is am I inspired by other musicians like David Sylvian or my husband, Robert Fripp. I know David - my husband has made great albums with him. And obviously I know Robert Fripp because I cook, clean and wash his socks for him. But when I write, I write with the knowledge and availability of technique that I own. Otherwise I could sound like Bach, Mozart or Beethoven. I am creative with both my limitations and my sense that everything is possible. So in answer to your question, no, I'm not influenced by either David or Robert. I remain true to Toyah. What I would like to add is I've never known anyone more influenced by Toyah than Robert. He nicks my artwork, he nicks my ideas, he nicks my musicians, he nicks my vocabulary. But I love him, he's my husband and he's more famous than me!

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Cycleboy1957 asks:

Could you answer a question that has long bugged me: does the pop music industry have a problem with women playing instruments?

Scouring YouTube, one can find women playing instruments to an amazingly high standard. In the classical world, fantastic musicians are 10 a penny. Yet, when I look at pop, folk and jazz, women playing instruments seem to be (almost) as rare as hens teeth. Yes, I see them with guitars around their necks, but rarely taking the solos. Woman’s Hour frequently interviews female singer-songwriters, but instrumentalists? Hardly ever. Yes, they are clearly out there, but rarely gain the status of an Eric Clapton or Elton John. Why?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I totally get what you mean. Last week I was working with YolanDa Brown, the saxophonist. I recommend you look her up. She's won MOBOs, she's a joy to be with, gorgeous spirit, self-taught and she improvises all her shows.

PenkhullMoonraker asks:

Did you ever perform on Cheggers Plays Pop?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I'm sure I did yes. Actually, I've got a Cheggers story. Over 40 years I worked a lot with him. He was the biggest wind-up merchant I've ever known. I was sound checking for a festival in Hampshire and Cheggers was the compere. While we were sound-checking he walked up to me and told me the festival was cancelled, to which I went: "No!!! It can't be! The site's up, the audience is here." He was winding me up.

letsgowhynot asks:

If someone landed on Earth from outer space and you had to explain “punk” to them, what would you say?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Great question! Thank you.

Dear Alien, The human race has a habit of having a hierarchy and a lower-archy. In the UK in particular this is represented by working-class, middle-class and upper-class.In the modern day this class system is slowly breaking down. I think thanks to punk, where the attitude was everyone has a right to voice their creativity, to voice their dislikes as much as their likes, the punk movement in effect woke up a sleepy world, pointed the finger at corruptions, unjust practices and hypocrisy, allowing a generation to pick up their guitars and sing. Punk is the voice that shouts the loudest from the silence of inertia.

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bergersmicer asks:

What do you see as Derek Jarman’s main legacy? Twenty-four years after his death and 40 after Jubilee, his work still stands out as fresh and challenging!

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

From today's perspective, it's been a joy to experience a new generation discovering and loving Jarman's work. That alone is a legacy. But I feel you need me to be more specific. I'd say that Derek without any form of compromise created a collage - layers of sound, colour, image - that he would have done on a canvas but was able to do in moving film too. It's not everyone's choice but I know he's influenced the greats. About 25 years ago, Greenaway contacted me asking to see my copy of The Tempest. My immediate thought was, I'll send it to you if I can be in your next film. But I knew that wasn't going to happen. So very graciously I lent him my copy of The Tempest. And I realised that Derek's influence was broadening.

My favourite Pixar film? I don't like animation …

DWFan1 asks:

What’s your favourite Pixar film?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I have a confession. I don't enjoy animation. I have no idea why because I absolutely adore doing voiceovers. I think part of me feels that animation has put an actor out of work.

Prostitute was the one album I had to write

StephenSW asks:

This is a year of anniversaries for you: your 60th birthday, 40 years since the formation of the Toyah band, and 30 years since your LP Prostitute. It was like nothing else released in 1988, like nothing you’d done previously (or since), and it was a brave, creative statement - the kind of thing BBC6 Music would pick up on if it had existed then. I’ve always thought it could be turned into a one-woman show, maybe using a film backdrop. Would you consider revisiting this material in any form, or a new project in this vein?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Prostitute was the one album I had to write. The late 80s was quite a difficult time for me as an artist because I'd almost become a parody of myself. All people wanted was pink hair and for me to sing I Want to Be Free. There's nothing wrong with either of those but people need to see you as a person for you to be an artist. When it was released, Billboard gave Prostitute a five-star review and claimed it to be an antidote to Madonna. It was never intended to be an antidote towards another woman. It was intended to be a very pure female voice talking about a truth and that truth was the moment I became a married woman, my experience was I became a second class citizen. Everything I'd worked for as an individual suddenly could only be approached through my husband,. My management, my bank manager, people I wanted to work with - they would only talk to my husband before they talked to me, which I found infuriating. To make Prostitute I drew up a physical pattern of bars and rather than write music on the traditional staves and lines, I wrote a pattern of numbers. I played everything on the album except drums and percussion. Steve Sidelnyk was the drummer on the album. Steve would be asked to play a drum pattern for so many bars then to change that pattern for another 16 bars and then return for 32 bars of his original drum pattern. It was an astonishing way to work. I then free sang a lyric over the top of his drum patterns. Then on top of that I added noises, made up from anything, banging bottles and pots and pans. Steve went on to become Madonna's main programmer. The release of this album in the UK generally infuriated the record execs but it was my bestselling album in America.

_plank_ 3d asks:

Did you and Hazel O’Connor have a bitter rivalry? And did you ever get into a punch-up?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Thank you for this question. The press always tried to play Hazel and I against each other in the 80s. It was a pretty typical thing to experience back then. We work a lot together today. I'm incredibly fond of her and admire her work as much as I admire Kate Bush's. Hazel has always reached out to me to make contact and catch up. She's been a good friend. Her mother used to send Hazel press clippings about me so Hazel always knew what I was up to. I find your question particularly interesting because I was always very envious of Hazel winning the lead in Breaking Glass, a film for which both I and Kate Bush auditioned for. Having seen the film many times, no one other than Hazel could have played that role. And the songs she wrote for the film are iconic.

fannybygastropub asks:

Can you tell me where you got that fab gold-coil necklace you wore on the new Pop Quiz? You look AMAZING!!

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

My makeup artist Sean Chapman also makes my jewellery for me. He made the gold coil necklace from go faster stripes you can buy for your car in Halfords. It's basically plastic that he moulds around wire.

KHepburnhairbun asks:

Do you play guitar? If so, acoustic or electric? Or is there any other musical instrument you [play]?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I play acoustic guitars that can be miked up to a speaker. I have three favourite guitars. One was left behind at my warehouse Mayhem in 1979 by Iggy Pop. It was his rehearsal guitar. It's a very beaten-up acoustic which I take everywhere with me. My other guitar is a slide guitar, also known as a National guitar, which I have tuned alternate strings to D, G, D, G, D, G. This is a standard blues tuning that I learned when I read Keith Richards' Life. It is such a fun tuning to work with. And currently I'm doing most of my writing in this tuning. I play also, in standard tuning, because it's really good for my cognitive brain to think in that way. I'm dyslexic and one of the biggest problems I have is that I can't always remember sequences of letters. I also play keyboards - badly - and violin - extremely badly.

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David Snyder asks:

What was it like to work with Tony Banks? I love the song you two did together. Are there any others in the vault?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I worked with Tony Banks on the song Lion of Symmetry for a film with Johnny Hallyday. Tony Banks sent me the backing track and asked to me write the lyric and melody line. I found it easy to do because I loved the track I was sent. When I was ready I went down to his studio in the south of England and spent the day putting the voice down on the track. Tony has since said this was one of the most enjoyable collaborations he's ever had. I take that very seriously as a compliment. I loved the project. I was free to layer as many voices I wanted on the track. In the afternoon, having put about 10 vocal layers on to this track, Tony asked me if I could sing a straight A over the whole of the song. I had no problem doing this but it was the wrong key for the song. I managed to do it without going off pitch. At the end of recording this straight A for the first time, Tony said through the booth, "That doesn't work. But I'm amazed that you never once went out of tune!"

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I'm at the opening for any horror movie – I love It

Flaemmchen90 asks:

What are your favourite films, old and new? I love a mix, especially classics on a rainy day. Also, is there any plans for some rereleases? I love to collect physical copies!

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I love films! I have an expensive DVD library! One of the joys of where I live is that I'm 50 yards away from an arts centre that shows a film every Monday morning. I slip away from my office and watch the 10.30 film every Monday when I'm in the UK. I was blown away by Maudie with Sally Hawkins. It's about the naive artist Maud Lewis. Sally Hawkins' performance in this is one of the best technical character journeys I have ever seen. This year I'm shooting a movie called Give Them Wings where the writer in real life is paraplegic. He will also be the lead in the movie. I'm playing his mother. I have to age in the movie and I'm telling everyone that Sally Hawkins has proven in Maudie that you can age on film without too much makeup. She is utterly remarkable. Apart from this film, you will always catch me at the opening of any horror movie. I love the film It. It excites me so much that It is going to become a franchise. It means I'll get a horror fix every other year.

Jeffagar asks:

I have been a huge fan off yours since 1979. I was wondering if you are planning to celebrate that wonderful milestone in your life – your 60th birthday – with a special gig, where all your fans could celebrate with you? May I also take this opportunity to wish you a stupendous 60th birthday for the 18th May, from this lifelong fan, health and happiness to both you and Robert.

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

You ask if I'm doing something special to celebrate with my fans. All this is in the pipeline and all news will be released hopefully in the not too distant months but my main priority is to own my back catalogue.

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Thank you very much for the birthday wishes - it's much appreciated. We have been planning for three years for every one of my albums to be re-released this year. These plans are still moving forward but greatly affected by Safari's choice to sell my entire back catalogue just as we delivered the release plan to them. As you can guess, I am finding this one of the most insulting, infuriating, nastiest things anyone could have ever done to me in my 40-year career. Currently, I am waiting for the material to become available on the market so I can be a bidder for it. I am hugely grateful to Demon music who have offered to part buy with me to make the purchase possible. We still plan to release five box sets over the next three years.

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sachat asks:

What’s the music like in the new Jubilee? And what do you remember about making the film? Any good stories about the Incredible Orlando?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

The music is of the era - we have The Fall but also we travel in time to the present day and we have M.I.A.'s Bad Girls. The music illustrates the play in its energy, its brilliance and its vibrancy. Jack, the great Orlando, was a joy to be with. He was always happy, always enjoyed meeting new people, and had the most fantastic guide dog who everyone loved. Surprisingly, Jack was not a gossip considering he had probably experienced many things worth gossiping about. But he was always a good friend and good company. When I first rehearsed with him on the set of Jubilee, I didn't realise he was blind, because Jack always went on to the set and counted the steps so he learned the space. Never once did I witness a blind man.

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What's on my bucket list? Happiness as a constant

Tickledblue asks:

It’s a milestone year for you. Any plans of celebrating with your fans with an electric set in Birmingham? I was crushed when David Bowie passed away. Would you consider covering one of his songs. If so, which one do you think you could do the most justice to? Do you have a bucket list of things you want to do? If so what are the top three?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I sing Suffragette City in my acoustic show Up Close and Personal. It's in the show as a reference to the suffragette movement but also to how much Bowie influenced me. If I was ever asked to record one of his songs I'd think twice because I think Bowie has got it right in the first place. It took six months at least after his death for me to even be able to talk about him without crying. And I tried to learn Lady Grinning Soul but soon concluded that the song is so masterful it would take me about 20 shows to get it right as a singer. And I would never be able to get through it without actually breaking down. So in answer to your question, I don't think I ever will cover a Bowie song.

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

I think happiness is one of the most obscure things to find. I think it's an art form. I would like to find the secret to finding it as a permanent feature. I think I was brought up to feel permanently guilty about my successes as well as my mistakes. Because of that, the top thing in my bucket list would be to find happiness as a constant in my life. No 2 would be to spend time on the tundra of Mongolia with the horsemen if they would have me. No 3 would be to stop procrastinating and get on and write the novel I've been intending to write for 25 years. I've got many plots. I write all the time. I just get bored by chapter 3...

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Korg1980 asks:

Have you written any songs that explore your affinity with animals or pets? Do any animals provide you with any artistic inspiration?

User avatar for ToyahWillcox Guardian contributor

Actually, yes. I used to have a house rabbit, Willy Fred (named after Bill, the drummer in REM and now the keyboard player in King Crimson, my co-writer in the band The Humans). The rabbit was a New Zealand white with pink eyes. Looking at him and realising all he needed in life was to be safe, well fed and warm, really helped ground me while I'm songwriting. His life force made me realise how important it is to centre yourself to the truth of why we're alive - ie that everyone in the world, no matter who or what they do or their background, needs to be safe, warm and well fed. Believe it or not Willy Fred had stroppy days. This, for me, made for better songwriting because it was as if I was dealing with a teenager who thought I was the most boring old-fashioned human being they'd ever come across. Some of my best songs have evolved from when I used to sing to Willy Fred when he was being a stroppy teenager. One example is Sensational off the Crimson Queen 2007.

Toyah is with us now

Hello! I'm Toyah Willcox, which you probably know by now. It's an honour to be here with a newspaper I greatly respect.

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Toyah Willcox webchat – post your questions now!

Toyah Willcox is not a woman to be pinned down. A singer, actor, TV presenter and stock market magnate, she has been a permanent fixture in British culture since the age of 19, when she played flame-haired pyromaniac Mad in Derek Jarman’s 1978 punk film Jubilee.

Since then, she has recorded 24 albums and had 13 Top 40 singles, including It’s a Mystery and I Want to Be Free. She has also appeared in more than 40 plays and 15 films, including Quadrophenia, The Ebony Tower (opposite Laurence Olivier) and The Corn is Green (with Katharine Hepburn). On TV, she’s been a religious affairs reporter for The Heaven and Earth Show, narrated Teletubbies and done a stint on I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here!

Now, she is returning to Jubilee in a new stage adaptation at the Lyric Hammersmith in London. She takes on the role of the time-travelling queen who arrives in a dystopia where a new generation seethes with anger at the establishment. “At the time it was made, it was utterly outrageous,” Willcox has said of the original film, describing it as a story of “women who are trying to kind of kill everything that controls them or that has exploited them … It’s a very resonant story today. Nothing’s changed except the technology.”

Toyah will be joining us for a live webchat at 1.30pm GMT on Monday 22 January. Post your questions for her in the comment section below.

 

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