As I relate in
another post here on Just Backdated, the impresario Robert Stigwood, who died
yesterday aged 81, had the unusual distinction of being the only man in the
world ever to have propositioned me, at least as far as I can remember. New York in
the seventies was often a bit of a blur after dark when the work was done and the
bottles opened, hedonistic too if you were lucky enough to work in the rock
trade. Amongst my friends were two or three gay guys, one a noted music writer,
who were usually great company, not least because free-spirited models liked to
hang around with unthreatening men. When the night drew to a close, however,
such girls were unlikely to be offended if a straight but gay-friendly escort offered
to squire them home. These friends knew I wasn’t gay, of course, but Robert Stigwood
wasn’t to know this when, in the summer of 1976, I was at a party at his
apartment on the West Side, a luxurious duplex which in the 1940s had been
occupied by the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
Chez Robert
was a penthouse on the corner of one of those huge mansion blocks on Central
Park West, actually the building next to the Dakota where John Lennon lived. I
think the party was thrown to celebrate the forthcoming release of Saturday Night Fever, the disco movie for
which his clients The Bee Gees had provided the music. The Gibb Brothers were
riding on the crest of a wave, with albums and singles everywhere on the
charts, either by them or with artists who’d recorded their songs, and earlier
the same day they had opened their own shop selling BG merchandise on 57th
Street. Robert was there and he invited me to the party personally. He was
famous for throwing good parties, and I’d been to one before, at a massive
house in Stanmore in North London, back in 1971.
The NY apartment was crowded, as I
recall. The Gibbs were there, along with many who worked for RSO Records,
Robert’s label that was distributed through Atlantic. Champagne corks popped
and the pleasing smell of marijuana lingered in the air. Cocaine was being
snorted by record company men with open necked shirts and small spoons around
their necks. Beautiful girls danced to disco music in a spacious living room
furnished with huge leather sofas. It wasn’t long before I was as high as a
kite, and in search of a loo I wandered down a long corridor, the walls of
which were covered in what seemed to be original artworks by famous painters,
Magritte, Matisse and Picasso. It was then that I realised the host had crept
up behind me and was being rather too friendly. I explained as nicely as I
could that I preferred girls, whereupon he led me into a bedroom where a
statuesque redhead from among his staff – or so he said – was sat on a bed,
reading a magazine. “This is…,” he said, and though I cannot remember her name,
the implication was that she and I might become enjoined while he watched. She
didn’t demur and in different circumstances I might have done just that but
something in my Yorkshire upbringing told me this was unwise and that was the
end of the matter. Robert smiled graciously and the three of us returned to
where the action was.
Robert Stigwood –
known to one and all as Stiggy – was a massively successful Australian-born music
entrepreneur who as well as managing The Bees Gees also managed Eric Clapton
and went on to produce several hit musicals. I met him several times between
1970 and 1977 and – aside from the encounter above – found him strangely diffident
for a rock manager, slight of build and rather hesitant. Perhaps this was an
act to cover up his astuteness in business, for he amassed a fortune that enabled
him to buy a yacht that was eventually sold to the Getty family and live in a
former royal residence on the Isle of Wight. In later years he lived quietly in
the South of France.
Among his theatrical successes were Hair and the Tim Rice/Andrew Lloyd Webber
musicals Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita. As well as Saturday Night Fever, he was behind The Who’s Tommy movie, Grease and –
probably his biggest flop – the dreadful Sgt
Pepper’s Lonely Heart Club Band movie in 1978. Born in Adelaide, in 1955 Stiggy
hitch-hiked to England via India and set up a theatrical agency in the Charing
Cross Road supplying actors for TV commercials. One of his clients, John
Leyton, wanted to be a pop singer so Stigwood somehow got Joe Meek – the British
Phil Spector – to record him singing ‘Johnny Remember Me’, one of the great pre-Beatles
UK singles and a number one hit in the summer of 1961. Stigwood was up and
running, setting up a booking agency and record label and though he had his ups
and downs it was the beginning of a phenomenal career wheeling and dealing
behind the scenes in the music business.
He was pally with Kit Lambert, of
course (John Entwistle said he found them in bed together), and became The Who’s
agent and, with the Reaction label, offered them a refuge after they fell out
with Shel Talmy. When he somehow overstepped the line with regard to The Small
Faces it is generally accepted that their manager Don Arden held Stiggy upside
down from an office window several floors up. He helped Cream to form and managed them, made an
alliance with Brian Epstein but The Beatles declined to be managed by him after
Epstein’s death. It didn’t matter. By then he’d discovered The Bee Gees whose career he
handled thereafter, simultaneously producing the theatre shows and films as
well as running RSO Records. His last real success before he retired was the Evita movie starring Madonna. I’d like
to have been a fly on the wall when those two were negotiating percentages.
RIP Stiggy. I forgive you for that
night in New York.
3 comments:
Townshend's valediction on the Who website ends similarly - give or take the redhead...
Im currently regretting that statuesque redhead by proxy :-)
Im currently regretting that statuesque redhead by proxy :-)
Post a Comment