Monday, 30 November 2020

Madcap dressmaker, TV personality and cabaret artist


November 30, 2020


by Valerie Lawson

JEANNE LITTLE 1938-2020 

In an upstairs alcove in the Sydney suburb of Paddington, Jeanne Little established her own dressmaking shop where she designed dresses for wealthy women and retired showgirls. Soon after it opened, Jeanne became pregnant and decided to make her own maternity dresses because, she said, those voluminous maternity dresses of the 1970s were so boring. 

Instead of hiding the bump, Jeanne made maternity dresses that turned heads. One was a white dress embossed with big pink elephants marching across the stomach. Another was a green smock with a red and white target painted on the belly. 

The maternity dresses were just the start of her lifetime of wearing eccentric, hilarious and sometimes gorgeous clothes that looked like the work of a couturier. Her life as an entertainer began when Jeanne went to The Daily Mirror, where she delivered the regular columns written by her husband, Barry Little.
Jeanne Little in two different guises

When the photo was published the next day, the producer of The Mike Walsh Show thought it might be fun to have her on the show. She went on and then they asked her to come, back, not just once but twice a week. As a regular guest on the show from 1974 to 1985, Jeanne captured the audience with the wacky dresses she wore in the show and the way she spoke – extremely loud - especially when she shrieked “Ooooh aaah! Dahhhling!”, her catchphrase. 

When she sat next to Mike on the stage all eyes in the audience were fixed on Jeanne as she flopped her hands, raised her arms, danced like a showgirl and flirted with Mike. 

An Easter hat conversation was one of the best moments in the show. Wearing a hat made of sausages and mash and scattered with green peas, Jeanne asked Mike if the sausages were still warm. “I only cooked them this morning in case you felt like one. Everyone likes a sausage. Do you want one darling?” Mike’s reply: “No thanks, Jeanne, I don’t.” 

She shuffled behind a screen and returned wearing a spiky hat made of ice cones and designed like the Statue of Liberty. Jeanne: “Isn’t it wonderful? But don’t wear it in bed”. Mike: “No, I see a lot of reasons for not wearing it in bed.” 

Jeanne’s stage screen, often used when she showcased her numerous dresses, was out of sight to the audience, similar to the wings in theatres. Every exit to the screen meant more entrances and virtual curtain calls. She deserved them, not only as a comedian but also a dancer, actor and chanteuse. 

Two years after she joined the show, she won the Gold Logie for most popular television personality. 

Her daughter, Katie, said “she was only paid $25 a spot. Mum worked for peanuts. She had to be so resourceful looking everywhere, thinking 'what can I do with that?'. Any school projects I brought home, anywhere we went, whether we were in a hardware store, a supermarket, an art shop or anywhere at all, Mum would go 'oh, I could try to make that'.” 

She made jackets made out of tin foil and dresses covered with balloons, or pale pink prawn crackers and milk bottle caps. “I remember Dad and I had to sit squashing them flat while Mum was sitting there hand sewing the bottle caps on to the dress. It looked like a kind of mermaid with fish scales all over it. “I was a kid growing up, so for me that was heaven, continually living in this creative mess, so fabulous.” 

As well as the disposable dresses, Jeanne designed edible hats made of food including pizza, french fries, crumpets, bangers and mash, ice cream cones and frankfurters. 

Jeanne’s loud voice and eccentric creations were both linked to her youth. As a child, she was shy and stuttered so badly she could barely speak. As well, her mother, Katherine Mitchell, had a very thick Scottish accent. The combination of an Australian accent with a Scottish brogue and the stutter meant the only way to speak clearly was to stretch out her words. 

As for Jeanne’s clothes, dressmaking ran in the family. Katherine was a tailor in Scotland but when she and her husband emigrated to Australia her main occupation was sewing at home so she could support her family. 

Jeanne, the youngest of seven children, was happy to stay home alongside her mother as she worked at her sewing machine. After seeing a tiny sewing machine in a shop window, Jeanne hoped she could have one. She didn’t ask her mother to buy one but a miracle happened when she saw a tiny sewing machine under a Christmas tree. 

With her mother’s present, she learned how to make doll’s clothes with scraps of fabric. When she was older, Jeanne made party dresses inspired by fashion photos in women’s magazines. 

She found her future husband at a party. Barry Little, an interior designer and regular newspaper columnist was a perfect match for Jeanne. 

Their daughter, Katie Little, thought so, too. Barry was “handsome and confident with thick, jet black hair and moustache to match his olive complexion” and her mother was “tall, thin and gorgeously exotic”. 

They married in 1971 and moved to a small terrace in Paddington. Later, they moved over the road to a more glamorous terrace four storeys high. 

The highest level was Jeanne’s workshop and sanctuary. Garbage bags were piled at the top of the stairs and a whole wall was covered by wardrobes. 

At the time, Katie was a student at Kambala, a Church of England school in Rose Bay. Jeanne picked her up at school after she finished her work at The Mike Walsh Show. Most mothers don’t dress up when they pick up their children but Jeanne did. She often arrived at the school dressed in one of her crazy outfits. A mother wearing hotpants and a yellow wig was a bit embarrassing, especially when other students gathered together to see what she was wearing. 

Jeanne’s career didn’t end with the TV show. She moved to the stage when American director and songwriter Jerry Herman came to Australia to cast an Australian production of Jerry’s Girls, his Broadway production based on his songs, among them Hello Dolly and Mame. Herman asked Jeanne to audition and to her surprise, she got the main role. 

In the 1990s, Jeanne toured Australia with her one-woman cabaret shows Hello Dahling!, Marlene - A Tribute to Dietrich, a show she wrote with Barry, and A Tribute to Marilyn Monroe. 

From the late 1990s to the mid-2000s, Little was on the panel show Beauty and the Beast. At the time she was still making her own clothes but by then she wore glamorous dresses instead of zany outfits. 

Jeanne’s final years were heartbreaking. In 2009 she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and by 2014, family members said her illness had advanced to the stage that she "no longer knows where she is or what's going on around her". 

She lived in a Sydney nursing home for many years and died, aged 82, on November 7, 2020. She is survived by Katie and her husband, Timothy Poulton and their children, Tom, Charlotte and Hunter. Barry died in July last year. 

Valerie Lawson

First published in The Sydney Morning Herald, November 30, 2020


Wednesday, 18 November 2020

Critic moved to tears at concert's 'Sublime Beauty'

Spring Sojourn 
Canberra Symphony Orchestra Chamber Players 
At Wesley Uniting Church, Forrest ACT 
November 13, 2020 

Reviewed by Tony Magee


Kirsten Williams on violin (and leader). Photo: Martin Ollman

IN her opening address, member of the CSO board and chair of the Artistic Advisory Panel, Robyn Holmes, in welcoming the socially distanced, capacity audience, reminded us all that this was the first return to live performance from CSO since March.
 
“A sense of renewal” was how she exuberantly described this very special event and, indeed, that’s exactly the vibrancy, excitement and sense of expectation that swirled through the room as we waited for the moment when five of the finest string players in Canberra would grace the stage.

Capturing the sublime and distinctive harmonic structure of Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “Phantasy Quintet”, with splashes of his most famous “Tallis Fantasia” weaving through, plus moments from the first violin hinting at his equally famous “The Lark Ascending”, Kirsten Williams on violin (and leader), Doreen Cumming on violin, Tor Frømyhr on viola, Lucy Carrigy-Ryan also on viola and Patrick Suthers on cello, brought to life the gentle opening structure of the piece, beginning with a mournful and heartfelt solo viola opening played exquisitely by Frømyhr.

Within five minutes of this performance, I had tears streaming down my face as I savoured every moment of the sublime beauty of melody, harmony, balance and skill of the musicians.

The Scherzo movement revealed playing of conviction before dwindling into an eerie, delicate, romantic and extremely moving conclusion with a shimmering high note from Williams on first violin.

The “String Quintet No.2 in G, Op.111” by Johannes Brahms featured a magnificent grand opening of forte from all players.

Spring Sojourn. Photo: Tony Magee

Joyful, youthful music, seemingly at odds with Brahms’ grumpy state of mind in his old age.

This was lively and exuberant playing of a magnitude not often heard these days, either by composers or musicians. The chamber ensemble seemed to live every moment, every note, every nuance of the piece.

The slow movement revealed excellently played pizzicato and bowed bass foundation work from Suthers on cello.

Alas, there was one small intonation blemish along the way, before the players all strode masterfully into a complex form of harmonic structure with masses of counter-melody before dwindling into a gentle harmonic conclusion.

The final movement commenced with a flurry in the minor key, before returning to the joyfulness for which this piece is famous and from which the players all delivered the finale with great conviction, style and precision.

Deafening applause, shouts and screams of delight followed.

This was one of the finest chamber music recitals I’ve heard in a long time.

First published in Canberra City News Digital Edition, November 14, 2020




Monday, 16 November 2020

Shirley Bassey goes out with a bang as her final album 'I Owe It All To You' sets Official Chart record

13 November 2020


The chart icon sets a huge chart record with her final album.


By Rob Copsey


Dame Shirley Bassey goes out in style on this week's Official Albums Chart as her new - and final - album I Owe It All To You sets an Official UK Chart record. 


The music icon's new collection debuts at Number 5 on this week’s chart marking her 35th Top 40 entry and highest charting album in 42 years, since 1978’s 25th Anniversary Album.


The entry gives Shirley the record as the first female artist to claim a Top 40 album in seven consecutive decades.


Shirley scored her first Official Albums Chart entry in 1961 with Fabulous Shirley Bassey. Unbelievably, of her 35 Top 40 albums, none have reached Number 1, but eight have landed in the Top 10.


The news comes a week after fellow chart icon Cliff Richard set a record as the first artist ever to score a Top 5 album in eight consecutive decades.


I Owe It All To You contains a mix of new songs and cover versions "handpicked to reflect [Shirley's] incredible life and career".


"My new album is a celebration of 70 years in showbiz," the Dame said. "70 years of support from my fans and 70 years of music! I've trodden the boards of many stages and kicked up many a diamante heel! The songs I have chosen all feel very personal and connected to my life. I hope they will do the same for my fans."


The title track and trailer single Look But Don’t Touch are the album's original compositions, with the latter written by acclaimed songwriter Eliot Kennedy, whose credits include Spice Girls, Bryan Adams and Gary Barlow.


First published at Official Charts, November 13, 2020




Friday, 6 November 2020

Geoffrey Palmer, TV and film actor, dies at 93

Friday 6th November 2020


ACTOR Geoffrey Palmer, known for his roles in such sitcoms as Butterflies, As Time Goes By and The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, has died aged 93.

He died peacefully at home, his agent said.

Judi Dench and Geoffrey Palmer publicity still for "As Time Goes By"

Versatile and prolific, he was known and loved for his hangdog expression, lugubrious delivery and the often testy demeanour he gave to his characters.

As Time Goes By saw him star with Dame Judi Dench, a partnership they revived in Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies.

He also acted in Mrs Brown, again with Dench, and The Madness of King George.

Dame Judi, who starred in nine series of As Time Goes By with Palmer, told BBC Radio 4's Front Row programme: "Geoffrey was master of comedy, an absolute master."

Paying tribute to his "wonderful deadpan expression", she added: "I've admired him all my life. How lucky to have been in something with him for so long."

His co-star in Butterflies from 1978 to 1983, Wendy Craig, told the programme: "He was just a delight to work with, his timing was perfect."

Despite his "rather serious face", she said he was "full of fun" in person.

"When he laughed and when he smiled his whole face lit up, his eyes twinkled. He was always up for a laugh and not a heavy-going serious person at all," she said.

His early television roles included appearances in The Army Game, The Saint and The Avengers and he went on to appear in Doctor Who and the Kipper and the Corpse episode of Fawlty Towers.

The Doctor Who programme listed the shows he had appeared in with a tribute on Twitter.

Broadcaster and author Gyles Brandreth said: "RIP Geoffrey Palmer - such a wonderful actor, such a lovely guy. Brilliant at his craft and just the best company: wickedly funny. He did everything he did so well. Thanks for all the happy memories Geoffrey: we'll cherish them as time goes by."

Comedian Marcus Brigstocke, who starred alongside Palmer in BBC One sitcom The Savages, remembered him as "the kindest, most brilliant man", while Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright said he was "brilliantly funny".

Comedian Eddie Izzard added: "Very sad to hear that Geoffrey Palmer has left us. I was very excited to meet him once and then had the honour to act with him in the film Lost Christmas. His work will stay with us and through that he can live on forever. Good work Sir. Rest in peace."

Actress Annette Badland said: "He was such a gifted actor and enormously good company. We worked together several times, laughed a lot and he was kind and generous. I am much saddened. Love to his family. Sleep well Mr Palmer."

Reece Shearsmith from The League of Gentlemen described him an "immaculate singular actor", singling out his performance in Butterflies.

Palmer appeared in four series of the Carla Lane sitcom, in which he played the stuffy husband of Wendy Craig's Ria.

Yet it was his partnership with Dench in As Time Goes By for which he will perhaps be best remembered.

The BBC sitcom, about two former lovers who meet unexpectedly and later marry, ran from 1992 to 2005.

In 2018 Dame Judi described her co-star as "the naughtiest man I ever had the pleasure to work with" as she gave him a prize at that year's Oldie Awards.

In Tomorrow Never Dies, released in 1997, Palmer's combative Admiral Roebuck sparred with Dame Judi's M, the head of the secret service.

Producers Michael G Wilson and Barbara Broccoli remembered the actor as "a much beloved star of TV and film and a treasured member of the Bond family".

'His face didn't change'

Palmer's distinctive voice made him a popular choice for narration, audiobooks and adverts.

He narrated the Grumpy Old Men series and introduced British viewers to "Vorsprung durch Technik" in adverts for Audi cars.

Actress Frances Barber remembered an occasion when he had queried a residuals payment he had received for the ubiquitous commercial.

"I just called my agent and said they've put too many 0's on the cheque," she recalled him saying. "After lunch he said 'Apparently they haven't'. His face didn't change."

In his later years Palmer was seen in Paddington, Parade's End and W.E, in which he was directed by pop star Madonna.

He was made an OBE in 2004 for services to drama.

Palmer, a keen fly fisherman, campaigned against the HS2 railway line, the proposed route of which ran close to his home in the Chilterns.

"Stop this vanity project and leave our countryside alone," he told then-PM David Cameron in a 2013 video filmed for the Daily Politics show.

"I am not grumpy," he once said of his distinctively jowly features. "I just look this way."

He is survived by his wife Sally Green, with whom he had a daughter and a son.

First published on bbc.com, November 6, 2020