The Chronicle

‘TIS THE SEASON TO BE OLLY...

ALEX GREEN SPEAKS TO ACTOR AND SINGER OLLY ALEXANDER AS HE PREPARES TO RELEASE HIS FIRST YEARS & YEARS ALBUM AS A SOLO ARTIST

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IT’S been a wild year for Olly Alexander. January saw the 31-year-old appear in Channel 4’s drama about the Aids crisis, It’s A Sin, and transcend his pop star status to become a household name.

Then in March he announced he had parted ways with his Years & Years bandmates Mikey Goldsworth­y and Emre Turkmen but would continue as a solo project.

Now he is gearing up to release his first album as a bona fide solo artist – a personal collection of songs that are a definite departure from his previous work.

“It’s fun to talk about this album,” he reflects over the phone from his London home, sipping on his morning coffee.

“Because it was really my escape during lockdown. It’s a project I’ve been working on for like three years – and it took way longer than I thought it would.

“So the fact that it is coming out, it has reached the finish line, and I feel happy with it, it’s definitely nice to focus on that happening.”

It’s been a journey for the actor and singer, who was born in North Yorkshire and attended school in Gloucester­shire and Wales.

Five years after Years & Years formed in London, Olly got his first true taste of fame when their synthpop-esque single King went to number one in the UK – and entered the top 10 all around Europe. Suddenly they were headlining festivals and Olly, who is gay, had become a spokespers­on for the LGBT community.

But Olly notices a different kind of attention now, following his starring role as Ritchie Tozer in the Russell T Davies-created It’s A Sin, which chronicled the lives of a group of gay friends living in London during the 1980s Aids crisis.

“It was a surreal experience because I don’t think anything can prepare you for the first time you feel like you’re becoming famous,” he explains. “I thought I had experience­d what that felt like in 2015, when King went to number one and Years & Years took off. But then, after It’s A Sin, it did feel like this whole new experience.

“I was like, ‘Wow, this is a bit next level’, because people really felt connected to that show, so it was quite overwhelmi­ng.

“Off the back of the pandemic and everything feeling like we live inside a dystopian reality, it was quite strange. I can’t believe this year is nearly over. It’s been quite the roller-coaster.”

With his album finally finished,

Olly is pleased to be talking about music again. Night Call, which is due for release in January, is not a radical departure from the Years & Years sound, but it is adventurou­s enough to please old fans and win over new ones as well.

The influence of French house (think Daft Punk, Stardust and Cassius), Pet Shop Boys, George Michael and classic disco runs deep.

“I had come off the back of making It’s A Sin and really immersing myself in 80s music,” he recalls.

“An incredible era for music. So much of it really captured the spirit of liberation on the dance floor, the euphoria despite the pain, and how that narrative took on so many different perspectiv­es and was so relevant to that time with people suffering with HIV and Aids.”

Night Call charts Olly’s own sexual history as a gay man and looks at how lockdown has changed how we think about intimacy.

“That ever-evolving part of my identity,” he says.

While Olly has found a new creative freedom in the studio, he is keen to stress his relationsh­ip with his former bandmates remains friendly. Mikey will still play live with Years & Years, while Emre will focus on his solo work as a writer and producer.

A guiding figure of the last 12 months has been one Sir Elton John, who reached out to Olly following the success of It’s A Sin. The pair later delivered an emotional version of the Pet Shop Boys track that inspired the programme’s name at the Brit Awards.

A single of the track was released to raise money for the Elton John Aids Foundation, and Sir Elton’s husband David Furnish appeared before the performanc­e to highlight its work.

“It meant a lot to him, having lived through that period,” Olly offers. “So I got a phone call from him one day.

“I can’t even describe what it’s like when Elton John calls you and his voice is coming down the phone. You’re like, ‘Oh s***’.”

“He’s so passionate about music still, and he gets such a kick out of collaborat­ing with other artists. He’s so good at lifting up other artists and to be around him, he is like a little kid, he gets so excited about new music.

“I was like, ‘Wow, it’s amazing to see another part of this legend that I’ve grown up with’.

“It’s a very humbling experience because he’s been through so much and done so much.”

After his roller-coaster of a year, Olly plans to focus on his music in 2022.

But he hasn’t ruled out a return to the screen entirely.

“I don’t have any plans to do any acting in the near future,” he says.

“If something came along that was amazing I would try and do it. But I don’t know. I would quite like to develop something myself.”

 ?? ?? Olly Alexander is excited to be talking about his new music
Olly Alexander is excited to be talking about his new music
 ?? ?? ■ Night Call by Years & Years is released on January 7
■ Night Call by Years & Years is released on January 7
 ?? ?? Olly with his co-stars from Channel 4 drama
It’s A Sin
Olly with his co-stars from Channel 4 drama It’s A Sin
 ?? ?? Olly with Sir Elton John at the BRIT Awards
Olly with Sir Elton John at the BRIT Awards

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