The Daily Telegraph

Tony Hawks: my charity single for the Telegraph’s Appeal

The comedian behind Eighties hit ‘Stutter Rap’ tells Guy Kelly why he’s proud his ditty is supporting our coronaviru­s appeal

-

Join Tony HAWKS, Stephen FRY,

Jo BRAND, Rob BRYDON & more to help those hardest hit

RICHARD MADELEY

Every great charity appeal needs a soundtrack. Comic Relief and Children in Need always have singles to go with their fundraisin­g nights. The anti-poverty efforts in the Eighties and the 2000s had Band Aid – as did the Ebola appeal, six years ago.

And so it seems only right that the coronaviru­s pandemic has its own theme tune, too.

It would need to be something catchy. It would need to reflect the extraordin­ary and often quite bizarre circumstan­ces we’re living in. It would need to be a bit of a laugh, because we could all do with one. And, ideally, it might benefit from having a little star power behind it, if only to nudge it into the public consciousn­ess a little.

Enter comedian and writer Tony Hawks, who has come up with just the thing.

“I’m quite good at generating things to do when nothing much is happening,” he says. “As a freelance performer, I’m kind of used to it.”

For Hawks, this spring was supposed to be business as usual: a mix of theatre work and live shows, recording radio comedy panel shows such as I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue and Just A Minute, and writing. When all that was put on hold, he had some spare time to idle around in his Devon home, thinking.

‘If there’s one positive we can take it’s that we’re all in this together’

Early last week, Hawks was doing just that, specifical­ly fiddling around making silly songs at the piano – a lifelong habit that led to a number 4 in the UK singles chart in 1988 for his band Morris Minor and the Majors, with the Beastie Boys parody “Stutter Rap (No Sleep til Bedtime)”.

He had heard the word “lockdown” thrown around a lot in the news and on social media lately, and so a nifty refrain came into his head. A few observatio­ns about our new, limited existence – such as enlivening a walk to the post office by trying it in shorts – became the basis for some wry verses. A bit of a drumbeat was added; a splash of synths. Within a few hours, he’d recorded a full song.

“Pretty much immediatel­y after I’d finished it, an email came in explaining the Telegraph Coronaviru­s Appeal, and it’s something I’d been thinking about – that this will be so much harder for lots of people, and if there’s one positive we can take it’s that we’re all in this together, trying to help each other in whatever way we can. So I wondered if the song might help.”

Hawks’s song, Lockdown, is out now, with proceeds going to the Telegraph Coronaviru­s Appeal. Thanks to our readers’ extraordin­ary generosity, more than £730,000 has

now been raised for Turn2us, a charity providing emergency grants for people in the UK who have been hardest hit financiall­y by the Covid-19 crisis, and hopefully now far more can be raised with the extra awareness his song creates.

There’s an unmissable, viral-ready video, too (see panel, right, for details of where you can view it). When Hawks decided to release the song online, he also opened his black book. After more than 30 years in comedy, he knows dozens of household names, so he sent them one simple request: could they film themselves looking as bored as possible for five or so seconds?

It turned out that the great and good of television and radio comedy (plus a few miscellane­ous others) could just about spare the time. The resulting 3-minute video for “Lockdown” – available to watch online now – is a golden compilatio­n of lethargy: famous faces from all industries showing they’re just as fed up with quarantine as the rest of us.

A rugby-shirted Stephen Fry’s there, silk dressing gown hanging up behind him, looking weary in his bedroom. Rob Brydon has nothing to do but sigh in his extraordin­arily clean kitchen. Sandi Toksvig knits, with her woolly (possibly knitted?) dog at her feet. Youtuber Tanya Burr, who knows a thing or two about making videos in her own home, triumphant­ly finishes a jigsaw puzzle. Campaigner and Strictly star Katie Piper lifts weights in her conservato­ry. Broadcaste­r Richard Madeley looks suspicious­ly tanned, as ever. Somebody may need to check on Sir Tim Rice, who appears stuck on his stairs.

Then – between clips of Hawks singing in the Devon countrysid­e around his home – there’s Jack Dee, David Coulthard, opera star Danielle de Niese, Alexander Armstrong, David Baddiel and a host of other celebritie­s in on the fun. They’re all in lockdown, and clearly all game for a laugh in the name of charity.

Hawks, who will admit that he is over 50 but doesn’t “like age as a concept” so you’ll have to guess based on the photograph­s, never considered making the song serious. In the early Eighties, he started his career as a singer-songwriter, but “at times like this, I think people need something light. It’s just a bit like someone going: ‘Right, I’ve been to Sainsbury’s – what now?’ Which is something we have all felt, at some point or another. It’s just a gentle, fun thing, and I hope kids like it, too.”

Gentle comedy is clearly something people have an appetite for. The most successful viral videos of the lockdown period, such as the Marsh family’s Les Misérables spoof or US singer Chris

Mann’s parody of Adele’s “Hello” (“Hello… from the inside…”), tend to have poked fun at our temporary confinemen­t. On the other hand, Wonder Woman star Gal Gadot’s hyper-earnest Hollywood all-star version of John Lennon’s “Imagine”, compiled by celebritie­s in their huge mansion complexes, was widely derided as awful, because it was.

“It’s nice that people can be creative and do stuff at the moment, but ‘Lockdown’ isn’t earnest or soppy, because that doesn’t seem right. I can’t stand that, the thing about ‘We all need to be seen to be caring’ – that American showbiz thing, sitting in mansions somewhere. Mine is just a bloke with nothing to do. Simple as that.”

A “bloke with nothing to do” is exactly what Hawks is at the moment. He has a seven-year-old son, Arlo, who lives nearby with his ex-partner, but otherwise he lives alone and, like many of us, is twiddling his thumbs.

“I’m coping all right, but some people are really re-evaluating everything, aren’t they? Spending more time with their kids, thinking again, going, ‘What is life?’ I’ve actually got a bit less time than I had, as my son isn’t in school, but it’s nice, we’re getting used to it, and we really are all in it together.”

He’s up for giving a live-streamed performanc­e if there’s appetite for it, may consider doing a follow-up song (“Let’s hope Bob Geldof doesn’t do one…”), and would like a series of videos for ‘Lockdown’, featuring everyone from politician­s (“Imagine Jacob Rees-mogg!”) to newsreader­s stuck with nothing to do.

“What I’d really like is a load of serious, big actors at home bored. Something about that is really funny to me. But we’ll see. I think we have plenty of time for ideas…”

For a man who professes to be mindlessly bored, Hawks’s productivi­ty is putting us all to shame. Let history record it: Shakespear­e wrote King Lear in quarantine. Newton discovered gravity. And Tony Hawks, in the great pandemic of 2020, penned ‘Lockdown’, a charity single, in just a day.

Now it’s our job to spread the song far and wide, to raise money for those who so desperatel­y need it, and to find reasons to smile and help one another in this time of crisis. If we can do that, as the song goes, “it’ll be September before you know it”.

‘It’s just a gentle, fun thing, and I hope kids like it, too’

 ??  ?? To make a donation please visit telegraph.co.uk/appeal or call 0151 284 1927,
To make a donation please visit telegraph.co.uk/appeal or call 0151 284 1927,
 ??  ?? JACK DEE
JACK DEE
 ??  ?? KATHY LETTE
KATHY LETTE
 ??  ?? SANDI TOKSVIG
SANDI TOKSVIG
 ??  ?? TONY HAWKS
TONY HAWKS
 ??  ?? BEN FOGLE
BEN FOGLE
 ??  ?? ALISTAIR MCGOWAN
ALISTAIR MCGOWAN
 ??  ?? STEPHEN FRY
STEPHEN FRY
 ??  ?? ALICE ROBERTS
ALICE ROBERTS
 ??  ?? KATIE PIPER
KATIE PIPER
 ??  ?? ROB BRYDON
ROB BRYDON
 ??  ?? ALEXANDER ARMSTRONG
ALEXANDER ARMSTRONG
 ??  ?? ADAM HILLS
ADAM HILLS
 ??  ?? GYLES BRANDRETH
GYLES BRANDRETH
 ??  ?? WILL GREENWOOD
WILL GREENWOOD
 ??  ?? TIM RICE
TIM RICE
 ??  ?? DAVID BADDIEL
DAVID BADDIEL
 ??  ?? HELEN LEDERER
HELEN LEDERER
 ??  ?? BEN MILLER
BEN MILLER
 ??  ?? JO BRAND
JO BRAND
 ??  ?? TANYA BURR
TANYA BURR
 ??  ?? TOM ALLEN
TOM ALLEN
 ??  ?? DANIELLE DE NIESE
DANIELLE DE NIESE
 ??  ?? DAVID COULTHARD
DAVID COULTHARD
 ??  ?? King of the silly song: Hawks is putting his talents to good use
King of the silly song: Hawks is putting his talents to good use

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom