Scootering

I'LL DO IT AND BE GOD FOREVER

It’s been 40 years since that film, you know… THAT one. Rik meets up with actor Gary Shail, to hear what's lined up.

- Words: Rik

Quadrophen­ia was arguably the largest influence to rekindle scooter interest. On August 25 Gary Shail (Spider) is holding a celebratio­n on Brighton pier to honour Quad 40 and Toyah, Leslie Ash, Trevor Laird, Gary Cooper and Gary Shail will unveil Brighton’s ‘Walk of Fame’. Gary’s told the cast that if they don’t turn up, then he’ll get the fans to tell them exactly

what they think… and then he’ll be God… forever! At some Quadrophen­ia events, fans are like big-game hunters, stalking their prey to get every signature, and then whack it on eBay, it being a barometer of fame. If your signature’s worth £80, you are fashionabl­e, but at £6.50… you’re not. At this moment, everything Quadrophen­ia is top dollar. It’s never been bigger, but I do emphasise, at this moment.

No… sleep… ’til Brighton!

Jason Edge of The Electric Stars introduced me to Gary and he spoke about the upcoming event. “People kept asking about the 40th and during a coffee with a mate I ended up here. From musician/actor to event manager overnight. I wanted somewhere iconic, hence, the pier. We’re not allowed on site ’til midnight, so we’ll build all night. No… sleep… ‘til Brighton! Last year it peed down, so we’ve a plan. It’s no hot-line to God, but it’s a plan. In reality, it’s a party. It just so happens to be the biggest party I’ve ever done.

“The music was the easy part. The Electric Stars, Who’s Next, The Highs and The Regents, all bands I can 100% rely on. I was a musician before acting, drumming at age 12. I’d do Friday, Saturday, Sunday, making £30 to £60, an amazing amount of money back then. Acting was accidental. I got detention and had to stand in the gym with the drama teacher on duty. He called me over… “Read this...” He’d adapted Tom Sawyer.

I played Tom and that was it, I was off to Arts Educationa­l School.

“My final year show was a Chekhov play, but I was a punk and I appeared with green hair. After the play, a woman introduced herself as an agent, inviting me to her office. I went to this plush office. There sat John Lydon (Johnny Rotten). He’d been fancied to play Jimmy. It was 1977, Punk was king. Next to Johnny was Toyah with crimson hair! Mark Wingett was a punk, too. He had a chain and padlock around his neck, he was right on it.

“I did the audition. I took my girlfriend Tammy with me. I met the director, Franc. He took one look and said, ‘I don’t think so’. The casting people mentioned my fighting skills. Franc said, ‘You don’t look hard enough’. I back-flipped, smacked him one, and got the job. As we left he told me to bring Tammy along. She’s in the film, too.

“Franc knew what he wanted… filming started with a script, but things changed, we’d just get notes about a scene. It would say something like: You’re talking about going to a party. You’ve just knocked on Chalkie’s door and his mum has answered. Then they’d shout ‘Action’ and we’d improvise, it was difficult to stop us. I’d love to see what got cut, but I think it’s all lost.

“We got to know each other really well. Franc would give us money, a driver and a pub. Sting was one of us and we went to see The Police at the Rock Garden. We were the only people there. We also had 1960s dance classes with Jeff Dexter, he told us what was mod. By now we’d become a gang. One day we were at the office of Bill Curbishley (film producer and band manager) to get the film’s promo T-shirt. We were allowed one each. Phil Davis noticed boxes of them in a back room. I went in and chucked a pile out of the window and Phil scurried about picking them up outside. Then Trevor went in and bunged another pile out. By the finish we left empty boxes. Why didn’t we keep one? Can you imagine what they’d be worth now?

I’d love to have Sting’s scooter

“The actual scooter training started on 250cc motorbikes (yes, 250s were ‘L’ plate legal). I’d been riding for ages, so I was on a 750. Insanely, they trained on motorbikes and THEN handed out scooters. Everyone stalled or fell off. With all the mirrors, it was like steering a ship. Trevor Laird (Ferdy) couldn’t ride anything. In one scene, Chalkie scoots around a bend and a load of bikers fall in behind him. Well, some idiot had parked a car on the blind bend. Phil turns the corner, pulls like mental avoiding the car, but causing a mass pile-up, bikes and scooters everywhere. We had to call 999 and the staff panicked. None of us had worn crash helmets; it’d invalidate the insurance, so out the back of a van they threw a load of helmets about before anyone turned up. Madness. I’d still love to own Sting’s Vespa, but I’d replace the seat with a huge piece of glass and use it as a dining room table.”

Quadrophen­ia was just a small British movie.

“People say Quadrophen­ia was the spearhead of mod revival. At the time it was a small British movie. Back then, VHS hadn’t even become mainstream. However, one of the proudest moments of my life was getting off a tube train, the doors opened and there was the film poster. I thought, ‘Oh my God. That is fame’.”

Limited tickets for the full-day event are still available from: www.quad40. co.uk

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 ?? Pics: Rik and supplied by Gary Shail ??
Pics: Rik and supplied by Gary Shail
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