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Bay City Rollers musical announces cast ahead of theatre run
Bay City Rollers musical announces cast ahead of theatre run

Scotsman

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

Bay City Rollers musical announces cast ahead of theatre run

The Bay City Rollers musical 'Rollers Forever' will take the stage at Glasgow's Pavilion Theatre, celebrating fans' enduring love for the band. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Rollers Forever focuses the story of two lifelong Bay City Rollers fans who reconnect on a Saturday night and relive their teenage obsession with the Rollers. It opens at Glasgow's Pavilion Theatre from on August 19 and runs until August 30. It stars Chiara Sparkes and Dani Heron as friends Susan and Jenny, and Chiara said that there is excitement in the air ahead of the show commencing its run. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad She said: 'It's exciting to have a show that people are so excited about coming to see. And it's sold so well already, that's quite rare. Going into a show already knowing there are so many fans and people that want it to be good, I think that's exciting.' Dani added: 'My mum absolutely loves them, and my aunties too. You don't realise how many songs they have. You know Shang-a-lang but then you look into it and you go 'I know that song, and that song.' 'I said to my mum and before I had accepted it she had bought tickets!' Alongside Chiara and Dani, Liam Harkins plays Susan's brother Alec, bringing his compelling stage presence following his performance as Celtic legend Tommy Burns. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Rollermania will take over the Pavilion this August | Wattie Cheung Chiara and Dani play best friends connected by their love of the Rollers as it took over the world, something that writer Danny McCahon was keen to bring into focus on the stage. He explained: Well, there's only been two manias really in Britain, Beatlemania and Rollermania. I remember the 70s, not as if it was 50 years ago, but as if it was maybe a decade ago. And I remembered so many people in my life being massive Bay City Roller fans. In fact, my wife is a massive Bay City Rollers fan. 'One of the things she brought into our marriage was three Bay City Rollers albums. So I knew about them, but when I started examining what made a Rollers fan so close to the band, I started realising we were all the same. No matter what band you were into in the 70s, the band that you followed is how you found your people.' Danny said the play will shine a spotlight on those relationships formed through bands. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He continued: 'Whatever band you're associating yourself with is how you find your people. And this play has turned out to be a sort of spotlight on how that friendship is enduring. Friendship and love can endure when it's kicked off with a shared interest like that.' John McLaughlin had been a lifelong Rollers fan, before becoming a member of the band when they reunited in 2015. Now he is a producer of Rollers Forever. He explained: 'It's incredible. I've seen it first hand. I've been a Bay City Rollers fan since I was a wee boy aged seven or eight. They were the first real band I had seen on the telly, and I saw the colour, the screaming girls on Top of the Pops, and then I saw an interview with them. They talked like me. 'So it really made a huge impression on me. I thought, 'Oh, this looks amazing. And they talk like me. This is amazing'. And then years later, full circle, I was lucky enough to put the reunion together with Les, Alan and Woody, and we took it all the way to the Hydro.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad And still flying the flag for the Rollers is Stuart 'Woody' Wood. The sole remaining member of the band from their 1970s heyday said that the musical is a chance for the Rollers fans to shine. He said: 'Back in 2015 and there were all these plans to do all this stuff, a movie and musical and reunion and it was great. The shows were sell outs. It was brilliant fun. John always wanted to do this musical, and we all stayed pals through the whole thing. We've written songs together, the title for the musical Rollers Forever is a song that we've written for it.' Bay City Rollers fans were known for their passion 'It's about the fans. It's not the story of the Bay City Rollers. It's just Bay City Rollers Music and the fans are telling their story.' The legacy of the Rollers has endured for more than five decades, Woody said that he feels lucky that their songs have stood the test of time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said: 'Those songs are still getting played someplace, whether it's their parents or their grandparents, the older radio stations, we had that top 20 last year, and just certain songs that just seem to stand the test of time. And we are lucky enough that a bunch of our songs are still doing that.' Tickets range from £25 - £39.50 and are available now here.

Stars of new stage show had to learn about the music by seventies Scots superstars the Bay City Rollers
Stars of new stage show had to learn about the music by seventies Scots superstars the Bay City Rollers

Scottish Sun

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Stars of new stage show had to learn about the music by seventies Scots superstars the Bay City Rollers

'I had no idea how big Rollermania had been. But when I told my mum I'd be working with Woody she nearly fainted' ROLLERMANIA Stars of new stage show had to learn about the music by seventies Scots superstars the Bay City Rollers BAY City Rollers legend Stuart 'Woody' Wood launched a musical about the seventies chart-toppers- with stage stars who had never heard of the seventies supergroup until they were cast in the show. The former pin-up joined actresses Chiara Sparkes, 28, and Dani Heron, 37, who will appear in Rollers Forever as die-hard fans of the tartan supergroup when it debuts at Glasgow's Pavilion Theatre next month. 4 Stuart "Woody" Wood outside The Glasgow Pavilion where Rollers Forever will debut in August 2025. 4 Actor Joe Gill, Chiara Sparkes, Dani Heron and playwright Danny McCahon with Woody in the Pavilion. 4 The classic Bay City Rollers from the 70s with Woody second from the right. But the pals admit the group's classic songs including Bye, Bye Baby, Saturday Night, and Shang-a-Lang that they'll perform on stage, were all new to them. Chiara from Glasgow, said: 'I had never heard of the Bay City Rollers, but it was funny because when I started singing the songs, I kind of knew them - I just didn't realise they had been by the Rollers.' Dani, from Paisley adds: 'I had no idea how big Rollermania had been. But when I told my mum I'd be working with Woody she nearly fainted.' Woody, 68, said: 'It's great that the story is being told through the eyes of the Bay City Rollers fans. It will be full of pure nostalgia, great songs and great fun and hopefully transport the fans back to the most incredible times.' One of those incredible times happened 50 years ago at a Radio One Roadshow at Mallory Park Race Circuit in Leicestershire descended into utter chaos when the Tartan boy band performed on an island only to see hundreds of their devotees try to swim across a lake to meet them. With local police losing control of the situation, quick thinking DJ Tony Blackburn leapt into a speedboat with someone dressed the Wombles character Uncle Bulgaria to pluck the stricken youngsters from the water. But Stuart insists the infamous day is even madder than that as Bay City Rollers frontman Les McKeown - who went on to have a battle with booze and drugs - had actually flown the chart-toppers to the event by private aircraft with his newly acquired pilot's licence. Stuart says: 'At the time it was just another day in the life of being a Roller. Every day was pandemonium. 'But what makes it stick in the memory is because Les was flying us that day. 'Les had just gained his pilot's licence and he flew us up to Mallory Park from a gig we'd been doing in Southampton. Original lead singer of The Bay City Rollers returns 50 years after fall out 'It was a small plane, one of these six seater jobs and we landed near the roadshow. Who knows how we got insurance for that - a rookie pilot in his early 20s flying the No1 group in the country. 'We then got the helicopter into Mallory Park and onto a boat to the island to be interviewed before we did the gig. 'I was only 18 at the time so it was all a laugh, although I certainly wouldn't have got into a plane with Les flying in his latter days - we'd have been the first band on the moon.' He added: 'We had our security guards with us as we got on this boat, but then the fans spotted us at the otherside of the water and you could see them running down the hills towards us. 'It was like something out of Braveheart because they were all charging at us while wearing tartan. 'They then leapt into the water and were scrambling towards our boat, which was tipping over. 'The police and security were really struggling and it was quite scary because so many girls were in the water. 'I wasn't worried about us, but the girls could have easily been tangled in the weeds and have come to harm. So I was concerned for them.' Rollers Forever, featuring the songs of the legendary Bay City Rollers - opened at the Pavilion Theatre, Glasgow from August 19–30.

Bay City Rollers star talks about new Pavilion musical in Glasgow
Bay City Rollers star talks about new Pavilion musical in Glasgow

Glasgow Times

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Glasgow Times

Bay City Rollers star talks about new Pavilion musical in Glasgow

'The theatre is just across the road from where Glasgow's most famous music venue, the Apollo, once stood,' says Woody, with a smile. 'We played the Apollo three times, and I have so many good memories of the place and the city.' The Bay City Rollers – tartan-clad, generation-defining teen idols - had nine top 10 hits between 1974 and 1976, have sold 300 million albums worldwide and (with a few line-up changes along the way) are still touring. Bay City Rollers fans outside the Apollo in Glasgow in 1973 (Image: Newsquest) During their heyday, Rollermania swept the nation, and the band's fans were well-known for their enthusiasm in greeting their heroes wherever they performed. Glasgow was no exception, says Woody, who has been part of the band since the 70s. 'We had to get shipped in, round the back of the Apollo, in this big white van with no windows,' he recalls, with a laugh. 'We never saw the fans outside, but we heard them. And on stage, seeing their faces, the sheer delight – it was quite something.' (Image: Gordon Terris/Newsquest) He adds: 'The nicest part of being in the Bay City Rollers is the fans. They are very loyal, very loud – some of them have been with us since the beginning and are in their 60s and 70s now. And what's really magical is they're bringing their kids and their grandkids, who have grown up listening to our music.' Joe Gill, Chiara Sparkes, Stuart 'Woody' Wood, Dani Heron and writer Danny McCahon (Image: Gordon Terris/Newsquest) Rollers Forever, which runs from August 19 to 30 at the Pavilion Theatre, stars Dani Heron and Chiara Sparkes as Jenny and Susan, two lifelong fans who reconnect one Saturday night and relive their teenage obsession with their favourite band. Written by award-winning playwright Danny McCahon and directed by acclaimed theatre-maker Liz Carruthers, the production marks the 50th anniversary of the Bay City Rollers' first number one hit, Bye Bye Baby, in 1975. Woody, who recently published his memoir, Mania, is the show's 'artistic consultant' and he says it has been a fantastic experience. 'It's great that the story is being seen through the eyes of the amazing BCR fans … it's their turn to shine,' he explains. 'I'm really chuffed to be involved – it's all about the songs, and these songs have stood the test of time. 'If you'd have told us 50 years ago that our songs would still be being played on the radio, and in theatres, and that we'd still be touring – well, we'd have been very surprised.' Cast members Joe Gill, Chiara Sparkes and Dani Heron with Stuart 'Woody' Wood (Image: Gordon Terris/Newsquest) He adds, smiling: 'It's a great feeling, to know that even when us lot are no longer here, something of us will still be going strong.' Despite growing up in Edinburgh – he now lives just outside the city with his wife Denise and their labradoodle Elvis - Woody has close links with Glasgow and the west of Scotland. His mum is from Clydebank, and he remembers childhood visits to the city at Christmas time. 'She'd take us to George Square to see the lights, it was lovely,' he recalls. He grew up 'surrounded by music', he says. 'My family had a piano in the house and my mum used to wake us up by singing opera,' he grins. 'Pals at school wanted to be in a band, so I thought, why not? I couldn't play guitar, I played trumpet and clarinet back then, I was a real jazz fiend. 'But at 15, I got into pop music and it all just happened from there. I just loved hanging about playing music with my friends. And that has never really changed.' It's the best reason for being in a band, Woody points out. 'If you're doing it for the fame or the money or because you want hits then you'll come a cropper,' he says. 'You've got to do it because you have a passion for it – and I still do.' He pauses. 'The day I no longer have that is the day I retire.'

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