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Plaque commemorates David Bowie's night in Stockport station after missing last train
Plaque commemorates David Bowie's night in Stockport station after missing last train

ITV News

time27-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • ITV News

Plaque commemorates David Bowie's night in Stockport station after missing last train

"He was really nice": Bill Frost was one of the sixth formers who booked Bowie to play that night in 1970. A plaque commemorating the time David Bowie spent the night in a station after missing his train has been unveiled. The late pop icon slept on the platform at Stockport train station after performing a sell-out gig at the Poco A Poco club in Heaton Chapel on 27 April 1970. A black plaque in the shape of a vinyl record has been unveiled outside the station by a group of friends, now in their 70s, who booked Bowie as sixth-formers to play. "He arrived in a second hand RAF jacket with his guitar over his shoulder and he was really nice," said Bill Frost, who was chairman of Stockport Schools' Students' Union at the time. "He was hungry and thirsty so one of my friends took him for a pint and another took him across the road for some tea. When he came back, he had a pork pie in one hand and an egg custard in the other!" Bowie, the Ziggy Stardust singer who died of cancer in 2016 at the age of 69, ended up missing his last train to London after the gig. "He said to me that he wanted to leave early to get the train but everybody ran way over and he was so good that he couldn't get off the stage," Bill reminisced. Now, that memorable night 55 years ago has been cemented in the northern town's history with a Stockport Music Story commemorative plaque. It is the 10th one to be installed in Stockport, a town that has produced several famous recording studios and artists like Sarah Harding of Girls Aloud and indie band Blossoms. John Barratt of the Stockport Music Story said this latest plaque was "very special" as he is a "lifelong Bowie fan". Bill added: "We know about this because we were there. But what John has done is put Stockport on the map after so many years. It's a great place to live and we're part of that history." Listen to the ITV News' entertainment podcast, Unscripted.

Why David Bowie slept on platform at Stockport train station
Why David Bowie slept on platform at Stockport train station

BBC News

time27-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Why David Bowie slept on platform at Stockport train station

As commuters pass through Stockport railway station, many of them will not ever realise that they could be waiting for a train on a platform with a claim to fame like no is because 55 years earlier, it was graced by none other than singer David five star hotels, the Ziggy Stardust performer spent the entire night under the stars (sort of) in Greater a plaque is being unveiled to commemorate the exact moment Bowie missed his last train home after a sell-out at the Poco A Poco club in Heaton Chapel on 27 April the trio who booked David Bowie for a gig as sixth-formers have been reminiscing on the "incredible" Acton, 72, admits she had never heard of Bowie when the Stockport Schools Student Union (SSU) booked him, while Bill Frost recalled being called out of class when Bowie's agent called the school office to rearrange the gig. Ms Acton said of the artist, who went on to global success with hits including Let's Dance, Changes, Space Oddity, Starman, Modern Love, Heroes, Under Pressure, Rebel Rebel and Life on Mars, "To be quite honest I didn't know who David Bowie was. "That sounds incredible but I hadn't got a clue who he was and the boys said we'll book him." Ms Acton added she soon became a fan of the singer, though."He was drop-dead gorgeous," she Frost, the chairman of the SSU at the time, knew all too well Bowie was on the verge of stardom, though."It was an amazing do," the 73-year-old told BBC North West Tonight. "It was incredible."I remember sitting at the back thinking 'good grief we've put David Bowie on in a concert'."Mr Frost recalls Bowie costing "about £120" to book at the time and remembers leaving class to speak to Bowie's agent. "One of the school secretaries came and knocked on the door and said 'there's somebody on the phone for you, something to do with David Bowie'."It was David Bowie's agent asking us if we could we change the date of the concert because they could not come up to Stockport on that day." Mike McCormack said: "It just all went by us and then in later life and David Bowie became massive."The 72-year-old said people are amazed when he tells them he was part of putting a Bowie concert on. It often leads to handshakes - and sometimes a Acton said it was "great times"."We had no fear. We just thought we could do anything and we did."It was a fantastic time," she added. Bowie, who died in 2016 aged 69, ended up missing his last train to London after the gig famous night in 1970 is being marked at the station with a Stockport Music Story commemorative plaque, the tenth one in the town. John Barratt of the Stockport Music Story said this latest plaque was "very special because I'm a lifelong David Bowie fan". "He was recording The Man Who Sold the World album during the time he came up for the gig and that album and then obviously Ziggy Stardust just launched him as a global superstar," he said."The fact that he was booked by a group for Stockport teenagers on his rise to fame I think deserves commemorating." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.

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