Sunday, October 22, 2023

PRESS UP DATE : BEHIND THE SHOULDER PADS TOUR REVIEW .. THEATRE ROYAL BRIGHTON ..

 

Review : Joan Collins ‘Behind The Shoulder Pads’ at Theatre Royal



To coincide with the release of her much-anticipated memoir ‘Behind the Shoulder Pads’, global superstar Dame Joan Collins has embarked on a brand new tour for 2023 and Saturday 21st October she ‘landed’ in Brighton for the penultimate show.
Featuring seldom told tales, enchanting anecdotes, and rare and fascinating footage from her seven decades in show business, the evening will be full of the usual wit, candour, and of course glamour that we have come to expect from this British born Hollywood legend. As an award-winning actress, author, producer, humanitarian and entrepreneur, Dame Joan Collins’ career places her in the unrivalled ranks of an international icon.

 The stage was set with two high back white armchairs with a small table between and three screens at the rear of the stage showed stills, professional and home movie clip from Dame Jones’ remarkable life.

I can honestly say that I’ve not been at a theatre show where at the star’s entry, resplendent in a long golden dress, on the arm of her husband Percy Gibson, the whole audience exploded in to cheering and applause.  It nearly lifted that roof off the Theatre Royal which, bearing in mind the frail state of the building, was slightly concerning!

Her husband, Percy Gibson, was by her side, interviewing her which was a very nice touch and he held his own well with immense humour, candour and charm.  It was also touching the way that he ensured that she was comfortable at all times.

We were regaled with stories from across her life, family and career including the birth of her sister Jackie, about which she was distinctly non-plussed at the time.

We whipped through RADA, her father not being impressed with his daughter being an actor, work in UK theatre and film before Hollywood came knocking and stole ‘our Joanie’ away for decades.


Her stories from her life as a starlet were, for me, the highlight of the first act as we hung on every charming, humorous and sometimes heart tugging word. This was where she grew, through experience, into the strong independent woman who took on the film, TV and publishing establishment and won.

After the interval with our star , in black, silver and sequins, the tables were turned and it was, us, the audience who asked the questions. Too many subjects to cover here but we found out why Tony Curtis was nicknamed Toxic, what Laurence Harvey was like in ‘real life’ and a myriad of others. The night ended with the answer to which decade she’d like to go back – the 80s “as long as I could take Percy with me”.

Although on The Graham Norton Show the night previously where she mentioned how tiring touring was it seems as though she does enjoy it and Brighton certainly did.


PRESS UPDATE : BEHIND THE SHOULDER PADS .. REVIEW : THE HAWTH CRAWLEY ..

 

Dame Joan Collins: Behind the Shoulder Pads | The Hawth Crawley | Review



To coincide with the release of her new memoir “Behind the Shoulder Pads” the award winning iconic star of stage and screen Dame Joan Collins alongside husband Percy Gibson, has embarked on a brand new tour.  She talks about her glittering career in film and stage, regaling the audience with anecdotes and stories of her life, alongside fascinating footage of her seven decades in showbusiness.

Dame Joan entered the stage on the arm of her enigmatic husband Percy Gibson, glamorous as always in a sparkling red sequin dress, a woman of many talents – we later learnt that she had designed the dress herself.  Percy led the show, directing questions towards his wife, which she answered with wit and charm.  Entertaining the audience with dozens of stories, starting from her childhood, and her birth into a showbusiness family, and talking about her late sister Jackie.  She then moved on to how she started in showbusiness, firstly by attending RADA and then films in the UK before being “bought” by Hollywood.  Regaling us with tales of life as a young starlet, the famous actors she met and worked with, some of whom became good friends, including Paul Newman, Marlon Brando and Gene Kelly.  She really brought to life a golden era in Hollywood through her narrative alongside film and photographs of those times. Of course, for this writer, the most memorable being her time spent in Dynasty, and a period of time that she particularly loved and talked about with fondness, of her time on the show and the people she worked with. 


 

The second half of the show, in which she appeared in another sparkling gown, this time black sequins, was dedicated to audience questions.  These included, her favourite decade (the 80’s), a day in her life she would relive again (her marriage to Percy), and numerous other questions before finishing off with a question praising her fabulousness and how she remained so glamorous and beautiful (it’s in the genes darling!).  All in all it was a wonderful intimate evening celebrating an iconic star, I loved the gentle humorous interaction between Dame Joan and Percy, and I left the show having enjoyed it tremendously.

Reviewer: Gill Burke

Friday, October 20, 2023

TV ALERT : THE GRAHAM NORTON SHOW BBC 1 10:40PM .. OCTOBER 20TH 2023 ..




Tune into BBC1 tonight at 10:40pm when Joan will join Graham Norton on the sofa along with Patrick Stewart & Ralph Fiennes.. Viewers in Ireland can catch the show at 11pm on Saturday Oct 21st..  You can watch a clip from the show below!

Monday, October 9, 2023

PRESS UPDATE : SUSSEX LIFE ... SEPTEMBER 2023 ..

 


Joan Collins: ‘Glamorous? I didn’t think I was good looking!’

Exclusive by Karen Pasquali Jones
She’s been married five times but insists she’s a romantic. She’s starred as the glamorous leading lady in some of Hollywood’s finest movies and the world's smash hit TV shows though she thinks she’s not particularly good looking. She’s hilarious, witty and popular and yet she claims to be shy. Meet Dame Joan Collins, who has to wear prosthetics to look old, and says her biggest achievement is her family.


Sussex Life: You’re coming to Sussex to do your new show, Behind the Shoulder Pads. What can we expect from it? Are there any shocks or scandal?

Joan Collins: Shocks and scandals? Honestly, what kind of life do you think I’ve led?

SL: Do you come to Sussex often? What are your favourite things to do here?

Joan: My family has a long connection with Brighton. My grandmother and all my aunts lived there, and we used to go often when I was a child. My cousin still lives there. I love the south of England. I have a good friend who lives in Hastings. Sussex is a beautiful county.


SL: You’re one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood cinema – what lasting memories do you have of that time? Any goals still to achieve?

Joan: I came to Hollywood at the end of the Golden Age when the gilt was beginning to tarnish. I wish I’d had a camera then and was more dedicated about taking photos of my time because it really was magical. You could walk down the streets of Beverly Hills and see mega stars such as Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly walking around.

As Bob Hope said when asked if he had goals left to achieve…keep breathing. Joking aside, I am looking forward to shooting a new movie about the Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor’s life after the Duke of Windsor died. It’s a fascinating story.

SL: Which is the one role you wanted but went to someone else?

Joan: That’s a great question. I was eager to play the role of Clara in Sons And Lovers but the producer who I had to meet made some unwelcome advances on me, which I refused. This was made worse by my boyfriend of the time, who told me the script was awful and I should turn it down because he wanted me to be with him while he was shooting in England. I reluctantly abandoned the project and my replacement, Mary Ure, won an Oscar for it!

SL: During your career, you have won multiple accolades for your talent including a Golden Globe Award (Best Actress, Dynasty) , and a People's Choice Awards (also for Dynasty, 1985). Where do you keep them? Which one meant the most?

Joan: They’re in my flat in LA which seems fitting. They all mean a lot to me, obviously, as it’s always nice to be recognised. In my acceptance speech for my Golden Globe in 1983 I said that the last time I had won was in 1957 for Promising Young Newcomer and that it had taken me a while but I finally got there!

SL: You were made a Dame in 2015 by the late Queen Elizabeth II for your charity work with children. Can you tell us more about the work and meeting the Queen.

Joan: One of my fondest memories meeting the Queen took place at Buckingham Palace in 2014. I was invited to see a performance of George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion given by RADA students (and some notable graduates_ to mark the 60 years of the monarch’s patronage of the drama school.

After the show the Queen walked around the room greeting and chatting to her many celebrity guests. She was holding a glass in her hand but whether it was wine or water I didn’t dare ask. When she came to me, she mentioned having bestowed my OBE, which I told her was perhaps the biggest highlight of my life after giving birth to my children, and we talked about the show. She was incredibly knowledgeable about the play and its adaption to My Fair Lady in the 1950s.

SL: Starring as Alexis Colby in Dynasty from 1981 – 1989 made you an even bigger international superstar. Did you love playing that character? Are you anything like her in real life?

Joan: Yes, I loved Alexis. I think it’s because I really connected on a gut level with the character. She was strong and tough and sometimes nasty and ruthless but only in business, because that’s how you have to be in business. I did not share that trait, but I knew plenty of producers that were exactly the same, so I took a blueprint off them. Where I connected was that what she did, she did in the best interests of her family. Similarly, I would do anything for the wellbeing of my children. I imbued Alexis with that rationale. I think people saw that and respected it, and I guess the haute couture and the humour didn’t hurt!

SL: What’s been the biggest achievement of your life?

Joan: As I said, I think having my children was my biggest achievement. They have all grown to be wise, dependent, and resilient. Given I was a single mother and sole breadwinner for much of the time I think that’s fairly significant.

SL: If you could tell your younger self any advice what would it be?

Joan: I underestimated myself so much. I had no self-esteem, I didn’t even think I was particularly good looking. I would plaster myself in pan stick make up. Both Jackie and I were brought up to think that we weren’t anything remarkable. The advice I would give my younger self would be: ‘You are something special.’

SL: You always look immaculate – how long does it take you to get ready and is it boring having to be beautiful and polished all the time?

Joan: 45 minutes if I’m doing the red carpet and 15 if I’m not. What’s boring about it? I love the paint and the dressing up box. I like looking good – it makes me feel good. There’s a reason we call it Dr Slap in my profession – theatricals call make up ‘slap’ because you ‘slap it on’. If you’re feeling under the weather, there’s nothing like make up and pulling your socks up to make you feel better.

SL: You’ve been married five times – the latest for 21 years to Percy Gibson. Are you a romantic?

Joan: The famous writer AA Gill said that my last marriage was ‘an exercise of optimism over experience.’ Well after 21 years of blissful wedlock, I say chock one up for the optimists and the romantics. ‘When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.’

SL: You starred in The Opposite Sex, where you said in your My Unapologetic Diaries that you sat in the hair and make-up room with Liz Taylor, Grace Kelly and Ava Gardner and were so shy you couldn’t speak. Were you very different then as you always seem so confident and charismatic. What made you change?

Joan: I once read an article by Woody Allen about his shyness. I saw him at a party not long after and went up to him to express how much I identified with it as, I myself, am a shy person. He looked down the extremely low-cut dress I was wearing and replied: ‘I wouldn’t have guessed’ and scuttled away.

SL: You detail a lot of times when you crash diet and lose 8lbs in a week or exist on broccoli to make sure you look your best for events and parts. How demanding on your body and mental health was your career? Can you eat what you want now?

Joan: I never dieted or ate for the sake of my career, but rather for the sake of my health and wellbeing. But there are times when you have to keep an extra keen eye on the lbs, as was the case for us in Dynasty. We had a strict unwritten code that came down from management about keeping slim, so we had one catering for the crew that was full of donuts and cakes and potato chips and one for the cast that was carrots and celery and cucumber slices. How times have changed.

SL: You had to wear prosthetics to look old in the film Gerry even though you were 85 – how did that make you feel? What’s the secret to your youthful looks?

Joan: I know! I was rather pleasantly surprised that they had to make me look old. Largely, I chalk it up to good genes. My father and sister all had the youthful look and so does my brother. But also, to a life lived with moderation. If you’re lucky enough to be given a rolls Royce, you have to maintain it after all.

SL: Does it upset you when people insist you must have had plastic surgery? If you had decided to have it, what would you have had done?

Joan: No, it doesn’t upset me. Sticks and stone. And the idea of going under sedation is anathema to me.

SL: What’s the average day for Joan Collins – run us through what you get up to?

Joan: My day is as average as you get. I love waking up in the morning and my husband usually brings me a cup of coffee as he’s a much earlier riser. I read all the papers – I’m a voracious newshound and then I get to work. If we’re not out in the evening, there’s nothing I love more than dinner on trays with a fabulous movie on TV.

SL: You’ve seemingly met everyone who’s anyone – who was your favourite celebrity and the worst?

Joan: I loved Paul Newman. He and I, and his wife Joanne Woodward became very good friends and they lobbied for me to be in their movie Rally round the Flag Boys. They were the only ones in the business, apart from my sister Jackie, who have ever helped me along my career.

Tony Curtis was a dreadful misogynist. He once called me the ‘C’ word in front of the whole crew just because I wanted to walk back to the set instead of getting a ride with him on a terribly dangerous truck.

SL: What is the worst thing that has ever happened to you?

Joan: My daughter Katy’s accident when she was eight. I was in Paris working any my husband had come with me even though we had discussed him staying behind to look after her. She was staying with a friend and they were playing in their back garden in their country house when she strayed onto the road, chasing each other, and got hit by a car. Katy’s friend broke her leg but my daughter sustained a head injury and was in a coma for eight weeks. She had to learn everything again – how to walk, talk, write… It was the most challenging and heartbreaking period of my life.

SL: What is the worst thing that could happen to you?

Joan: I don’t think anything could be worse than losing one of your children.

SL: How do you want to be remembered?

Joan: That I entertained and gave people pleasure.

SL: What’s next?

Joan: Coming to Sussex!

Dame Joan Collins will perform Behind The Shoulderpads at Theatre Royal Brighton on October 21, 2023 at 7.45pm. Alongside her husband, Percy Gibson, the actress will have an intimate chat with the audience, share seldom told tales, enchanting anecdotes, and show rare and fascinating footage from her seven decades in showbusiness. Tickets start from £25 atgtickets.com









Saturday, October 7, 2023

PRESS UPDATE : BRIGHTON AND HOVE NEWS ... OCTOBER 7TH 2023 ..

 


Dame Joan Collins in Brighton – The Interview....


To coincide with the release of her much-anticipated memoir Behind the Shoulder Pads, global superstar Dame Joan Collins is embarking on a brand new tour for 2023. She comes to the Theatre Royal, Brighton, on Saturday 21 October.

With her husband Percy Gibson by her side, they will field your questions, giving audiences the opportunity to have an intimate chat with the world famous actress.

Featuring seldom-told tales, enchanting anecdotes and rare and fascinating footage from her seven decades in show business, the evening will be full of the usual wit, candour and of course glamour that we have come to expect from this British-born Hollywood legend.

As an award-winning actress, author, producer, humanitarian and entrepreneur, Dame Joan Collins’ career plBook your tickets now to avoid missing out.

https://www.atgtickets.com/shows/dame-joan-collins-behind-the-shoulder-pads/theatre-royal-brighton/tickets/9FAA8A55-1358-40A1-830E-2DEFEA459E2F

Brighton and Hove News were delighted to catch some time with Dame Joan ahead of her UK tour.

KK Your memoir Behind The Shoulder Pads, fabulous title by the way, came out on 28 September.

You’ve written other memoirs, advice books, novels newspaper and magazine columns. How many books is that to date?

DJC 19!

KK Have you always been compelled to write or did it emerge later in life ?

DJC I was always writing from a young age. I wrote my first autobiography at age 13, but sadly it did not have mass appeal.

KK You faced up to the publishers Random House in the 1990s. What caused you to end up in court?

DJC Random House had been giving massive advances to celebrities for years, and then the market crashed and publishers were in a panic. They had given Marlon Brando a $4 million advance the year before me and when I asked him what he had written he said, “Not a thing – I think they’ve forgotten they paid me.” I think they thought they could make an example of me – maybe they did not expect me to fight, and win!

KK I got the importance of looking ‘good’ from my mother – she always looked immaculate and I still wouldn’t consider wearing a black bra under a white shirt because of her. Even in my hippy days I was colour co-ordinated! Where did the importance of glamour come from for you?

DJC Similarly, from my mother and my aunts. They were always impeccably turned out and impossibly glamorous. The idea of “dressing down” in the 50’s was anathema. But I went through my rebellious “no make-up and jeans” phase when I was a teenager. I remember the day Richard Fleischer, the director of “The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing” came up to me while I was lunching at the commissary and screamed “You look hideous! Never got out without full makeup, a nice dress, and white gloves!”


KK After RADA you set your sites on Hollywood. Did your whole family moved to the USA and were your parents fully accepting of your career choice?

DJC I did not set my sights on Hollywood. Hollywood came looking for me. I was perfectly content doing British films and I most wanted to be a serious actress on the stage, because that’s what RADA had inculcated in me. That’s why I did not want to accept until I received a salary that I thought would be commensurate with my experience. Otherwise, I would have been thrown on the scrapheap of wannabe starlets whereas I was given above the title billing with proper roles. My father had already accepted my choices since I was starring in British films and my mother always supported me.

KK I’m not going to ask you to spill the beans about the stories in Behind The Shoulder Pads but I’m interested to know which of your fellow movie stars have stuck in your mind and why?

DJC Paul Newman. He and I, and his wife Joanne Woodward became very good friends and they lobbied for me to be in their movie “Rally ‘round the Flag, Boys”. They were the only ones in the business, aside from my sister Jackie, who have ever helped me along my career. When I lived in New York while Tony (Anthony Newley) was on Broadway, we’d go up to Paul’s country house and he would fire up the bar-b-q and made the most amazing dressings. He said “one of these days I’m going to bottle them!” Which he did with “Newman’s Own”. The last time we saw each other I asked him how he was and he said “still got a pulse!”

KK Do you have any particular roles down the years of which you are most proud?

DJC I think it’s impossible not to say Alexis in Dynasty, for which I am forever grateful to have had, but I am immensely proud of a small movie I made with Steven Berkoff called Decadence because I played four different characters and it gave me the chance to flex my acting muscles.

KK You and your sister Jackie were tight friends and terrors ‘on the town’ I suspect. How did you cope with losing her?

DJC Losing your younger sister is not something you get over. It’s something you learn to live with.

KK Have you suffered from sexual inequality in your career regarding pay?

DJC Oh indeed. Some have even credited me with being one of the earliest to fight for equal pay when I demanded a raise during Dynasty. I certainly always felt that one should get paid commensurate to ability and experience regardless of sex or race. That’s what I had done since the beginning of my career when I demanded from Fox what my agent said they “would never pay”.

KK Do you have a favourite era for fashion and if so, why?

DJC The Belle Epoque I think was the most glamorous period in fashion history, and of course the “new look” by Dior in the late forties. Simple yet stunning, understated yet dramatic. Very similar to the early years in dynasty. The power look.

KK How did you feel to be made a Dame?

DJC Humbled and honoured.

KK I’m considered to be outgoing, confident and fearless but in fact it’s a bit of an act. I have to force myself to approach strangers at parties and am quite shy in crowds. Is it true that you are same and how do you deal with it?

DJC I once read an article by Woody Allen about his shyness. I saw him at a party not long after and went up to him to express how much I identified with it, as I am a shy person in crowds. He looked down the extremely low-cut dress I was wearing and replied, “I wouldn’t have guessed,” and scuttled away.

KK You’ve said that maintaining the mystery in romantic life is imperative – I won’t shave my legs in front of my partner for instance. You’ve stated separate bathrooms as one tip. What other pointers can you give us?

DJC That’s a good question! I’m going to have to think about that one. Don’t mix finance with romance perhaps? I think a woman should always retain a bit of mystery and keep her partner guessing. Always keep them off-balance, I say!

KK With your husband Percy alongside you are embarking on a UK wide tour following the release of Behind The Shoulder Pads and are coming to Brighton’s Theatre Royal on 21st September. You’re opening up yourself to answer questions from your audience – are you at all trepidatious of what they may ask?

DJC I’ve been doing one-woman shows since 2006 and answering questions from journalist since my very young days in the business but yes, there is always something that will stump me. But not, I try not to worry about what I cannot control.

KK You and Percy have been together for over 20 years. What is special about him and your relationship that has made it so enduring.

DJC I think it’s that we started as friends. It wasn’t one of those sudden mad passionate affairs (well, it was but not until later). We got to know each other before we fell in love, so the bond became much stronger as a result. We already knew each others bad and good spots and accepted them for what they were, and we don’t try to change each other.

KK Thank you for giving up some of your precious time for Brighton & Hove News. I’d like to applaud you for your support for many charities but particularly with regard to breast cancer, of which I am a survivor. We are all very grateful for your charitable work.


Thursday, October 5, 2023

TV ROUNDUP : BEHIND THE SHOULDER PADS APPEARANCES ...



Joan made a select series of tv appearances to promote her latest bestseller 'Behind The Shoulder Pads'.. You can catch up below!!


THE ONE SHOW - BBC 1 Click Below To View! 

THE ONE SHOW SEPTEMBER 22ND 2023 ..



GMB ITV1 - Click Below To View!

GOOD MORNING BRITAIN SEPTEMBER 26TH 2023 ..


Joan with Elizabeth Hurley on Loose Women Oct 5th 2023

LOOSE WOMEN ITV1 - Click Below To View!

LOOSE WOMEN OCTOBER 5TH 2023

PRESS UPDATE : THE SCARBOROUGH NEWS ... BEHIND THE SHOULDERPADS REVIEW! ... OCTOBER 5TH 2023 ..

 


There is nothing like Dame Joan Collins - actress in magnificent form at York Barbican....