A Small Memory of Victoria Wood - Andrew Crofts
Towards the end of the seventies I
received a call from a publicity lady at the ICA , a small, artsy theatre venue in the
Mall.
“We’re putting on a play called ‘Talent’
by a young writer called Victoria Wood and we wondered if you would like to
interview her. You may have seen her singing funny songs on ‘New Faces’ or
‘That’s Life’. She’s playing one of the lead roles as well. Believe me, she’s
going to be a huge star.”
Publicists always tell you that
people who aren’t yet stars are going to be very soon, that’s their job, but it
was a free ticket and seemed like a good contact, so I happily went along.
Needless to say the play was a
gentle revelation and although the young Miss Wood was painfully shy and modest
she managed to be a joy to interview. Hearing or seeing someone who is
genuinely honest and funny is always life-enhancing.
Playing back the interview afterwards, and then reading through her words once I had typed
them up into an article for a women’s magazine, I actually found myself
laughing out loud again; a pretty fair indicator that the publicity lady’s
predictions were going to come true.
If Victoria Wood was the only thing
that ever came out of the hundreds of thousands of hours of talent show
television that the world has endured, it would still all have been worthwhile.
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