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Celebrity masterminds: Laurie Taylor and Sally Feldman on fame

Sociologist鈥檚 and media scholar鈥檚 work on TV interview series furnished raw material for a study of the limelight and those in it

Published on
August 21, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Rex

Reflecting on glory: Sky Arts鈥 In Confidence series gave presenter Laurie Taylor (left, pictured with guest John Lydon) an opportunity to study public figures鈥 views of their own celebrity

When Laurie Taylor was teaching sociology at the University of York and also presenting a television programme called The Great British Drink Test in the 1970s, he tells us in his new book, it led to a run-in with York鈥檚 senior professor of philosophy: 鈥溾楥aught that programme the other night,鈥 he said with the tone of a man who鈥檇 inadvertently trodden in something unpleasant. 鈥榊ou know, you鈥檙e getting to be a bit of a celebrity鈥.鈥

Professor Taylor continues: 鈥淗is face told me that he could think of no more ignominious fate鈥hen I thought about it later, [the episode] seemed to capture something critical about the nature of celebrity.鈥

In Confidence: Talking Frankly about Fame, which Professor Taylor wrote with his wife Sally Feldman, senior fellow in creative industries and former dean of media, arts and design at the University of Westminster, offers both great anecdotes and considered reflections on 鈥渢he nature of celebrity鈥.

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Jazz singer Cleo Laine describes growing up as the daughter of an eccentric Jamaican father who 鈥渦sed to dress like Anthony Eden with the hat, the striped trousers and so on鈥 鈥 and how she falls back on her own invented version of Hungarian when she forgets the words of a song. Actor Tom Baker loves the fact that he is 鈥渨orshipped鈥 by Doctor Who fans and that a very old woman once told him that 鈥淚 knew you were special because my titties began to tingle鈥. And conductor and composer Andr茅 Previn is the proud owner of an edition of Mozart鈥檚 letters signed by Lenny Bruce 鈥 which the comedian stole for him, despite being on parole and so risking prison.

Yet the book is far more than a collection of great stories. It arose out of 60 one-hour interviews 鈥 with everyone from Lily Allen to Alan Ayckbourn, Michael Winner to Jonathan Miller, Tracey Emin to John Lydon (Johnny Rotten) 鈥 that Professor Taylor recorded for Sky Arts between 2009 and 2013.

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鈥淲hen the transcripts arrived,鈥 he told Karen Shook in a 糖心Vlog books podcast, 鈥渨e suddenly saw what a wealth of material we had 鈥 why not do something more with them? We have a wonderful collection of what people say about celebrity.鈥

Almost all the interviews were recorded in a studio on Westminster鈥檚 campus, noted Ms Feldman. Students were used as technicians, and, she said, 鈥渙ne of the really telling things was how the celebrities treated them鈥. The students were enthralled by the enthusiasm and practical guidance offered by David Attenborough and Terry Gilliam, and almost every Irish person working in the building looked in on the recording of former president Mary Robinson.

Who can they trust?

Professor Taylor and Ms Feldman soon discovered that certain themes kept recurring. Many of the interviews, he recalled, touched on 鈥渉ow women make it in the world; how people cope with talking about their youth 鈥 if you鈥檙e a celebrity, you have to invent a story of where you came from鈥. There is also 鈥渢he issue of who you can trust鈥 if you are 鈥渢housands of times richer and better known鈥 than the people who want to be friends with you, he added.

The chapter on celebrities鈥 friendships takes him back to 鈥渢he cocaine-fuelled antics at several well-known private London clubs in the 1980s. There was usually a recognisable group: one or two celebrities, a clutch of lesser stars, and three or four nonentities who were desperately eager to be accepted as full participants. Even from a distance it was easy to see that there would be casualties amongst these extras鈥hen the star left the room, these 鈥榝riends鈥 were exposed as nothing of the sort.鈥

In Confidence also tracks the recent rise and current ubiquity of the celebrity interview. During Ms Feldman鈥檚 time as editor of the BBC Radio 4 programme Woman鈥檚 Hour, she once 鈥渟ent an interviewer to do a vox pop among the toddlers in the BBC cr猫che鈥. Even a 3-year-old was sufficiently media-savvy to ask: 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 live, is it?鈥

Professor Taylor agreed that celebrities and civilians alike 鈥渘ow know what is expected of us in an interview鈥, although he remembers a time when he was doing ethnographic research in the criminal underworld and was firmly told by one crook: 鈥溾業 don鈥檛 do questions鈥欌Such people live] in a non-question world, where you don鈥檛 ask 鈥榃hat have you been doing today?鈥 or 鈥榃here have you been the last five years?鈥欌

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Behind-the-lines insights

Is there still a value in celebrity interviews, asked Ms Shook, in an age when publicists attempt to control every utterance and stars go direct to the public via social media outlets such as Twitter to burnish their own preferred image of themselves?

Ms Feldman suggested a parallel with the changes seen in war reporting: 鈥淢ore and more we have embedded journalists, who are with the army and with the tanks, and getting an entirely biased view of whatever the war is 鈥 and the heroines and the heroes are the ones who go behind the lines and get the stories themselves.鈥

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In the same way, there would always be a market for interviews that delivered Jeremy Paxman鈥檚 ideal of, as Ms Feldman put it, 鈥済etting the bastard to tell me something he鈥檚 lying about鈥.

There are relatively few genuine academic celebrities, although Professor Taylor found David Starkey 鈥渧ery interesting 鈥 he relished having sold out鈥e relished the money and the rings and the success鈥. He paraphrased Dr Starkey鈥檚 view: 鈥淚f I鈥檓 going to be a public academic, I will jolly well be a public academic. I won鈥檛 do any of the self-deprecating bit at all. I will hurl myself into it the way I hurled myself into my joyous gay encounters on Hampstead Heath.鈥

And what of Professor Taylor鈥檚 own celebrity? The host of BBC Radio 4鈥檚 Thinking Allowed and author of THE鈥檚 long-running satirical feature The Poppletonian admitted that he is 鈥渁 bit famous鈥 and had briefly been 鈥渁 bit of a rent-a-gob鈥 on chat shows such as Kilroy. However, 鈥渁fter a time, although it鈥檚 mildly gratifying to be recognised in the coffee shop, you really do recognise the banality and insincerity of this area of celebrity鈥.

The study of celebrity is now an established academic discipline, although Professor Taylor claimed 鈥渢here is not one book on the subject I kept returning to鈥.

He said he suspected that many academics haven鈥檛 鈥渆ngaged with celebrities in their own lives quite enough鈥. In much scholarly writing on the subject, 鈥渢here was too much of an assumption that all celebrities 鈥 all people in this caste 鈥 somehow corresponded to each other鈥.

Professor Taylor added: 鈥淚 wanted to correct a slight imbalance and focus on 鈥榥egotiating celebrity鈥, how celebrities manage this position鈥ow does this vast new class exist? What are its parameters? What are its problems? What does it have to negotiate? What are its dilemmas? I think this is the first book which looks at celebrity in that way.鈥

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matthew.reisz@tesglobal.com

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