Thursday, December 30, 2010

Dec. 30: Comedienne & impersonator Tracey Ullman ("Miley Cyrus's 'Grammy," "Carla Bruni,") is 51 today.



Ullman was born Trace (no "Y at the end) Ullman in Slough, Buckinghamshire in the U.K.

When she was six, Ullman's father died of a heart attack while reading her a bedtime story. In an effort to cheer up her family, Tracey recounts putting on shows in her mother's bedroom, performing alongside her older sister, Patty. That first show was entitled The Patty Ullman Show. "I was a spin-off!" recalled Ullman. In her nightly performances she mimicked anyone and everyone, including neighbours, family members, friends, even celebrities.


At the age of 12, a headmaster saw Ullman's future potential, and recommended her to the Italia Conti Academy stage school. At the age of 16, Ullman began finding jobs as a dancer, and soon landed a role in Gigi in Berlin. After returning to England, she joined the "Second Generation" dance troupe. She also began appearing in variety shows.


This exposure led to her casting in numerous West End musicals, including Grease, and The Rocky Horror Show. Ullman was also cast in a play at London's Royal Court Theatre for an improvised play about club acts.

Entering the competition, Ullman created the character Beverly, a born-again Christian chanteuse. The performance was a smash hit and she won the "Best Newcomer Award," drawing interest from the BBC. They offered her the chance to star in her own show.

 
In 1983, Ullman succeeded as a singer on the punk label Stiff Records, although her style was more comic romantic than punk. She had six songs in the UK Top 100 in less than two years.



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Tracey Ullman's State of the Union: Complete Season One






Her 1983 debut album, You Broke My Heart In 17 Places, featured her first hit single, "Breakaway," which featured Tracey using a hairbrush as a microphone; the international hit cover version of Kirsty MacColl's "They Don't Know" went to #2 in the UK, and #8 in the U.S. (MacColl sang backing vocals on Ullman's version.) It would later become the theme song to Ullman's later television series, Tracey Takes On....

Follow-up singles included a cover of Doris Day's "Move Over Darling," which reached #8 in the UK, and Madness' "My Girl," which Ullman changed to "My Guy's Mad At Me."


Ullman's songs were over-the-top, described as "retro before retro was cool," as a reviewer wrote in 2002. Her career received another boost when the video for "They Don't Know" featured a cameo from Paul McCartney. At the time Ullman was filming a minor role in McCartney's film Give My Regards To Broad Street.


Ullman released her second and last album, You Caught Me Out, in 1984. Her final hit, "Sunglasses," featured comedian Adrian Edmondson in its music video. During this time, she also appeared as a guest VJ on MTV in the U.S.


In her HBO stand-up special, Tracey Ullman: Live and Exposed, Ullman recreated her music career, recounting how she entered the business, and why she left it.


Along with her stint in the music world, Ullman began working in television. Between 1981 and 1984 she starred in sketch comedies A Kick Up the Eighties and Three of a Kind for the BBC. In 1985, she donned a blond wig and took the role of a promiscuous gold digger named "Candice Valentine" on the ITV sitcom Girls On Top. She left after one season to give birth to her first child.


By then, U.S. television beckoned, and renowned television producer James L. Brooks came calling. The two had discussed working together previously, but it wasn't until 1987 that they created The Tracey Ullman Show. Ullman played a variety of characters, completely unrecognizable with the help of makeup, prosthetics, and padding. The show was the first commercial hit for then unknown Fox channel.


The Tracey Ullman Show earned four Emmys and introduced The Simpsons, which was featured in simple cartoon shorts. Several years after her show went off the air, she said jokingly in a late night television interview that she hoped to one day have a regular two-minute spot on The Simpsons. In 1991 Ullman had provided the voice of "Emily Winthrop," a British dog trainer on The Simpsons episode "Bart's Dog Gets an F."


Ullman returned to television in 1993, but this time in cable television. Two specials were created allowing Ullman to bring life to a host of new characters. Tracey Ullman: A Class Act the second, Tracey Ullman Takes On New York. Both specials drew praise and awards. HBO became interested in doing a Tracey Takes On ... series, and Ullman and her husband, Allan McKeown, set up production in Los Angeles in 1995.

Tracey returned to HBO in the summer of 2005, with her autobiographical one-woman stage show, Tracey Ullman: Live and Exposed. The show garnered another Emmy nomination.


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Dec. 30: singer, actor, and jockey, Davy Jones Of The Monkees is 65 today.


David Thomas Jones was born in Manchester, England in 1945. After his mother died, his father sent him to live with jockey Basil Foster  as an apprentice. Foster recognized Jones' acting and singing ability, and encouraged him to pursue his acting career. When Foster  was approached by a friend who was a casting director, for a theatre on the West End of London, Basil told him, "I've got the kid."

As a teenager he appeared on British TV soap operas, including Coronation Street as Ena Sharples's grandson, Colin Lomax. He was nominated for a Tony Award for his portrayal of the Artful Dodger in the musical Oliver! He played the role in London and on Broadway.

Somewhat ironically - maybe prophetically is a better word - he appeared with the Broadway cast of Oliver! on the Ed Sullivan Show, on the same night The Beatles made their first appearance. Jones says of that night, "I watched the Beatles from the side of the stage, I saw the girls going crazy, and I said to myself, this is it, I want a piece of that."

 
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The Monkees - Greatest HitsThe Monkees - Our Favorite Episodes




 
Following his Ed Sullivan appearance, Ward Sylvester of Screen Gems, at the time, the television division of Columbia Pictures, signed Jones to a contract. A pair of American television appearances followed in episodes of Ben Casey and The Farmer's Daughter. He also recorded a single and album for Colpix Records, which charted but weren't huge hits.


From 1965 to 1971, Jones was a member of The Monkees, a pop-rock group formed expressly for a TV show of the same name. He was the only Monkee who had signed a deal with Screen Gems, the studio that produced the series. As a Monkee, Jones sang lead vocals on many of the group's songs, including "I Wanna Be Free" and "Daydream Believer."


After the show went off the air and the group disbanded, he continued to perform solo, while later joining with fellow-Monkee Micky Dolenz and songwriters Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart as a short-lived group called Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart. He has also toured throughout the years with other members as various incarnations of the Monkees.

In 1978 he appeared with Micky Dolenz in Harry Nilsson's play The Point at the Mermaid Theatre in London. Jones continued acting and appeared in one episode of The Brady Bunch, two episodes of My Two Dads, and two episodes of Love, American Style.

He also appeared, in animated form, on an episode of The New Scooby-Doo Movies. Also, Jones made a cameo appearance as himself in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "SpongeBob vs. The Big One," and Boy Meets World.

In 1997 he guest-starred as himself on the TV Show Sabrina The Teenage Witch and sang "Daydream Believer" to Sabrina, played by Melissa Joan Hart.

In recent years, Jones performed with his former bandmates in reunion tours and appeared in several productions of Oliver!, this time as Fagin.

He continued to race horses with some success in his native England, while residing in Beavertown, Pennsylvania in the U.S.

In April 2006, Jones recorded the single "Your Personal Penguin," written by children's author Sandra Boynton, as a companion piece to her new board book of the same title.

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