Although in his home country he’s best remembered for his
many embarrassing drunken appearances on British chat shows, Reed was a talented
actor whose appearances in several swinging 60s classics (including The
System (1964), The Trap (1966), and the career-defining role of Bill Sikes
in Oliver!) helped define the
era. Closely associated with the films of Ken Russell - Women in Love (1969), The Devils (1971), and Tommy (1975) – he also starred as Athos in The
Three Musketeers (1973), and as pervy
author Gerald Kingsland in the dreadful Nic Roeg film Castaway (1986).
Reed made his film debut in 1955, as an extra in the Diana
Dors vehicle Value For Money. As well as
making many minor (and often uncredited) television appearances over the next
five years he appeared in a dozen movies, such as the Norman Wisdom comedy The
Square Peg (1958), as an over-the-top camp
chorus boy in The League of Gentlemen (1960) and as a nondescript teen in the cult musical Beat
Girl (1960). By now he was beginning to
make waves, and over the next two years would appear in bigger and bigger roles
in a succession of bigger and bigger hits: he played a bouncer in The
Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll for Hammer, the
leader of a gang of Teddy Boys in another Wisdom film, The Bulldog
Breed, an artist in the Tony Hancock comedy
The Rebel and as Lord Melton in Hammer
Films’ Sword of Sherwood Forest.
Good looking in a brutish sort of way, naturally the record
companies soon came a-calling.
Ollie first stepped in to a recording studio in 1961, laying
down two tracks for a Decca single: the Jim Dale-penned The Wild One (a song he would perform,
drunk, on TV in the 80s), and Lonely For a Girl. Both are excruciatingly awful: the production and
arrangement of The Wild One owes
a great deal to Joe Meek (and, in turn, owes a lot to Buddy Holly), but that’s
about the only thing the plug side has going for it. The B-side is worse: Ollie
can’t hit the notes, and the little spoken interlude is diabolical. Wonderful!
Was written by Mitch Murray who would go on to write How Do You Do It,
recorded by two
groups from Brian Epstein’s stable. On both tracks Reed sounds uncannily like
another of Decca’s singing stars, Jess Conrad.
The Decca single sank without a trace. Unperturbed, Reed’s
management hustled him over to Pye, where he cut a couple of sides for their
Piccadilly imprint: Sometimes was
written by Dave Clark and Ron Ryan (the Dave Clark Five were signed to
Piccadilly around the same time), while the B-side – Ecstasy – was a cover of the song written by Phil Spector
and Doc Pomus, and first released by Ben E. King. If anything, its worse than
the Decca 45.
Next was a dreadful ‘comedy’ cover of Baby It’s Cold
Outside, sung as a duet with Joyce Blair…
who, of course, would go on to release Christine – a novelty single inspired by the Profumo affair -
under the pseudonym Miss X. Ollie only appeared on the A-side.
That was it. He would appear on the soundtrack to the movie Oliver!, and as the narrator on a version of The
Ancient Mariner, but no more pop singles
would be issued under his name until the 1990s, when he released a horrible
version of the Troggs’ classic Wild Thing, a recording that even
featured a guest appearance from snooker legend Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins. But
by that time he had become better known for falling over drunk and insulting
women on chat shows than for his acting ability. Starring roles in shockingly
bad movies such as A Touch of the Sun
(later re-released as No Secrets!)
did nothing to improve his lot, although his reputation was somewhat salvaged
with his final on-screen appearance, as Antonius Proximo, the gruff gladiator
trainer in Ridley Scott's Gladiator. Released posthumously, Reed would be nominated for the BAFTA for Best
Actor in a Supporting Role.
Here, for your delectation, are all five of Ollie’s stabs at
60s pop stardom.
Enjoy!
Download Wild HERE
Download Lonely HERE
Download Sometimes HERE
Download Ecstasy HERE
Donload Baby HERE
Funny where you end up after watching a few clips of Ollie. For some reason I always thought 'The Wild One' was a cover of something. Thank you for shedding some light on such an obscure piece of music history.
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