Cathy McGowan

Cathy McGowan

Cathy McGowan (born 1943) is a British broadcaster and journalist, presenter from 1964-6 of Rediffusion television’s rock music show, "Ready Steady Go!"

"Ready Steady Go!"

"Ready Steady Go!" "(RSG)" was first broadcast in August 1963, coinciding with the rise of The Beatles in Britain and internationally [See, for example, William Mann in "The Times", 23 December 1963; Dominic Sandbrook (2005) "Never Had It So Good"] . As one historian of television reflected in the 1970s, "the revolution had the greatest possible effect on television ... and hindsight commentators were to see the year [1963] as a line of demarcation drawn between one kind of Britain and another" [Burton Graham (1974) "A Do You Remember Book: Television"] .

With its slogan ,"the weekend starts here" ["Oxford Dictionary of 20th Century Quotations" (1998) 59:11] , "RSG" was shown on Fridays from 6-7pm ["Halliwell's Television Companion" (3rd ed 1986)] . Its original presenter Keith Fordyce, of the BBC Light Programme and Radio Luxembourg, was joined in 1964 by Cathy McGowan [ [http://www.retrosellers.com/features91.htm Ready Steady Go! and Cathy McGowan ] ] . McGowan, recruited as an advisor from 600 applicants, had been in the fashion department of "Woman’s Own". She is said to have secured the role in a "run off" with journalist Anne Nightingale, later a disc jockey on Radio 1, by answering "fashion" to a question from Elkan Allan (1922-2006), "RSG"'s executive producer and head of entertainment at Rediffusion [ [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article1124539.ece Elkan Allan - Obituaries, News - Independent.co.uk ] ] , as to whether sex, music or fashion were more important to teenagers [Richard Williams in "The Guardian", 13 February 2006] .

While McGowan had answered an advert for 'a typical teenager' to work as an advisor, she found herself presenting the show. Her strength was that her status as a fan of the artists was evident in her style; stumbling over her lines, losing her cool and apparent inexperience only made her more popular, and by the end she was presenting the show alone. She may have been the inspiration for Susan Campy from The Beatles 1964 film A Hard Day's Night, when George Harrison tells the producer of a fictitious teen television show that Campy is "... that posh bird who gets everything wrong", to which the producer played by Kenneth Haigh replies, "She's a trendsetter. It's her profession."

"Queen of the Mods"

McGowan seemed in tune with the times - "the girl of the day", according to Eric Burdon of the Animals [Richard Williams in "The Guardian", 13 February 2006] - and, through her fashion sense acquired the eponym, “Queen of the Mods” [See, for example, Madeleine Marsh (1999) "Collecting the Sixties"; [http://www.justball.net/home/cathymcgowan/press/interviews/teen.php] ] . (This term has been applied to others, such as Dusty Springfield and, in New Zealand, Dinah Lee [ [http://www.sergent.com.au/dinahlee.html Dinah Lee ] ] .) Much of her appeal lay in the fact that she was the age of "RSG"'s viewers [Dominic Sandbrook (2006) "White Heat"] : young women regarded her as a role model, while men were attracted by her looks. Anna Wintour, future editor of American "Vogue", was, according to her biographer Jerry Oppenheimer, among teenagers whom the show introduced to fashion. [Oppenheimer, Jerry;Front Row: The Cool Life and Hot Times of Vogue's Editor In Chief, St. Martin's Press, New York, 2005, ISBN 0-3123-231-07, 6] Another, Lesley Hornby, who became Twiggy, regarded McGowan as her heroine: "I'd sit and drool over her clothes. She was a heroine to us because she was one of us" [Quoted in Dominic Sandbrook (2006) "White Heat"] .

A star among stars

A similar empathy extended to the artists that McGowan interviewed. Donovan, launched in 1965 by his appearances on "RSG", recalled McGowan as the "young Mary Quant-look hostess" (Quant being the leading British proponent of the mini-skirt, which McGowan helped popularise), with whom he developed an "easy-going" style of on-screen conversation [Donovan (2005) "The Hurdy Gurdy Man"] . In the words of Dominic Sandbrook, a social historian:

The show's most celebrated presenter, McGowan was the same age as the national audience; she wore all the latest trendy shifts and mini-dresses; and she spoke with an earnest, ceaseless barrage of teenage slang, praising whatever was 'fab' or 'smashing', and damning all that was 'square' or 'out'. 'The atmosphere', one observer wrote later, 'was that of a King's Road party where the performers themselves had only just chanced to drop by' [Dominic Sandbrook (2006) "White Heat"] .

By Christmas 1965 McGowan's name was coupled with rising singer Jonathan King in a roll-call of stars on the The Barron Knights' record, "Merrie Gentle Pops":

:Andy, Sandie, Pitney, Proby,:Cathy McGowan and Jonathan King ["Andy" may have been American singer Andy Williams.] .

The following summer McGowan was among celebrities - "a more glittering line up of guests could hardly be imagined" [Dominic Sandbrook (2007) "White Heat"] - at the opening in June of Sibylla, a nightclub close to Piccadilly Circus in London.

Impact on the "swinging" sixties

McGowan was an early patron of Biba [ [http://www.bibacollection.co.uk/history.htm History of Biba ] ] , whose first store opened in September 1964, and had her own fashion range at British Home Stores [Richard Wiseman (2006) "Whatever Happened to Simon Dee?"] . She endorsed a portable make-up set known as "Cathy's Survival Kit". Barbara Hulanicki, who founded Biba, observed that "the girls aped Cathy's long hair and eye-covering fringe and soon their little faces were growing heavy with stage make-up" [Madeleine Marsh (1999) "Collecting the Sixties"] . Julia Dykins, half-sister of John Lennon of the Beatles, recalled how, despite wearing black eye make-up, black polo necks and dyed black jeans à la Cathy McGowan", she was unable to convince doormen at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the Beatles came to prominence, that she was over 18, the age for admission [Julia Baird (2007) "Imagine This"] . It has been claimed that the formation in 1966 of a British Society for the Preservation of the Miniskirt was prompted by McGowan's indicating that she would wear a long skirt on "RSG" [Tom Robbins in "New York Times", 1995 [http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/miniskirt/biography/biography-in-progress] ] .

After Fordyce’s departure in March 1965, McGowan continued to present "RSG" until it ended on 23 December 1966. In 1965 a decision that artists should perform live [ [http://www.tv.com/ready-steady-go!/show/11175/summary.html&full_summary=1 Ready Steady Go! TV Show - Ready Steady Go! Television Show - TV.com ] ] gave it immediacy that its longer-running BBC rival, "Top of the Pops" (1964-2006), never acquired; indeed, the latter retained a Mancunian model Samantha Juste - in television, McGowan's rival - as its "disc girl" until 1967. Although "RSG"'s momentum had begun to flag, it had become a "cult programme" [Richard Whiteley (2000) "Himoff!"] whose impact on music and, through McGowan, on the "swinging" sixties more generally was widely acknowledged. As Sandbrook put it, "Thanks to the enthusiastic salesmanship of McGowan and her fellow presenters, the emerging youth culture that had once been confined to the capital [London] or to the great cities could now be seen and copied almost immediately from Cornwall to the Highlands" [Dominic Sandbrook (2006) "White Heat"] . The musician and jazz critic George Melly thought "RSG" "made pop music work on a truly national scale ... It was almost possible to feel a tremor of pubescent excitement from Land's End to John O'Groats" [Quoted in Sandbrook (2006) "White Heat"] .

McGowan, who was a 5 foot 4½ inch (1.63m) brunette, modelled and also presented a show on Radio Luxembourg.

After "Ready Steady Go!"

Once RSG had ended, McGowan's star began to wane. By way of illustration, the "Sunday Times", previewing an exhibition of photographs by Patrick, Earl of Lichfield 40 years later, has described "Queen"'s use of his shots in 1967:

[Lichfield] was ... a great one for persuading people to join in, even if the outcome was not always the one they expected. In the 1960s he took a series of group portraits for Queen magazine supposedly documenting the movers and shakers of the time - except that some, such as Jonathan Aitken and Cathy McGowan, were deemed not to be "in", and were labelled as "out" in the magazine. But Lichfield, with his impeccable manners, refused to upset his subjects by letting them know that in advance [Mark Edmonds in "Sunday Times Magazine", 4 May 2008. An "in group", published by "Queen" in June 1967, included actress Susannah York, actor Tom Courtenay and model Twiggy] .

Later work

McGowan continued in journalism and broadcasting. She was a board member of London’s Capital Radio when it was launched in 1973. In the late 1980s she worked for the BBC's "Newsroom South East", specialising in entertainment [ [http://www.justball.net/home/cathymcgowan/press/interviews/hello89.php Hello Interview (13 August 1989) ] ] . She interviewed celebrities, including some she had known in the 1960s and others such as singer Michael Ball, who became her partner, and Deborah Harry, formerly of Blondie, whom she described as the most beautiful woman she had met. [This was not an uncommon view: see, for example, Cathay Che (1999) "Deborah Harry: Platinum Blonde"] . In 1991 McGowan co-hosted with Alexei Sayle and Jonathan Ross a show by British comedians to mark the 30th anniversary of Amnesty International.

Family

In 1970 McGowan married actor Hywel Bennett (b. 1944) ["Who's Who 1992". Some Internet sources give the date of McGowan's wedding as 1970, but Bennett's "Who's Who" entry is clear as to 1967.] , who appeared in such films as "The Family Way" (1966) and "The Virgin Soldiers" (1969). They had a daughter, Emma. The marriage was dissolved in 1988 and, since the early 1990s, she has been the partner of Michael Ball, almost 20 years her junior [ [http://www.justball.net/home/cathymcgowan/home.php Cathy Mcgowan Biography ] ] . Ball was godfather to McGowan's grandson, Connor, son of Emma.

McGowan's brother John McGowan was a disc jockey in 1965 on King Radio, a "pirate" station broadcasting from a fort in the Thames Estuary [ [http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/album48.htm The Pirate Radio Hall of Fame: The Mark Hammerton Collection ] ] . In the mid 1990s the death from ovarian cancer of his wife Angela, a friend of McGowan since their teens, led to his becoming co-founder of a charity supporting research into the disease [ [http://www.michaelballcorner.com/roc.htm ROC - Research into Ovarian Cancer ] ] .

Notes


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