Confessions of a Pop Performer

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Confessions of a Pop Performer - 1975 | 91 mins | Comedy | Colour

The Production Team

Director: Norman Cohen.
Producer: Greg Smith.
Script: Christopher Wood. (from the novel "Confessions from the Pop Scene" by Christopher Wood)
Cinematography: Alan Hume.
Film Editing: Geoffrey Foot.
Production Design: Robert Jones.
Art Direction: Bernard Sarron .
Makeup Department: Eddie Knight and Joan White.
Sound Department: Tony Lenny, Bill Rowe and Jim Willis.

The Cast

Robin Askwith - Timothy Lea
Anthony Booth - Sidney Noggett
Bill Maynard -- Mr. Lea
Doris Hare - Mrs. Lea
Sheila White - Rosie Noggett
Lin Harris - Jason Noggett
Bob Todd - Mr. Barnwell
Jill Gascoine - Mrs. Barnwell
Peter Jones - Maxy Nau
Ian Lavender - Rodney
David Hamilton - TV Interviewer

Plot Synopsis

Confessions of a Window Cleaner had only been on release for two months when Columbia Pictures demanded a sequel of initially reluctant producer Greg Smith. By the end of 1974 there were eleven Christopher Wood novels on the market; after Window Cleaner the next book in the series had been Confessions of a Driving Instructor, but Smith took the decision early on to adapt one of Wood's more recent novels, Confessions from the Pop Scene. The title was subsequently changed to Confessions of a Pop Performer due to the double-entendre gained from the wording 'performer’.

With veteran Val Guest unwilling to direct the sequel, Window Cleaner's associate producer Norman Cohen was drafted in to helm Pop Performer. Cohen brings a quicker pace to proceedings and more physical comedy, filling the running time with wall-to-wall slapstick and bawdy seaside postcard humour. Unfortunately, Pop Performer lacks the impish charm of its predecessor and Askwith is hampered by an extremely poor script. All the principal cast members reprise their roles, apart from Dandy Nichols, who had committed to filming the BBC series Till Death Us Do Part. She was immediately replaced by another veteran comedy character actress, Doris Hare, well known as the devoted mum in the long-running ITV sitcom On the Buses.

Tiring of window cleaning and its attendant dangers, Sid (Anthony Booth) and Timmy (Robin Askwith) set up 'Noggo Enterprises' to promote up-and-corning local pub band 'Kipper'. Sid arranges for them to play their first big showcase gig at the local civic hall, but when the group's drummer hurts his finger Timmy takes over at short notice to perform their theme tune 'Do the Clapham'. Unfortunately, Sid's attempts at getting together a bunch of screaming teenage fans fall flat when the only rent-a-crowd he can manage are members of the Clapham Old Girl's Club. The geriatric groupies, dressed in 'I Love Kipper' T-shirts, duly storm the stage and cause a riot.

Kipper's musical prowess somehow gets them onto Maxy Naus (Peter Jones) TV talent show Star Knockers. However, their television debut ends in cataclysmic disaster when Sid attempts to rig the show's 'applause-ometer'. Events take a turn for the better when Kipper are hired as eleventh-hour stand-ins for a charity event at the London Pallacium in front of the Queen and Prince Philip.