|
Cathy McGowan (born 1943) is a British broadcaster and journalist, best known as presenter of the rock music television show, ''Ready Steady Go!''. In this role, she found herself suddenly propelled to fame as the symbolic new-profile 1960s teenager, casual in speech and manner, but dressed in creative fashions that made her popular with male and female viewers alike. ==''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 to 7 pm.〔''Halliwell's Television Companion'' (3rd ed 1986)〕 Its original presenter Keith Fordyce (1928–2011), a stalwart of the BBC Light Programme and Radio Luxembourg, was joined in 1964 by Cathy McGowan and Michael Aldred.〔(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), ''RSGs executive producer and head of entertainment at Rediffusion,〔(Elkan Allan – Obituaries, News – Independent.co.uk )〕 as to whether sex, music or fashion was most 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." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Cathy McGowan (presenter)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|