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John Bonham's final TV interview was a famous fiasco... but it's not quite what it seems

By Fraser Lewry, Classic Rock

Back in March 1980, Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham undertook his final TV interview. Recorded a few short months before his death, it did not appear to go well.

Bonham's grilling took place on Alright Now, a rock music show that ran on The UK's Tyne Tees TV for just two seasons in 1979 and 1980. The first season was hosted by former Darts singer Dan Hegarty, but by series two he was gone fired for being "too outrageous" – and a series of guest presenters had taken his place: Bob Geldof, Suzi Quatro, Bill Odie, Mickie Most, Phil Lynott.  

The second episode of series two was hosted by Scottish comedian Billy Connolly, and a stellar line-up of guests was booked. Guitar hero Rory Gallagher would open and close the show. A live film of local punk heroes Angelic Upstarts was on the running order, as were a pair of studio performances from Dr Feelgood. But the real prize was the interview with Bonham.

"We've scored an absolute coup on this show," says Connolly in his introduction. "Because we're going to do probably the only interview with John Bonham ever done."

"Mind you," he adds, "when you see it you'll probably realise why it was the only interview ever done."

A clip from Led Zeppelin's movie The Song Remains The Same follows, before the film cuts back to Connolly, who's been joined by Bonham, and the interview starts. A pattern is quickly established. Connolly asks a series of fairly involved questions, and Bonham gives monosyllabic answers. 

"Not really." 

"So-so." 

"A few months."  

"Yes." 

"Could be." 

"Gee, the nights are drawing in, eh?" says Connolly, as if to fill the awkward silences with something.  

It's not great television, but the show was deemed suitable for broadcast. 

The clip has since passed into broadcasting legend. In 2006 the archive service ITN Source selected it as one of the 10 most notorious rock interviews of all time, car crash television at its best. And, for the most part, Connolly has been blamed for the so-called fiasco, as if his line of questioning was responsible for Bonham's reluctance to play along.  

It turns out things were a little more complicated than that. In 2002, Connolly's wife, the writer and performer Pamela Stephenson, published a biography of her husband entitled Billy, and wrote that the interview had gone exactly as planned. And 20 years later Connolly confirmed it in an interview with Mojo, revealing that Bonham showed up for the recording rather worse for wear, and that the two had conspired to keep the drummer's input to a minimum to spare his blushes.

"I said to him, look, why don't I just ask you really lengthy, confusing questions and you can just shrug as if you don't know the answer, or just say yes?" Connolly explained. "That way we still do the interview but you don't actually have to do it. He said, 'Would you do that?' and I said, 'Of course, it'll just seem like you're mercilessly taking the piss.' I didn't give a fuck so we did it - and it was funny.

"Then years later, during the days of [music TV show] The Tube, [host] Paula Yates dug out that tape and showed it as if it was John ripping me a new one! It's funny how things like that have a tendency of backfiring."

Connolly and Bonham had actually been friends for years. The two had first met at the notorious Hyatt House hotel in Los Angeles in the early 70s, and Connolly had flown aboard Led Zeppelin's private jet. The relationship continued over the course of the decade, with Connolly invited to the London premiere of The Song Remains The Same in 1976. He also introduced Bonham onstage at Hammersmith Odeon three years later, during Paul McCartney's Concert For Kampuchea charity show. 

After the Alright Now recording, as if to confirm that there were no hard feelings, Connolly and Bonham enjoyed a meal.

"We went for dinner at this place in Newcastle that did rabbit pie," Connolly told Mojo. "I always went there because of that pie. When we got there, John was a bit fired up and he started shouting, bawling and breaking things. Then, he said, 'I've had enough! I'm going for a lie down.' He found a chaise lounge and next thing we heard him snoring." 

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did a cruise with my wife around 1988 and this  Connoly fellow was the comedian on board, we went to a show, it was packed I remember two people , a guy and girl were heckling the shit out of him so he stopped mid sentence and told a story and made them the butt of the joke, didn't know who the hell he was but he had longer hair, an accent and was funny

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22 hours ago, Zep Hed said:

John Bonham's final TV interview was a famous fiasco... but it's not quite what it seems

By Fraser Lewry, Classic Rock

Back in March 1980, Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham undertook his final TV interview. Recorded a few short months before his death, it did not appear to go well.

Bonham's grilling took place on Alright Now, a rock music show that ran on The UK's Tyne Tees TV for just two seasons in 1979 and 1980. The first season was hosted by former Darts singer Dan Hegarty, but by series two he was gone fired for being "too outrageous" – and a series of guest presenters had taken his place: Bob Geldof, Suzi Quatro, Bill Odie, Mickie Most, Phil Lynott.  

The second episode of series two was hosted by Scottish comedian Billy Connolly, and a stellar line-up of guests was booked. Guitar hero Rory Gallagher would open and close the show. A live film of local punk heroes Angelic Upstarts was on the running order, as were a pair of studio performances from Dr Feelgood. But the real prize was the interview with Bonham.

"We've scored an absolute coup on this show," says Connolly in his introduction. "Because we're going to do probably the only interview with John Bonham ever done."

"Mind you," he adds, "when you see it you'll probably realise why it was the only interview ever done."

A clip from Led Zeppelin's movie The Song Remains The Same follows, before the film cuts back to Connolly, who's been joined by Bonham, and the interview starts. A pattern is quickly established. Connolly asks a series of fairly involved questions, and Bonham gives monosyllabic answers. 

"Not really." 

"So-so." 

"A few months."  

"Yes." 

"Could be." 

"Gee, the nights are drawing in, eh?" says Connolly, as if to fill the awkward silences with something.  

It's not great television, but the show was deemed suitable for broadcast. 

The clip has since passed into broadcasting legend. In 2006 the archive service ITN Source selected it as one of the 10 most notorious rock interviews of all time, car crash television at its best. And, for the most part, Connolly has been blamed for the so-called fiasco, as if his line of questioning was responsible for Bonham's reluctance to play along.  

It turns out things were a little more complicated than that. In 2002, Connolly's wife, the writer and performer Pamela Stephenson, published a biography of her husband entitled Billy, and wrote that the interview had gone exactly as planned. And 20 years later Connolly confirmed it in an interview with Mojo, revealing that Bonham showed up for the recording rather worse for wear, and that the two had conspired to keep the drummer's input to a minimum to spare his blushes.

"I said to him, look, why don't I just ask you really lengthy, confusing questions and you can just shrug as if you don't know the answer, or just say yes?" Connolly explained. "That way we still do the interview but you don't actually have to do it. He said, 'Would you do that?' and I said, 'Of course, it'll just seem like you're mercilessly taking the piss.' I didn't give a fuck so we did it - and it was funny.

"Then years later, during the days of [music TV show] The Tube, [host] Paula Yates dug out that tape and showed it as if it was John ripping me a new one! It's funny how things like that have a tendency of backfiring."

Connolly and Bonham had actually been friends for years. The two had first met at the notorious Hyatt House hotel in Los Angeles in the early 70s, and Connolly had flown aboard Led Zeppelin's private jet. The relationship continued over the course of the decade, with Connolly invited to the London premiere of The Song Remains The Same in 1976. He also introduced Bonham onstage at Hammersmith Odeon three years later, during Paul McCartney's Concert For Kampuchea charity show. 

After the Alright Now recording, as if to confirm that there were no hard feelings, Connolly and Bonham enjoyed a meal.

"We went for dinner at this place in Newcastle that did rabbit pie," Connolly told Mojo. "I always went there because of that pie. When we got there, John was a bit fired up and he started shouting, bawling and breaking things. Then, he said, 'I've had enough! I'm going for a lie down.' He found a chaise lounge and next thing we heard him snoring." 

 

FTFY

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  • 10 months later...

Connolly plummeted the depths of poor taste when he made a joke about guy called Ken Bigley. The unfortunate man had been beheaded by ISIS whilst doing humanitarian work in Iraq;

Comedian Billy Connolly has been criticised after making a joke about Iraq hostage Kenneth Bigley.

He reportedly asked his audience: "Don't you just wish they would just get on with it?", at the Hammersmith Apollo theatre in London on Monday night.

The Scotsman was booed after making further comments about Mr Bigley's Thai wife, Sombat.

Mr Bigley's brother, Paul, said if people wanted to pay to see such humour they could go and "queue in the rain".

The comedian allegedly swore after a member of the audience stuck up for Kenneth Bigley, saying: "You're talking about a man's life Billy."

 

He lost a lot of respect, mine included, after this. 

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20 hours ago, chillumpuffer said:

Connolly plummeted the depths of poor taste when he made a joke about guy called Ken Bigley. The unfortunate man had been beheaded by ISIS whilst doing humanitarian work in Iraq;

Comedian Billy Connolly has been criticised after making a joke about Iraq hostage Kenneth Bigley.

He reportedly asked his audience: "Don't you just wish they would just get on with it?", at the Hammersmith Apollo theatre in London on Monday night.

The Scotsman was booed after making further comments about Mr Bigley's Thai wife, Sombat.

Mr Bigley's brother, Paul, said if people wanted to pay to see such humour they could go and "queue in the rain".

The comedian allegedly swore after a member of the audience stuck up for Kenneth Bigley, saying: "You're talking about a man's life Billy."

 

He lost a lot of respect, mine included, after this. 

Never liked him. Always seemed rather conceited to me

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