Sixties
City presents
a wide-ranging series of
articles on all aspects of the Sixties, penned by the creator of the iconic
60s music paper Mersey
Beat
|
|
Gabrielle also appeared in numerous television parts
throughout the Sixties including ‘Intrigue’ in 1966, an industrial espionage
drama, and roles in ‘Coronation Street’, ‘The Saint’, ‘The Champions’, ‘Journey
To The Unknown’, ‘Virgin of the Secret Service’ and she also appeared as
Angora in ‘The Avengers’ episode ‘The Hidden Tiger’ in 1967 (she auditioned
unsuccessfully for the roles of Emma Peel and Tara King). She gained a cult
following when she portrayed Lt. Gay Ellis in the Gerry Anderson series
‘UFO’ (dressed in a mauve wig) and in 1972 established herself still further
with the British public as Jill Howard in the highly popular ‘The Brothers’
series. Although she made her film debut in 1969 in ‘Crossplot’, a Swinging
Sixties movie starring Roger Moore, the British cinema in the Seventies
was unlike that of the Sixties. During the Sixties American studios poured
money into British studios and there was a wide variety of films, some big-budget,
some modestly budgeted, but most aimed at international audiences. The Seventies saw Hammer reduced to making movies based on TV series such as ‘On The Buses’, with little appeal outside the UK, while the main British contribution to the cinema was a string of soft-porn films. Gabrielle, who was to be found in bed topless with Peter Sellers in ‘There’s A Girl In My Soup’, appeared in a series of 'sex comedy' films such as ‘The Au Pair Girls’, ‘Suburban Wives’ and ‘Commuter Husbands.’ Why a well-respected Shakespearean actress would be willing to appear full-frontal as a sexpot in ‘The Au Pair Girls’ is puzzling as theatre and television roles still kept her regularly in work. She appeared as Penny in the ‘Dead Men Are Dangerous’ episode of ‘The New Avengers’ and continued to appear over the years in numerous television episodes on ‘The Professionals’, ‘Medics’, ‘Peak Practice' – and in the 21st Century ‘Heartbeat’ and ‘The Inspector Lindlay Mysteries’ among others. Gabrielle is the sister of the late singer/songwriter Nick Drake. Nick was born in Burma on 18th June 1948. He began recording in 1968 and established his reputation with three albums: ‘Five Leaves Left’, ‘Bryter Layter’ and ‘Pink Moon’. He suffered a nervous breakdown in 1972 and was hospitalised. Nick died at his home in Tamworth, Staffordshire, of an overdose of antidepressants on 23rd October 1974. He was 26 years old. Gabrielle appeared in the documentary ‘A Skin Too Few: The Days of Nick Drake.’ |
Article
Bill Harry 2012 Original
Graphics
SixtiesCity 2012
|