Pan's People
There's one group who were omnipresent and pivotal during the
poppiest years of the British 70s, one group who were always there,
who never missed a beat. One group who were always on Top Of The
Pops. One group who always made a splash. Pan's People - Babs
Lord, Dee Dee Wilde, Ruth Pearson, Andrea Rutherford (later replaced
by Cherry Gillespie), Louise Clarke (replaced when she left to get
married by Sue Menhenick), and choreographer Flick Colby. Every - and
I mean every - schoolboy knew that line-up and could recite it like it
was their football team. "A handful of very dishy, very dolly dancing
birds," as they were described in 1974. To which I can only concur.
How many people do you think tuned in to TOTP just to watch
Pan's People? Taking a ball park figure, I'd say about 40 per cent of
the viewers. At the time, Pan's People were astonishingly sexy,
astonishingly ravishing. It was, in the most literal of senses, a
turn-on. There they were, every week, dancing their little socks off,
giving, just giving . . .
To get a gauge of what it was like, put yourself back in 1972.
There's Top Of The
Pops - and nothing else. There's no Chart
Show, no other TV show. There's no MTV, no
VH-1, no
anything. There are no pop videos. There's just Top Of The
Pops and cheesy groups miming along to their cheesy hits.
Top Of The
Pops was incredibly powerful. Looking back, it's difficult
to imagine quite how influential it was - It was like the youth club where everyone went
to see what was happening and the DJs were like trendy scoutmasters,
old geezers who tried to pretend that they were one of us when we all
knew that they would inform on us to our parents given half the
chance.
Even then, we knew that the DJs were a dreadful bunch,
interested in only themselves, thinking they were the pop stars when
really they were just cringingly embarrassing.
Jimmy Saville, Tony Blackburn, Noel Edmonds, Ed 'Stewpot' Stewart,
Kenny Everett, Peter Powell, Kid Jensen... Forget it. They were
dreadful characters. So dreadful that they haven't been exhumed by the
ravenous kitsch machine. The funny thing is, as the decade progressed,
they got worse! Contemplate these three terrifying words: Dave Lee
Travis. (Sorry about that).
Dreadful as the DJs were, it didn't stop TOTP
from being
absolutely unmissable. Everyone watched it and if you didn't watch it
. . . well, you just did. You couldn't not watch. And one
of the best things about TOTP
for all teenage boys (and their dads!) was Pan's People.
Pan's People were in the show where the pop videos would be now.
There'd be a group who wouldn't come on, maybe they were Americans or
on tour or too busy, so what were they going to do to illustrate the
song? TOTP could play the song but what could they do about the
visuals? Send for Pan. So Pan and her People would come on and do a
dance.
And they were incredibly sexy, incredibly . . . vibrant. Their
little syncopated steps and that cute finger wagging to the camera
thing that they did. The flowing limbs and hair, the clothes wafting
around their bodies, the skirts that were always, always split up the
sides, the tassels that hung down over the exposed bits, cheekily
giving a glimpse of the land beyond as they swiveled and swirled and
danced and played.
We used to sit there and try and guess what song they'd have Pan's
People dance to. Mud? Nah, they'll be in the studio.
Sweet. Nah,
they'd also be there. And so you'd think of some American soulster
who'd be too busy doing Soul Train in America which we
knew was a brilliant show, but we never saw it. We once saw Bowie
doing Young Americans on it and he was brilliant and it
was brilliant. Top word, brilliant.
But Pan's People, you'd always want them to be dancing to a fast
song, something that they'd do a lot of the old swiveling and
swirling to, and by and large they would. Every so often they'd dance
to some soft ballad and it would be soooo disappointing, soooo
disappointing. They'd just waft around in these full-length chiffon things, trying
to look all ethereal and sensual, but . . . listen, I don't know how
to phrase this. Let's be bold. You never saw anything. There. Said it.
We wanted hot pants and skirts with slits and tassels, not nonsense
long chiffon things.
Pan's People. It's got to be said, there was an element of the
underwear section in the mail order catalogue (if you know what I
mean) to Pan's People. When I was a young lad, I used to send away for
mail order catalogues (in my mother's name, stupid) and then I'd be
really cool when they came, not say anything. Invariably, my mum would
open them and have a look. She'd never buy anything, but she'd look. When she went, I'd go and sneak a look at the underwear section.
Pre-teen soft porn. Well - and, listen, we're being honest here -
there was an element of that in Pan's People. An element? Not 'arf.
Everyone
had their favorite PP and they always did that looking at the camera
- just at you - bit, and it was all a huge come-on. They each had
their own color, their own moves. They each had their own tics,
little things that they'd do, that the others wouldn't.
"Pan's People - 'The name? We got the name from Pan, the goddess of
dance" said Ruth. "It was electric and thrilling and I have wonderful
warm memories,"' said Dee Dee, "For a young girl it was the best job
in the world. We were in the public eye, at the top of our profession
and admired by millions. We all had a great time in the Sixties and Seventies. 'I can
remember being in that small intimate studio with Stevie Wonder and it
was magic. But it was also quite lonely as well at times. Men were
keen to look but they wouldn't come near us. We were so glamorous they
thought we were unapproachable. And men will never approach a group of
women, especially a loud, attractive group of young women."
Flick Colby, the only American in the gang, said, "We were always
much more than a dance team. We were a group, except that we didn't
sing. We were just kinda like session musicians. We just got together
because we all liked dancing. We just wanted to go out and start
leaping around, so we did. As a dance group, Pan's People always had
something to say, and that was always reflected in our dancing." Er,
yes. Know what you mean, Flick. Sweet Flick. Always a way with words.
In 1974, she said this: "The girls were all picked because they
were good dancers, although good looking girls obviously help any
group along. The more they dance, the more sexy they are to watch. But
Pan's People have never been 'teasers'. We've never tried the alluring
technique." 'Course. "Of course we were sexy," said Ruth. 'Young girls
are sexy."
Kitsch is something that it's impossible to be at the time that
you're doing it. You can only be kitsch in retrospect. Mostly that's
absolutely true, but - and I don't know how they pulled this off -
Pan's People managed to pull off the unique trick of being
contemporarily kitsch. There was a naïve charm that was innocence.
What were they? Twenty? And now Babs talks about her daughter's
boyfriend asking her for a picture so that he can show his mates. "My
daughter's boyfriend wants a picture of her mum!?" And Ruth talks
about being at a party and sitting next to Paul McCartney and who's
that walking past? Why, it's Mick Jagger.
Pan's People were perfect. Gorgeous gals in a pre-silicon age, they
could have been you. So what were they like, all those parties? What
was it like, backstage at Top Of The
Pops? Was it a laugh? Ruth
looked said, "Was it a laugh? It was such a laugh I can' tell you."
So, go on, what happened? "'I'd tell you, but to be honest, I can
remember going out to lots of parties, but I can't really remember the
detail." You had a good time then. "Oh, yes. It was fun."
When Pan's People disbanded, most of the girls left their dancing
behind to raise families and pursue other careers. Babs married actor
Robert Powell and spent many years involved in fundraising (including
taking part in the Round the World Yacht Race). Dee Dee also married
and set up her own dance studio. Ruth settled into working in local
government, and Louise devoted her time to raising her family.
However, some of the girls remained involved in the production of TOTP
- Flick Colby remained as the choreographer, manager and
director for each of the three replacement dance acts, with Ruth
Pearson co-managing Legs & Co and Cherry Gillespie and Sue Menhenick
performing with Ruby Flipper.

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