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Thread started 07/05/16 8:55pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Prince @ the BRIT Awards show 2.11.1985 Grosvenor House Hotel in London

I'm not really a big talker,

But it's nice to know someone so far away loves you so much.

All thanks 2 God

um

Goodnight


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Reply #1 posted 07/05/16 8:56pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

American singer, songwriter and musician Prince stands up to collect the award for Best Internationa

American singer, songwriter and musician Prince stands up to collect the award for Best International Artist at the British Record Industry Awards, aka the BRIT Awards, held at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London, 11th February 1985. (Photo by Georges DeKeerle/Getty Images)

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Reply #2 posted 07/05/16 8:58pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Prince at the 1985 Brit AwardsPrince accepts his first Brit Award

Prince is the most successful international male artist in the history of the Brit Awards, winning the category five times - in 1985, 1992, 1993, 1995 and 1996.

He's also performed at the ceremony on several occasions and will be back this year to present an award.

But pop historians insist the rock star was taciturn and aloof on his first appearance, an impression reinforced by the fact he was accompanied everywhere by his 6 ft 6 in bodyguard, Charles "Big Chick" Huntsberry.

His shyness didn't help matters, either.

Elaine Paige, who presented Prince with the best soundtrack prize (for Purple Rain), told Smash Hits his acceptance speech "sounded like 'mumblemumblemumble' to me, and I was standing next to him!"

If you leaned in and paid close attention, though, the ornately costumed pop pixie was announcing a love affair with the UK that culminated in his 21-night stint at the O2 in 2007.

"I'm not really a big talker," he said. "But it's nice to know someone so far away loves you so much."


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Reply #3 posted 07/05/16 9:11pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Best Soundtrack / Cast Recording

Presented by Barbara Dickson and Elaine Paige. Nominees:

  • Electric Dreams (various artists)
  • Footloose (various artists)
  • Give My Regards to Broad Street (Paul McCartney)
  • Purple Rain (Prince and the Revolution)
  • The Woman in Red (Stevie Wonder and Dionne Warwick)

Winner: Purple Rain.

Best International Artist

Presented by a rather confused Holly Johnson out of Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Nominees:

  • Michael Jackson
  • Prince and the Revolution
  • Lionel Richie
  • Bruce Springsteen
  • ZZ Top

Winner: Prince & the Revolution

https://musicforstowaways.wordpress.com/2013/01/16/the-bpi-awards-1985/


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Reply #4 posted 07/05/16 9:22pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

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Reply #5 posted 07/06/16 3:26am

CROWNS1

I'm probably one of the few people in the universe that wasn't crazy about this period. The music was good, but I liked the Controvery/Dirty Mind era better. It was raw and edgy and new.

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Reply #6 posted 07/06/16 8:20am

OldFriends4Sal
e

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Reply #7 posted 07/06/16 8:22am

OldFriends4Sal
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Reply #8 posted 07/06/16 10:32am

OldFriends4Sal
e

1985: American Pop Star Prince - real name Prince Rogers Nelson - in London at the British Record Industry Awards. (PA)

February 1985: Prince follows his bodyguard at the British Record Industry Awards at the Grosvenor House Hotel. Prince and his band the Revolution were named Best International Group.

February 1985: Prince follows his bodyguard at the British Record Industry Awards at the Grosvenor House Hotel. Prince and his band the Revolution were named Best International Group.

PA/Press Association Images

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Reply #9 posted 07/06/16 11:43am

LondonIrish197
0

OldFriends4Sale said:



Best Soundtrack / Cast Recording


Presented by Barbara Dickson and Elaine Paige. Nominees:


  • Electric Dreams (various artists)

  • Footloose (various artists)

  • Give My Regards to Broad Street (Paul McCartney)

  • Purple Rain (Prince and the Revolution)

  • The Woman in Red (Stevie Wonder and Dionne Warwick)

Winner: Purple Rain.



Best International Artist


Presented by a rather confused Holly Johnson out of Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Nominees:


  • Michael Jackson

  • Prince and the Revolution

  • Lionel Richie

  • Bruce Springsteen

  • ZZ Top

Winner: Prince & the Revolution



https://musicforstowaways.wordpress.com/2013/01/16/the-bpi-awards-1985/






I remember watching it at the time and Holly Johnson read out the nominees then opened the envelope and said something along the lines of "I've never met this man but I've had sex over the phone with him" then announced Prince as the winner.

Does anyone else remember this?
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Reply #10 posted 07/08/16 8:47am

OldFriends4Sal
e

LondonIrish1970 said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Best Soundtrack / Cast Recording

Presented by Barbara Dickson and Elaine Paige. Nominees:

  • Electric Dreams (various artists)
  • Footloose (various artists)
  • Give My Regards to Broad Street (Paul McCartney)
  • Purple Rain (Prince and the Revolution)
  • The Woman in Red (Stevie Wonder and Dionne Warwick)

Winner: Purple Rain.

Best International Artist

Presented by a rather confused Holly Johnson out of Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Nominees:

  • Michael Jackson
  • Prince and the Revolution
  • Lionel Richie
  • Bruce Springsteen
  • ZZ Top

Winner: Prince & the Revolution

https://musicforstowaways.wordpress.com/2013/01/16/the-bpi-awards-1985/


I remember watching it at the time and Holly Johnson read out the nominees then opened the envelope and said something along the lines of "I've never met this man but I've had sex over the phone with him" then announced Prince as the winner. Does anyone else remember this?

I wasn't there but I rememer this lol

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Reply #11 posted 07/08/16 9:10am

BillieBalloon

The whole world loved him!
It's gracious of him to turn up at that time to accept the award personally.


He had a long love affair with the U.K. Actually it was still carrying on past 2007, in 2014 with his hitnrun tour. Also the free c.d giveaways in newspapers.

.
[Edited 7/8/16 9:25am]
Baby, you're a star.

Meet me in another world, space and joy
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Reply #12 posted 07/08/16 11:29am

OldFriends4Sal
e

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Reply #13 posted 07/08/16 11:30am

OldFriends4Sal
e

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Reply #14 posted 07/08/16 7:59pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

Neil Tennant on the 1985 Brits – a classic feature from the vaults

The Brits are coming! We're marking the annual bunfest by reliving Neil Tennant's visit to the 1985 ceremony for Smash Hits, courtesy of Rock's Backpages – the world's leading archive of vintage music journalism

Prince

Feel the glamour … Prince picks up his tasteful trophy at the 1985 Brits. Photograph: Georges Dekeerle/Getty Images

It's seven o'clock on a freezing Monday evening in London and – outside the posh Grosvenor House Hotel – a large crowd of girls is, inexplicably, bawling The Union of the Snake at the tops of their voices.

Not that inexplicably, actually. Admittedly, hordes of pop stars are flooding into the hotel, but Duran Duran are nowhere in sight.

The reason for the avalanche of pop stars is, of course, the presentation of the 1985 British Record Industry Awards. In previous years this has been a comparatively quiet affair with the awards doled out over lunch, but this year it's an extravaganza based on the American Grammy awards: live TV coverage, lashings of stars, a slap-up meal, performances on stage by famous faces etc.

I arrive at the hotel just after Pete Townshend of the Who and just before Nick Heyward. In the queue for the cloakroom, all the men are wearing bow ties and dinner jackets and trying to impress their friends and rivals in the music business.

"Peter Frampton …" I hear one say to another. "There was a man who was a poster and became a legend."

In other words, a lot of rubbish is going to be talked tonight and a lot of backs slapped as the wine flows.

Photographers are in a frenzy in the foyer snapping anyone remotely famous, like Bob Geldof and Paula Yates, Howard and Jan Jones, Meat Loaf, Toyah … I buy a refreshing gin-and-tonic in the bar and have a little chat with Nick Heyward who's looking very chic in a black moiré suit.

"I try to make the effort," he murmurs modestly and tells me about his new record until Peter Powell interrupts and we reminisce about old Oxford Road Shows. He's not with Janice Long (as I know you were wondering). "She's got to work tonight," he explains. Anyway, then David Grant starts talking to Nick and I wander through the bar, past Neil Kinnock who's here with his wife, Glenys, and two kids, and nearly bump into Alison Moyet arriving with her husband.

Screams are drifting down the stairs from outside: Frankie Goes To Hollywood are arriving. And the bar is buzzing with speculation that Prince is in town and will be coming to the ceremony. Will he turn up?

Time for dinner. As I sit down, Nik Kershaw and his wife scurry past, pursued by photographers, looking for their table. A minute later, Sting and Trudi Styler emerge from the opposite direction, looking equally lost. Sting's new haircut and dinner suit give him a gaunt and glamorous look; Trudi looks very pregnant. Oooh! There's Kim Wilde and her father.

Discontent is seething in the press tables where I'm sitting. All us poor hacks are up in the balcony above the main hall where all the important guests are dining. The man from the Star and the man from the London Evening Standard keeping trotting off to see who's here. I tuck into the smoked salmon, followed by vegetable soup – or Creme de Legumes, as it says on the menu – duck, profiteroles and bottles of wine, chilled in buckets of ice. All quite acceptable, really, even if it is a bit "like punk never happened".

One photographer at my table asks another if he's going to hang round in the foyer to photograph Wham! when they arrive.

"Oh God, no!" he replies. "They always look the same.''

Lesley Ann Jones flits from table to table, one minute chatting to the man from The Sun, the next marching past with Holly Johnson's German friend Wolfgang.

After the meal, we get speeches from officials of the British Phonographic Industry who've organised the event, saying things like "One in every four records sold anywhere has a British connection" (which is quite impressive when you think about it).

Upstairs, the speeches are immediately forgotten when an enormous entourage of photographers, hangers-on and heavies mill across the floor. And in their centre is … PRINCE! Tiny enough to make Nik Kershaw look tall, an expression somewhere between sulkiness and embarrassment on his face, he disappears into a side door, followed by a ripple of applause.

A few minutes later, Mike Smith takes up his position in front of television cameras just a few yards in front of me and the live TV transmission of the awards commences.

You probably saw it all on TV anyway – in fact, you probably saw and heard more than me, because in the Great Hall it was often difficult to hear what was going on over the constant buzz of conversation. Holly Johnson's remark about having had "sex on the telephone" with Prince came over loud and clear but Prince's mumbled thank-yous were just about inaudible.

From where I'm standing I have a perfect view of Elaine Paige, who applauds Sade most enthusiastically.

Until he accepts his second award – after which he leaves – Prince and his two bodyguards sit at the same table as Strawberry Switchblade. "What did you talk to him about?" I ask them.

"We were struck dumb," confesses Jill. Apparently there was no conversation whatsoever.

Once the broadcast is over, a lot of people start to leave, although celebrations continue 'til one. David Cassidy marches out, not quite as tanned as George Michael, who's almost orange. He looks very well, actually, and while departing amid the usual gaggle of photographers, stops and says "Hello" to me, before having his pic taken with Mark O'Toole.

The Frankie lads are looking pretty "bladdered", as you'd expect, discussing where to go on to. They settle on the Embassy club, where two of Mark's brothers are playing in a group called Phantasee. Holly is wandering round, very relaxed: " 'Ello, 'la," he says. "I'm pissed."

And he's not the only one. Strawberry Switchblade, their manager and me, set off to find Bronski Beat's dressing-room but somehow end up in the kitchens. Instead, we nip into a little room where Gary Crowley interviews Rose and Jill for cable TV, and I have a word with Elaine Paige about what Prince said when she presented him with one of his awards: "Sounded like 'mumublemumblemumble' to me, and I was standing next to him."

Right beside her, Neil Kinnock is being questioned by journalists. It's just a few hours since Clive Ponting was found innocent and Kinnock is busy telling the press that "responsibility" goes "right to the top" when his wife tells him it's time they went home.

"Coming, Glen," he shouts and they leave.

And so, a few minutes later, do I.

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Reply #15 posted 07/11/16 11:53am

OldFriends4Sal
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Forums > Prince: Music and More > Prince @ the BRIT Awards show 2.11.1985 Grosvenor House Hotel in London