But thanks to fellow Carry Oners Sid James and Peter Butterworth, Talbot ‘Tolly’ Rothwell’s turntable spun to the antiquated dreariness
of the crooners (Frank Sinatra, Perry Como and Bing Crosby).
As the Carry On scriptwriter, Tolly wasn’t high on the
pecking order when it came to selecting the aural ambience of his abode, especially
on those rare weekends when the stars came out and illuminated the sleepy
little Sussex village of Fulking.
But Babs was no shrinking violet, and often once the whisky
and wine was in full flow, Tolly’s wall mounted speakers would throb to the wah-wah
guitars and hard driving beat of The Temptations ‘Cloud Nine’. That’s when
things got interesting .. especially if Kenneth Williams was in residence!
It wouldn’t be long before young Ken would note Sid James’
disdain at the ongoing racket, and that’s when, without a second thought,
Kenneth would jump raft and come down on the side of the good ship, Windsor .
‘Turn it up, Barb’, he would scream. ‘Come on everyone, are
we the only ones ‘ere with a pulse?’ Babs would love it, I loved it .. and
Tolly would just give that ‘wink’ of his and retire graciously to the rear
garden.
The battle had been won. Soon, the likes of Marvin Gaye, The
Isley Brothers, Martha and the Vandellas, Booker T. & the M.G.'s, Eddie
Floyd and Wilson Pickett would drive Sid and his compatriots out of both the
house and the party spirit. Kenneth may have been left with a much diminished audience, but it was an audience all the same!
A Write Carry On - The Untold Story Of A Man In The Shadows
by Mike Cobley