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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:08,280 BACKING GROUP: # Ooo-ooo-wahhh-ahhh 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 4 00:00:09,200 --> 00:00:12,880 # Only the lonely 5 00:00:12,920 --> 00:00:15,360 # Only the lonely 6 00:00:15,400 --> 00:00:16,640 (CHEERING) 7 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:19,760 # Know the way I... People that are completely unique - 8 00:00:19,800 --> 00:00:23,800 you don't so much admire them as just marvel at them. 9 00:00:23,840 --> 00:00:26,880 # Only the lonely... # 10 00:00:26,920 --> 00:00:31,280 I was sitting in the living room with me mum and me aunty, 11 00:00:31,320 --> 00:00:32,880 and it came on the radio. 12 00:00:32,920 --> 00:00:35,840 (SIGHS) What a voice. Yeah. Fantastic. 13 00:00:35,880 --> 00:00:39,080 And I always liked his stuff, bought his records. 14 00:00:39,120 --> 00:00:42,200 Me mum and me aunty were going, "Ooh, it's too sexy!" 15 00:00:42,240 --> 00:00:47,840 # Only in dreams 16 00:00:47,880 --> 00:00:49,880 NARRATOR: Sexy AND cool, 17 00:00:49,920 --> 00:00:53,800 Roy Orbison was perhaps the most humble and influential rock star 18 00:00:53,840 --> 00:00:55,640 the world ever knew. 19 00:00:55,680 --> 00:00:57,960 # Dreams 20 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:02,240 All of us, in studying the craft of making a good record, 21 00:01:02,280 --> 00:01:06,080 had studied Roy's work. 22 00:01:06,120 --> 00:01:08,360 In many ways, my whole life 23 00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:10,680 has been fashioned, 24 00:01:10,720 --> 00:01:12,400 subconsciously, by him. 25 00:01:12,440 --> 00:01:15,080 # Dreams... # 26 00:01:15,120 --> 00:01:18,320 # I'm going back some day 27 00:01:18,360 --> 00:01:22,960 # Gonna stay on Blue Bayou 28 00:01:24,400 --> 00:01:26,960 # Where the folks are fine 29 00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:29,920 # And the world is mine 30 00:01:29,960 --> 00:01:31,840 # Blue Bayou... # 31 00:01:31,880 --> 00:01:34,160 NARRATOR: His unique voice, his unique sound, 32 00:01:34,200 --> 00:01:36,040 his totally unique appearance 33 00:01:36,080 --> 00:01:39,960 made Roy Orbison one of a kind, especially in Britain, 34 00:01:40,000 --> 00:01:43,520 where his talent was embraced and supported by rock royalty. 35 00:01:43,560 --> 00:01:48,040 # Golden days before they end 36 00:01:48,080 --> 00:01:49,280 # Whisper... # 37 00:01:49,320 --> 00:01:51,440 I think Roy and England had a love affair. 38 00:01:51,480 --> 00:01:53,960 Roy loved the British and the British loved Roy. 39 00:01:54,000 --> 00:01:56,000 (WILD CHEERING) 40 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:07,080 (PRETTY WOMAN INTRO) 41 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:16,880 # Pretty woman 42 00:02:16,920 --> 00:02:18,760 # Walkin' down the street... # 43 00:02:18,800 --> 00:02:20,160 NARRATOR: By the 1980s, 44 00:02:20,200 --> 00:02:24,040 Roy Orbison's status as a living legend was well and truly confirmed, 45 00:02:24,080 --> 00:02:27,360 when some of the biggest names in the music business queued up 46 00:02:27,400 --> 00:02:30,880 to be in his backing band for his Black And White Night concert. 47 00:02:30,920 --> 00:02:33,040 # ..as good as you 48 00:02:33,080 --> 00:02:35,320 Roy and I talked about doing a show 49 00:02:35,360 --> 00:02:39,200 that would be a performance show for Roy. 50 00:02:39,240 --> 00:02:42,080 So we set a time, finally - 51 00:02:42,120 --> 00:02:45,520 September, 1987. 52 00:02:45,560 --> 00:02:47,320 # I couldn't help but see 53 00:02:47,360 --> 00:02:48,960 # Pretty woman... # 54 00:02:49,000 --> 00:02:50,640 It had been a while since people 55 00:02:50,680 --> 00:02:52,880 had focused on Roy's music quite this way. 56 00:02:52,920 --> 00:02:54,680 A lot of care was taken to do 57 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:58,480 the songs justice the way I believe the show does. 58 00:02:58,520 --> 00:03:00,600 (PRETTY WOMAN INSTRUMENTAL) 59 00:03:00,640 --> 00:03:03,640 # Rrrrrrrrrr! # 60 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:08,240 I'm being asked all the time how this wonderful cast came together. 61 00:03:08,280 --> 00:03:13,360 Everybody just seemed to be available at that particular time. 62 00:03:13,400 --> 00:03:17,080 If we would had done it a month before, a month later, 63 00:03:17,120 --> 00:03:19,960 I don't think everybody could have been there. 64 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:22,000 (ROCK AND ROLL INSTRUMENTAL) 65 00:03:25,640 --> 00:03:28,560 ELVIS COSTELLO: I don't think the entire ensemble 66 00:03:28,600 --> 00:03:32,600 was put together until we were all on the set of 67 00:03:32,640 --> 00:03:34,560 the Cocoanut Grove in the Ambassador Hotel. 68 00:03:34,600 --> 00:03:38,160 I know Bruce Springsteen arrived at the very last minute. 69 00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:40,560 How did you get that? 70 00:03:40,600 --> 00:03:43,040 My big memory of that night was 71 00:03:43,080 --> 00:03:45,880 Bruce arriving, I think, for the sound check, 72 00:03:45,920 --> 00:03:49,920 and then realising that his memory of the songs 73 00:03:49,960 --> 00:03:52,160 was not the same as the ability to play them. 74 00:03:52,200 --> 00:03:53,960 # Sweet dreams... 75 00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:56,120 Then you go: (FALSETTO) # Sweet dreams 76 00:03:56,160 --> 00:03:58,720 You might wanna go under me. Yeah, I may have to! 77 00:03:58,760 --> 00:04:01,120 When he actually looked at the charts and realised 78 00:04:01,160 --> 00:04:03,760 that there were odd counts in some of the songs, 79 00:04:03,800 --> 00:04:06,040 I have an image of him sitting with his guitar, 80 00:04:06,080 --> 00:04:08,600 with, like, a cassette Walkman, 81 00:04:08,640 --> 00:04:12,040 comparing what he had obviously memorised, 82 00:04:12,080 --> 00:04:15,880 over a couple of decades since the records came out, 83 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:17,920 to what was written on the page, 84 00:04:17,960 --> 00:04:21,040 and frantically closing the distance between the two things 85 00:04:21,080 --> 00:04:23,160 if he was gonna play on a couple of these songs. 86 00:04:23,200 --> 00:04:25,560 I thought that's the measure of how much he loved Roy 87 00:04:25,600 --> 00:04:27,200 because he was really dedicated. 88 00:04:27,240 --> 00:04:31,720 BOTH: # Sweet dreams, baby 89 00:04:33,440 --> 00:04:36,240 # Oh, how long 90 00:04:36,280 --> 00:04:38,280 # Must I dream? # 91 00:04:38,320 --> 00:04:40,320 OK. 92 00:04:41,320 --> 00:04:45,080 BOTH: # Sweet dreams, baby... # 93 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:50,840 NARRATOR: Orbison clearly inspired anyone who was anyone in music. 94 00:04:50,880 --> 00:04:53,680 But just where did all the raw talent come from? 95 00:04:55,320 --> 00:04:59,280 Born in 1936 in the small town of Vernon in Texas, 96 00:04:59,320 --> 00:05:01,720 from an early age Roy was single-minded 97 00:05:01,760 --> 00:05:04,160 in his pursuit of a career in music. 98 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:08,280 ROY ORBISON: My mom and dad gave me a guitar when I was six years old. 99 00:05:08,320 --> 00:05:10,400 I always wanted to be a singer. 100 00:05:10,440 --> 00:05:12,520 My father asked me, 101 00:05:12,560 --> 00:05:15,240 when I was about six or seven, 102 00:05:15,280 --> 00:05:17,280 maybe even earlier... 103 00:05:17,320 --> 00:05:20,160 I don't know whether I was playing the guitar at the time or not, 104 00:05:20,200 --> 00:05:22,720 but he said, "Know what you're gonna be when you grown up?" 105 00:05:22,760 --> 00:05:24,080 and I said, "I'll be a singer." 106 00:05:26,680 --> 00:05:31,400 I was able to get on a radio show when I was eight years old - 107 00:05:31,440 --> 00:05:33,440 an amateur hour - 108 00:05:33,480 --> 00:05:36,960 and I showed up so often that they made me a part of the show. 109 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:38,880 And when I was 14, I think, 110 00:05:38,920 --> 00:05:43,160 I moved to West Texas and formed a group. 111 00:05:43,200 --> 00:05:47,080 Well, we were from Wink, Texas, and so we were the Wink Westerners, 112 00:05:47,120 --> 00:05:51,320 and when we got a bit more popular, we became the Teen Kings. 113 00:05:51,360 --> 00:05:53,640 # We'll hang out and raise some fun 114 00:05:53,680 --> 00:05:56,200 # We'll stay out till after one... # 115 00:05:56,240 --> 00:05:58,880 I met him the first time in Odessa and Midland, Texas. 116 00:05:58,920 --> 00:06:00,400 He had a group that played 117 00:06:00,440 --> 00:06:02,440 on the local television show there, 118 00:06:02,480 --> 00:06:04,600 and the song was called Ooby Dooby. 119 00:06:04,640 --> 00:06:06,680 # Ooby dooby, ooby dooby 120 00:06:06,720 --> 00:06:09,080 # Ooby dooby, dooby, dooby, dooby, dooby 121 00:06:09,120 --> 00:06:10,440 # Dooby doo... # 122 00:06:10,480 --> 00:06:13,840 ROY ORBISON: I made a demonstration record called Ooby Dooby, 123 00:06:13,880 --> 00:06:18,840 and sent that then to Sam Phillips in Memphis, Tennessee. 124 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:22,360 He asked me - could I be there in three days? 125 00:06:22,400 --> 00:06:27,040 And so I grabbed my group together and we made the record 126 00:06:27,080 --> 00:06:28,800 and I dropped out of the university 127 00:06:28,840 --> 00:06:31,320 - the junior college that I was attending then - 128 00:06:31,360 --> 00:06:34,000 and went on the road within two or three months. 129 00:06:34,040 --> 00:06:38,040 JOHNNY CASH: What I thought at the time 130 00:06:38,080 --> 00:06:40,400 was the smallest voice 131 00:06:40,440 --> 00:06:42,120 was Roy Orbison. 132 00:06:42,160 --> 00:06:43,960 Sam Phillips says he had to put 133 00:06:44,000 --> 00:06:46,760 the microphone down his throat to pick him up. 134 00:06:46,800 --> 00:06:49,320 But I think Sam had the wrong kind of microphone, 135 00:06:49,360 --> 00:06:53,480 because his later records prove 136 00:06:53,520 --> 00:06:58,240 that he's not only got a great, strong voice, 137 00:06:58,280 --> 00:07:00,720 but he's one of the greatest singers in our business. 138 00:07:00,760 --> 00:07:04,440 But he saw his own potential, as did others, 139 00:07:04,480 --> 00:07:08,320 and he moved to a bigger label and had bigger records. 140 00:07:08,360 --> 00:07:10,240 # Pretty woman 141 00:07:10,280 --> 00:07:12,000 # Walkin' down the street 142 00:07:12,040 --> 00:07:13,640 # Pretty woman 143 00:07:13,680 --> 00:07:15,720 # The kind I like to meet 144 00:07:15,760 --> 00:07:17,880 # Pretty woman... # 145 00:07:17,920 --> 00:07:20,480 NARRATOR: Searching for ways to fulfil that potential, 146 00:07:20,520 --> 00:07:24,880 Roy looked across the Atlantic to an early-'60s music culture in Britain 147 00:07:24,920 --> 00:07:27,600 that was more than ready to embrace something new. 148 00:07:27,640 --> 00:07:30,680 # Mercy! 149 00:07:30,720 --> 00:07:35,160 In the early-'60s, 150 00:07:35,200 --> 00:07:37,240 I worked for Decca as a promotion man 151 00:07:37,280 --> 00:07:39,440 and my job, apart from promoting records, 152 00:07:39,480 --> 00:07:43,080 was to look after all the American artists who came over to London. 153 00:07:43,120 --> 00:07:46,880 I was 21 years old, and it was a dream job. 154 00:07:46,920 --> 00:07:50,880 # Are you lonely, just like me? 155 00:07:53,640 --> 00:07:55,920 # Rrrrrrrrrr! 156 00:07:59,760 --> 00:08:02,320 # Pretty woman, stop a while 157 00:08:03,120 --> 00:08:04,520 # Pretty woman... # 158 00:08:04,560 --> 00:08:07,040 Very American, Southern, polite - 159 00:08:07,080 --> 00:08:09,680 and that was my initial impression of Roy. 160 00:08:09,720 --> 00:08:12,960 Very softly spoken, very polite, very appreciative. 161 00:08:13,000 --> 00:08:16,800 He was a gentleman - a real gentleman, actually. 162 00:08:16,840 --> 00:08:20,360 And that's what he had - that kind of rather sweet, 163 00:08:20,400 --> 00:08:24,360 Southern states of America charm that he had. 164 00:08:24,400 --> 00:08:27,280 # Pretty paper 165 00:08:27,320 --> 00:08:29,720 # Pretty ribbons 166 00:08:29,760 --> 00:08:32,520 # Of blue 167 00:08:32,560 --> 00:08:35,320 # Wrap your presents 168 00:08:35,360 --> 00:08:37,880 # To your darling 169 00:08:37,920 --> 00:08:41,840 # From you 170 00:08:41,880 --> 00:08:43,640 # Pretty pencils 171 00:08:43,680 --> 00:08:45,840 # To write - I love... # 172 00:08:45,880 --> 00:08:48,560 He would invariably come with his wife Claudette 173 00:08:48,600 --> 00:08:50,440 and his boys. 174 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,000 They'd have a little apartment, 175 00:08:53,040 --> 00:08:55,480 and I would spend a lot of time with them as a family, 176 00:08:55,520 --> 00:08:58,760 cos they were very family, and... 177 00:08:58,800 --> 00:09:01,720 he loved having the boys around, 178 00:09:01,760 --> 00:09:03,480 he loved having Claudette around. 179 00:09:03,520 --> 00:09:06,160 And so I became 180 00:09:06,200 --> 00:09:08,400 part of their family. 181 00:09:08,440 --> 00:09:11,440 # Downtown shoppers 182 00:09:11,480 --> 00:09:16,800 # Christmas is nigh 183 00:09:16,840 --> 00:09:18,840 # And there he sits... # 184 00:09:18,880 --> 00:09:22,360 He always reminded me of a preacher, he was so gentle. 185 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:25,040 Very, very sweet. Loved his kids, loved the family. 186 00:09:25,080 --> 00:09:28,080 He was just a lovely guy, I mean, we were all mental. 187 00:09:28,120 --> 00:09:30,240 We were young and mad. Roy was very... 188 00:09:30,280 --> 00:09:32,440 a very polite American. 189 00:09:32,480 --> 00:09:34,880 He was very sweet. We were Scousers - 190 00:09:34,920 --> 00:09:38,080 hard cases, nutters. 191 00:09:38,120 --> 00:09:40,040 He was a gentleman. 192 00:09:40,080 --> 00:09:43,200 We were idolising Americans at this point. 193 00:09:43,240 --> 00:09:48,160 You know, we had Cliff and we had Tommy Steele, but... 194 00:09:48,200 --> 00:09:50,480 We were just kids from Liverpool, who knew nothing, 195 00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:53,160 following Roy Orbison, a massive star, 196 00:09:53,200 --> 00:09:54,880 whose songs we'd sung for years, 197 00:09:54,920 --> 00:09:56,560 and we're there with him, 198 00:09:56,600 --> 00:09:59,000 and watching him - a dream. 199 00:09:59,040 --> 00:10:02,800 # Well, I got a woman as mean as she can be 200 00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:09,320 # Some-a-times I think she's almost mean as me... # 201 00:10:09,360 --> 00:10:12,000 The Brits were so enamoured of American... 202 00:10:12,040 --> 00:10:16,160 of rock and roll, um... 203 00:10:16,200 --> 00:10:20,520 they possibly appreciated them more than the Americans did. 204 00:10:20,560 --> 00:10:23,880 TONY KING: The songs seemed more hip and the performances were more hip, 205 00:10:23,920 --> 00:10:27,280 and that's what we were all about. 206 00:10:27,320 --> 00:10:32,720 I think any British recording artist from that period 207 00:10:32,760 --> 00:10:34,520 would probably tell you the same thing. 208 00:10:34,560 --> 00:10:38,400 # THE BEATLES: Love Me Do 209 00:10:38,440 --> 00:10:41,280 NARRATOR: Though Britain was hungry for all things American, 210 00:10:41,320 --> 00:10:44,640 Roy's first UK tour would turn out to be an unexpected test 211 00:10:44,680 --> 00:10:47,160 of just how loyal his British fans might be. 212 00:10:47,200 --> 00:10:51,000 An all-English musical phenomenon was sweeping the country. 213 00:10:51,040 --> 00:10:55,680 Roy found himself sharing the bill with The Beatles. 214 00:10:55,720 --> 00:10:58,440 OLIVIA HARRISON: You know, from what George told me, 215 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:00,120 they were so starved of rock and roll 216 00:11:00,160 --> 00:11:02,280 and how they waited for the records to come out 217 00:11:02,320 --> 00:11:06,160 and they knew there was this thing going on in America. 218 00:11:06,200 --> 00:11:11,080 So for them, it was just something that they were really hungry for. 219 00:11:11,120 --> 00:11:14,560 TONY KING: The Beatles responded to Roy with total admiration. 220 00:11:14,600 --> 00:11:17,320 I can't emphasise enough how much 221 00:11:17,360 --> 00:11:21,760 American artists were the thing to admire, 222 00:11:21,800 --> 00:11:25,440 you know, and all things American. 223 00:11:25,480 --> 00:11:27,720 Before I joined the Stones in the late-'50s, 224 00:11:27,760 --> 00:11:29,200 I thought he was fantastic. 225 00:11:29,240 --> 00:11:32,480 And then he toured with The Beatles. 63? 226 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:34,200 (WILD CHEERING) 227 00:11:34,240 --> 00:11:36,560 GERRY MARSDEN: The Beatles were on the tour with us, 228 00:11:36,600 --> 00:11:39,440 the Beats, ourselves and Roy - massive tour. 229 00:11:39,480 --> 00:11:42,600 1963 was a great time for me. 230 00:11:42,640 --> 00:11:44,520 It was my first record, 231 00:11:44,560 --> 00:11:46,280 first number one 232 00:11:46,320 --> 00:11:48,200 and my first tour with 233 00:11:48,240 --> 00:11:51,400 Mr Roy Orbison, who became a very dear friend, 234 00:11:51,440 --> 00:11:53,520 and such a lovely guy. 235 00:11:53,560 --> 00:11:55,400 # I got a woman 236 00:11:56,320 --> 00:11:58,320 # Yeah, I got a woman 237 00:11:59,200 --> 00:12:01,200 # Yeah, I got a woman... # 238 00:12:01,240 --> 00:12:04,360 OLIVIA HARRISON: George told me they followed Roy 239 00:12:04,400 --> 00:12:07,640 and they would stand in the wings listening to this big ending, 240 00:12:07,680 --> 00:12:11,240 and he said they'd just be trembling thinking, 241 00:12:11,280 --> 00:12:14,280 "How on earth are we gonna go out and follow this?" 242 00:12:14,320 --> 00:12:17,560 (APPLAUSE AND CHEERING) 243 00:12:21,720 --> 00:12:26,000 In spite of the fact that The Beatles were getting 244 00:12:26,040 --> 00:12:29,480 this huge acclaim from the British public 245 00:12:29,520 --> 00:12:32,080 right from the word go, really - 246 00:12:32,120 --> 00:12:35,080 from Love me Do, it started - 247 00:12:35,120 --> 00:12:38,280 when Roy came on stage, 248 00:12:38,320 --> 00:12:44,280 he still had the goods to top them. 249 00:12:44,320 --> 00:12:50,560 # Just before the dawn 250 00:12:50,600 --> 00:12:55,000 He just stood there and sang - 251 00:12:55,040 --> 00:12:58,240 that's all he did - didn't do anything else! 252 00:12:58,280 --> 00:13:00,440 I don't remember him putting one foot to the left 253 00:13:00,480 --> 00:13:02,600 or one foot to the right, to be honest with you. 254 00:13:02,640 --> 00:13:05,360 # I can't help it 255 00:13:05,400 --> 00:13:08,480 # I can't help it, if I... # 256 00:13:08,520 --> 00:13:10,720 That was what the impact was - 257 00:13:10,760 --> 00:13:15,360 was that he had the nerve 258 00:13:15,400 --> 00:13:18,120 to do that - to just stand there 259 00:13:18,160 --> 00:13:20,400 and let his voice do the work. 260 00:13:22,600 --> 00:13:25,320 # It's too bad 261 00:13:25,360 --> 00:13:30,040 # That all these things... # 262 00:13:30,080 --> 00:13:33,960 BILL WYMAN: Some people can do that - they just give off this aura. 263 00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:36,080 They don't have to move about. 264 00:13:36,120 --> 00:13:37,960 I've been trying to do it for 30 years, 265 00:13:38,000 --> 00:13:40,160 but it doesn't happen with me! 266 00:13:40,200 --> 00:13:43,000 So I stay in the shadows. (LAUGHS) 267 00:13:43,040 --> 00:13:46,920 # Only 268 00:13:46,960 --> 00:13:50,040 # In dreams... # 269 00:13:50,080 --> 00:13:52,360 ROY ORBISON: Well, in my case, 270 00:13:52,400 --> 00:13:54,360 when you see me perform, it's - 271 00:13:54,400 --> 00:13:56,680 what happens is I sing 272 00:13:56,720 --> 00:13:59,120 and the audience watches me do that. 273 00:13:59,160 --> 00:14:02,840 # Some-a-times I think she's almost mean as me 274 00:14:02,880 --> 00:14:07,480 On opening night, I had between seven to 15, 20 encores, 275 00:14:07,520 --> 00:14:10,760 and Paul and John grabbed me by the arms and said, 276 00:14:10,800 --> 00:14:13,480 "Yankee, go home," whatever, and wouldn't let me 277 00:14:13,520 --> 00:14:16,040 take my last curtain call. But it was all in good fun. 278 00:14:16,080 --> 00:14:17,760 GERRY MARSDEN: And that voice - 279 00:14:17,800 --> 00:14:20,960 my God! - used to annoy me it was so good. 280 00:14:22,320 --> 00:14:26,520 # Each place we go 281 00:14:27,400 --> 00:14:32,000 # I'm so afraid... # 282 00:14:32,040 --> 00:14:35,720 TONY KING: He'd sing Running Scared, and his mouth would go... 283 00:14:35,760 --> 00:14:38,960 "just running scared", like this - you know? - 284 00:14:39,000 --> 00:14:41,120 this tiny little movement of the mouth, 285 00:14:41,160 --> 00:14:44,560 but, phwoar... And he'd get to the end of that song, 286 00:14:44,600 --> 00:14:46,720 where it goes up and up and up and up, 287 00:14:46,760 --> 00:14:49,920 and his mouth still wasn't moving, not a lot, 288 00:14:49,960 --> 00:14:51,760 not like, "ahr", you know, 289 00:14:51,800 --> 00:14:54,040 I'm really gonna give it the full whack. 290 00:14:54,080 --> 00:14:58,240 He'd just still stand there and his mouth would open slightly more, 291 00:14:58,280 --> 00:15:00,960 and then out would come this incredible note. 292 00:15:01,000 --> 00:15:03,080 And I think that's what was so thrilling 293 00:15:03,120 --> 00:15:06,520 because his modesty 294 00:15:06,560 --> 00:15:10,280 in combination with his vocal prowess 295 00:15:10,320 --> 00:15:12,800 was quite something to see. 296 00:15:14,080 --> 00:15:18,080 # You love him so 297 00:15:18,120 --> 00:15:20,200 GERRY MARSDEN: The way he sang was different 298 00:15:20,240 --> 00:15:21,600 than we'd ever heard before. 299 00:15:21,640 --> 00:15:24,760 Elvis didn't do that, but Roy did. 300 00:15:24,800 --> 00:15:27,960 And I think just the difference in sound 301 00:15:28,000 --> 00:15:30,680 that that man made, that's why he's so popular. 302 00:15:30,720 --> 00:15:35,480 # If he came back 303 00:15:35,520 --> 00:15:38,400 # Which one would you choose? 304 00:15:38,440 --> 00:15:40,880 ROY ORBISON: I never had 305 00:15:40,920 --> 00:15:42,960 any formal training, and I think 306 00:15:43,000 --> 00:15:45,720 maybe it's just that I might be a baritone 307 00:15:45,760 --> 00:15:48,760 with a real high range, 308 00:15:48,800 --> 00:15:51,520 two-and-a-half octaves or so, but I've never checked it. 309 00:15:51,560 --> 00:15:54,360 # His head in the air 310 00:15:56,400 --> 00:15:58,760 # Oh, my heart was breaking 311 00:15:58,800 --> 00:16:01,680 # Which one would it be? 312 00:16:01,720 --> 00:16:04,360 # You turned around 313 00:16:04,400 --> 00:16:10,040 # And walked away with me # 314 00:16:10,080 --> 00:16:11,560 I started singing this way 315 00:16:11,600 --> 00:16:14,800 because I was writing songs, 316 00:16:14,840 --> 00:16:18,160 and I wrote the melody 317 00:16:18,200 --> 00:16:19,960 that I heard in my head. 318 00:16:20,000 --> 00:16:23,520 So then I had to sing those notes as well. I didn't know how high 319 00:16:23,560 --> 00:16:26,160 or low you were supposed to go, so I went where I wanted to. 320 00:16:32,080 --> 00:16:36,200 # I could smile for a while 321 00:16:37,520 --> 00:16:40,040 # But I saw you last night 322 00:16:40,080 --> 00:16:43,360 # You held my hand so tight 323 00:16:43,400 --> 00:16:49,400 # As you stopped to say hello 324 00:16:49,440 --> 00:16:52,360 # Oh, you wished me well 325 00:16:52,400 --> 00:16:56,280 # You couldn't tell 326 00:16:56,320 --> 00:17:00,880 # That I'd been crying 327 00:17:00,920 --> 00:17:04,080 # Over you 328 00:17:04,120 --> 00:17:06,800 # Crying 329 00:17:07,720 --> 00:17:09,800 # Over you 330 00:17:09,840 --> 00:17:14,520 # Then you said, "So long" 331 00:17:15,560 --> 00:17:17,680 # Left me standing 332 00:17:18,560 --> 00:17:21,080 # All alone 333 00:17:21,120 --> 00:17:23,360 # Alone and crying... # 334 00:17:23,400 --> 00:17:25,640 There was something about Roy's voice 335 00:17:25,680 --> 00:17:27,640 that was completely unique to him, 336 00:17:27,680 --> 00:17:32,640 which was obviously a good thing because it was hard to emulate, 337 00:17:32,680 --> 00:17:35,480 that had this sort of - and I always thought 338 00:17:35,520 --> 00:17:37,360 it had a crying sound to it. 339 00:17:37,400 --> 00:17:39,840 It almost was like a controlled cry. 340 00:17:39,880 --> 00:17:44,800 # The touch of your hand 341 00:17:44,840 --> 00:17:47,360 # Can start me crying 342 00:17:50,920 --> 00:17:52,920 # I thought that I 343 00:17:54,120 --> 00:17:56,120 # Was over you 344 00:17:57,360 --> 00:18:00,320 # But it's true 345 00:18:00,360 --> 00:18:02,600 # So true 346 00:18:02,640 --> 00:18:06,000 # I love you even more 347 00:18:06,040 --> 00:18:09,080 # Than I did before 348 00:18:09,120 --> 00:18:15,440 # But, darling, what can I do? 349 00:18:15,480 --> 00:18:19,600 # For you don't love me 350 00:18:20,840 --> 00:18:25,560 # And I'll always be 351 00:18:27,200 --> 00:18:30,760 (FALSETTO) # Cry-y-y-ing 352 00:18:30,800 --> 00:18:32,760 # Over you... # 353 00:18:32,800 --> 00:18:36,960 I think Roy's voice is like an opera voice, only sexy. 354 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:40,320 Opera voices are kind of - to me, they're not sexy. 355 00:18:40,360 --> 00:18:42,480 It's just the music they're singing. 356 00:18:42,520 --> 00:18:44,480 But Roy doing rock and roll and blues, 357 00:18:44,520 --> 00:18:48,120 you know, blue notes, and things with that kind of opera voice - 358 00:18:48,160 --> 00:18:49,960 now, that made it really different, 359 00:18:50,000 --> 00:18:54,800 and it put like an opera slant on a rock-and-roll track. 360 00:18:54,840 --> 00:18:57,600 It's wonderful and it's sad at the same time 361 00:18:57,640 --> 00:19:01,080 because that's the inflection, 362 00:19:01,120 --> 00:19:04,160 and what he puts into the soulfulness of his voice. 363 00:19:04,200 --> 00:19:07,240 You know, he's got marvellous soul. I think, that's... 364 00:19:07,280 --> 00:19:10,440 He was probably a soul singer before any of them, you know? 365 00:19:10,480 --> 00:19:16,240 # Cry-ing 366 00:19:16,280 --> 00:19:23,280 # O-o-o-ver 367 00:19:23,320 --> 00:19:30,880 # You-ooo-oooooooo # 368 00:19:30,920 --> 00:19:34,360 JEFF LYNNE: You know, like Elvis said, "Ladies and gentlemen, 369 00:19:34,400 --> 00:19:36,920 the best singer in the world right there - Roy Orbison." 370 00:19:36,960 --> 00:19:40,440 Probably cos he WAS the best singer of all. 371 00:19:40,480 --> 00:19:44,760 # Golden days before they end 372 00:19:44,800 --> 00:19:47,120 NARRATOR: Roy's entry into the British music scene 373 00:19:47,160 --> 00:19:52,160 had been a triumph with It's Over topping the UK charts in 1964. 374 00:19:52,200 --> 00:19:54,080 # Your baby won't be... 375 00:19:54,120 --> 00:19:57,440 But personal tragedy would soon threaten to end Roy's career. 376 00:19:57,480 --> 00:20:03,960 In 1966, his wife Claudette was killed in a motorbike accident. 377 00:20:04,000 --> 00:20:06,560 And there was even more heartbreak to come. 378 00:20:06,600 --> 00:20:09,600 TONY KING: They had this beautiful boy called Roy DeWayne. 379 00:20:09,640 --> 00:20:11,240 I used to take him to the zoo 380 00:20:11,280 --> 00:20:13,840 and take him around, and I loved his company. 381 00:20:13,880 --> 00:20:16,240 He was like a really sweet kid. 382 00:20:16,280 --> 00:20:19,440 And I remember once I came back to the promotion offices 383 00:20:19,480 --> 00:20:22,240 in Great Marlborough Street - the Decca offices, 384 00:20:22,280 --> 00:20:24,400 and Roy DeWayne, I'd exhausted him. 385 00:20:24,440 --> 00:20:27,480 And he must have been about six or seven - 386 00:20:27,520 --> 00:20:29,440 he wasn't a baby. 387 00:20:29,480 --> 00:20:31,840 Anyway, I'd had to carry him back to the office 388 00:20:31,880 --> 00:20:35,000 cos he was so exhausted he fell asleep, and I remember carrying him. 389 00:20:35,040 --> 00:20:36,960 I remember his little head on my shoulder. 390 00:20:37,000 --> 00:20:41,720 # But, oh, what will you do? 391 00:20:41,760 --> 00:20:44,760 And then he got... 392 00:20:44,800 --> 00:20:47,960 burnt to death in that fire. 393 00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:51,400 # We're through-oo-oo 394 00:20:52,400 --> 00:20:54,040 # We're through... # 395 00:20:54,080 --> 00:20:57,160 We'd been playing the Birmingham Theatre for a week. 396 00:20:57,200 --> 00:20:59,000 This was September '68, 397 00:20:59,040 --> 00:21:01,920 and the following day we were gonna do the last performance, 398 00:21:01,960 --> 00:21:04,360 which was a concert in Bournemouth, 399 00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:08,280 and then he was going to be flying back to the US - 400 00:21:08,320 --> 00:21:09,720 that was the end of the tour. 401 00:21:09,760 --> 00:21:11,960 I got a call about three o'clock in the morning 402 00:21:12,000 --> 00:21:14,000 local time in England. 403 00:21:15,440 --> 00:21:17,440 # Send falling stars 404 00:21:17,480 --> 00:21:20,320 # That seem to cry... # 405 00:21:20,360 --> 00:21:22,240 JOHNNY CASH: He was on tour in England, 406 00:21:22,280 --> 00:21:24,240 and he got the news over there 407 00:21:24,280 --> 00:21:27,640 that his house had burned and he had lost two of his boys. 408 00:21:27,680 --> 00:21:30,040 I remember thinking: How is that... 409 00:21:33,280 --> 00:21:35,480 ..man going to cope with that? 410 00:21:35,520 --> 00:21:41,480 # It breaks your heart in two 411 00:21:41,520 --> 00:21:44,400 JOHNNY CASH: He stayed in seclusion for quite a while. 412 00:21:44,440 --> 00:21:48,000 We made contact and let him know we cared and were concerned, 413 00:21:48,040 --> 00:21:53,240 and it was a long time until I saw Roy 414 00:21:53,280 --> 00:21:59,040 because it wasn't something that he was wanting to talk about. 415 00:21:59,080 --> 00:22:01,640 Well, to be quite honest, I really thought, 416 00:22:01,680 --> 00:22:04,240 at that particular point in time, 417 00:22:04,280 --> 00:22:08,000 that he... that would be the... 418 00:22:08,040 --> 00:22:11,040 that we would never see him again. I thought that would be... 419 00:22:11,080 --> 00:22:14,760 He had not worked really since Claudette had died. 420 00:22:14,800 --> 00:22:18,200 However, I did get another call saying that he was coming back. 421 00:22:18,240 --> 00:22:22,600 NARRATOR: To a large extent, Roy's return had been made possible 422 00:22:22,640 --> 00:22:26,640 by someone he had met and fallen in love with before the fire. 423 00:22:26,680 --> 00:22:29,280 We started dating, and six weeks later 424 00:22:29,320 --> 00:22:32,320 the house fire happened in Hendersonville, Tennessee. 425 00:22:32,360 --> 00:22:35,080 But I think it was such a gift for him 426 00:22:35,120 --> 00:22:39,800 to have fallen in love with me before, so he did have a focus. 427 00:22:39,840 --> 00:22:45,720 It gave him a chance to create a life that he really wanted, 428 00:22:45,760 --> 00:22:51,320 and that was one of a real stable family and to have more kids. 429 00:22:51,360 --> 00:22:56,160 Roy just had such an incredible gentle strength. 430 00:22:56,200 --> 00:22:58,480 He scaled the heights and the lows. 431 00:22:59,280 --> 00:23:02,640 # Lonely rivers sigh 432 00:23:02,680 --> 00:23:04,560 # Wait for me... # 433 00:23:04,600 --> 00:23:10,160 I arrived in December of '68 in Tennessee, 434 00:23:10,200 --> 00:23:13,920 and then we travelled in America and we got married in March. 435 00:23:16,520 --> 00:23:20,320 We had Roy Kelton Junior, who was born in 1970, 436 00:23:20,360 --> 00:23:22,000 and then Alex in '74 437 00:23:22,040 --> 00:23:25,520 and we had Wesley from the marriage with Claudette. 438 00:23:26,680 --> 00:23:29,680 If you would have seen Roy with the kids, 439 00:23:29,720 --> 00:23:33,880 you would have never suspected that he had lost two kids 440 00:23:33,920 --> 00:23:36,280 in a house fire... 441 00:23:36,320 --> 00:23:39,720 # A long, lonely time 442 00:23:43,640 --> 00:23:46,800 # Time 443 00:23:46,840 --> 00:23:49,120 # Goes by... # 444 00:23:49,160 --> 00:23:52,160 JOHNNY CASH: They came through it in a really great way, 445 00:23:52,200 --> 00:23:54,360 a very surprising way. 446 00:23:54,400 --> 00:23:56,640 He came back stronger than ever 447 00:23:56,680 --> 00:23:59,480 after this terrible loss of those two boys. 448 00:23:59,520 --> 00:24:03,440 He came back with all of the determination 449 00:24:03,480 --> 00:24:06,480 and the will to go ahead 450 00:24:06,520 --> 00:24:08,520 and to be the great artist he is. 451 00:24:14,000 --> 00:24:16,520 (PRETTY WOMAN INTRO) 452 00:24:16,560 --> 00:24:18,360 (APPLAUSE) 453 00:24:18,400 --> 00:24:21,440 NARRATOR: As the '70s dawned, a new-look Roy returned 454 00:24:21,480 --> 00:24:24,160 again and again to tour for his UK fans, 455 00:24:24,200 --> 00:24:27,520 and of course, the Orbison family went too. 456 00:24:27,560 --> 00:24:29,600 # Pretty woman 457 00:24:29,640 --> 00:24:31,840 # Walkin' down the street... # 458 00:24:31,880 --> 00:24:34,440 BARBARA ORBISON: When it was tour time, we all went. 459 00:24:34,480 --> 00:24:36,400 We went - nannies... 460 00:24:36,440 --> 00:24:40,360 Everybody just went out on the road. 461 00:24:40,400 --> 00:24:44,320 Baby formulas, baby cribs, perambulators, 462 00:24:44,360 --> 00:24:46,480 whatever it took, 463 00:24:46,520 --> 00:24:48,320 you know? 464 00:24:48,360 --> 00:24:50,280 # Mercy! 465 00:24:50,320 --> 00:24:52,760 We would be, tours or no tours, 466 00:24:52,800 --> 00:24:54,760 probably four or five months 467 00:24:54,800 --> 00:24:56,520 out of the year in London. 468 00:24:56,560 --> 00:25:00,160 We practically lived here in the '70s, and loved it. 469 00:25:00,200 --> 00:25:01,400 # I couldn't help but see 470 00:25:01,440 --> 00:25:03,920 # Pretty woman 471 00:25:03,960 --> 00:25:07,280 # You look lovely as can be... # 472 00:25:07,320 --> 00:25:09,960 He loved England. He loved the British people. 473 00:25:10,000 --> 00:25:13,160 It was somehow Britain or the British people Roy that liked. 474 00:25:13,200 --> 00:25:15,080 You know, I think that it was a love affair. 475 00:25:15,120 --> 00:25:17,600 Roy Orbison loved... Roy loved England. 476 00:25:17,640 --> 00:25:19,920 I mean, he loved everything about it. 477 00:25:19,960 --> 00:25:21,720 He loved the food, 478 00:25:21,760 --> 00:25:23,960 and that was tough to love in the '60s. 479 00:25:24,000 --> 00:25:28,240 JEFF LYNNE: He came up to my house in the Midlands, 480 00:25:28,280 --> 00:25:31,360 and he brought with him - he showed me in his trunk - 481 00:25:31,400 --> 00:25:32,760 he said, "Look at this." 482 00:25:32,800 --> 00:25:35,320 He had a driver, and he said, "Look what I've brought," 483 00:25:35,360 --> 00:25:40,280 and he'd got, like, four sets of pie and mash, 484 00:25:40,320 --> 00:25:41,960 you know, for everybody. 485 00:25:42,000 --> 00:25:43,880 Brought it all the way from London. 486 00:25:43,920 --> 00:25:47,040 # Pretty woman, say you'll stay with me 487 00:25:47,080 --> 00:25:51,720 Roy, I think, just loved the English way of life. 488 00:25:51,760 --> 00:25:53,680 He would love to listen to accents, 489 00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:55,600 and go and see places in Scotland 490 00:25:55,640 --> 00:25:57,320 and go and visit castles 491 00:25:57,360 --> 00:26:01,160 and walk the hills. Nutcase! 492 00:26:01,200 --> 00:26:03,280 We were in bed - he was walking the hills. 493 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:06,800 He just loved Britain. He really did. And we loved him. 494 00:26:06,840 --> 00:26:09,320 # Ahhhhhhhh! 495 00:26:09,360 --> 00:26:11,360 # Pretty woman # 496 00:26:11,400 --> 00:26:13,080 He was very real. 497 00:26:13,120 --> 00:26:15,320 He wasn't slick and he wasn't show-bizzy. 498 00:26:15,360 --> 00:26:18,600 He didn't have a patter. You know, he didn't... 499 00:26:18,640 --> 00:26:21,440 He wasn't a schmoozy kind of guy. 500 00:26:21,480 --> 00:26:23,560 (APPLAUSE) Thank you. 501 00:26:23,600 --> 00:26:25,640 Thank you very much. 502 00:26:25,680 --> 00:26:29,800 I appreciate you coming tonight very much. 503 00:26:29,840 --> 00:26:32,280 We're happy to be here. I hope you are. 504 00:26:32,320 --> 00:26:36,080 BARBARA ORBISON: He was that same person, on stage and off stage. 505 00:26:36,120 --> 00:26:38,560 It was never about ego, 506 00:26:38,600 --> 00:26:42,560 you know? It was just about being himself. 507 00:26:42,600 --> 00:26:44,720 # Only the lonely 508 00:26:44,760 --> 00:26:46,760 # Dum-dum-dum dummy-doo-wah 509 00:26:46,800 --> 00:26:50,280 # Know the way I feel tonight 510 00:26:50,320 --> 00:26:52,440 # Ooh yay, yay, yay, yeah... # 511 00:26:52,480 --> 00:26:56,120 It's inherent in the British nature 512 00:26:56,160 --> 00:26:59,200 to admire modesty, 513 00:26:59,240 --> 00:27:03,840 especially when it's accompanied with a great talent. 514 00:27:03,880 --> 00:27:05,800 # There goes my baby 515 00:27:05,840 --> 00:27:07,720 # Pum pum pum pum... # 516 00:27:07,760 --> 00:27:10,520 He was a shy man, 517 00:27:10,560 --> 00:27:12,240 a family man, 518 00:27:12,280 --> 00:27:14,240 a quiet man. 519 00:27:14,280 --> 00:27:16,160 Who he was 520 00:27:16,200 --> 00:27:19,440 was just as much 521 00:27:19,480 --> 00:27:22,400 a part of everything as what he was singing. 522 00:27:22,440 --> 00:27:25,080 # Know why-y-y 523 00:27:26,520 --> 00:27:28,520 # I cry... # 524 00:27:28,560 --> 00:27:30,680 By the time we got married, 525 00:27:30,720 --> 00:27:32,800 all that was important 526 00:27:32,840 --> 00:27:36,280 was to have a great relationship and to live life 527 00:27:36,320 --> 00:27:42,280 and to sort of, like, mend those incredible painful times 528 00:27:42,320 --> 00:27:44,960 and to really enjoy life 529 00:27:45,000 --> 00:27:48,520 and do what he felt he was called on this earth for. 530 00:27:48,560 --> 00:27:50,520 # I got a woman 531 00:27:50,560 --> 00:27:53,120 # Yeah, I got a woman... # 532 00:27:53,160 --> 00:27:55,040 He said, "For that, I will go anywhere - 533 00:27:55,080 --> 00:27:57,520 smallest club, biggest marinas, whatever." 534 00:27:57,560 --> 00:27:59,480 # I think she's almost 535 00:27:59,520 --> 00:28:02,000 # Mean as me # 536 00:28:03,360 --> 00:28:05,640 # SEX PISTOLS: Anarchy In The UK 537 00:28:15,520 --> 00:28:18,840 NARRATOR: Though Roy still had a loyal following, 538 00:28:18,880 --> 00:28:22,040 the mid-'70s saw a change in the British music scene - 539 00:28:22,080 --> 00:28:24,200 the rejection of all things mainstream 540 00:28:24,240 --> 00:28:26,640 and the stripped-down instrumentation of punk rock 541 00:28:26,680 --> 00:28:31,120 seemed, at first glance, to leave little room for the Big O. 542 00:28:33,000 --> 00:28:37,600 (ACOUSTIC GUITAR PLAYS PRETTY WOMAN INTRO) 543 00:28:39,600 --> 00:28:41,280 # Pretty woman 544 00:28:41,320 --> 00:28:43,600 # Won't you pardon me? 545 00:28:43,640 --> 00:28:45,320 # Pretty woman 546 00:28:45,360 --> 00:28:47,080 # I couldn't help but see 547 00:28:47,120 --> 00:28:49,000 # Pretty woman 548 00:28:49,040 --> 00:28:51,040 # You look lovely... # 549 00:28:51,080 --> 00:28:52,800 See, I can't get up there. 550 00:28:52,840 --> 00:28:54,960 When I was in the Sex Pistols, 551 00:28:55,000 --> 00:28:57,360 if you were a closet music fan like myself, 552 00:28:57,400 --> 00:29:02,240 there were loads of bands who I would've probably got hung for, 553 00:29:02,280 --> 00:29:05,480 if it would have gotten out that I liked at the time, you know? 554 00:29:05,520 --> 00:29:08,200 Would he come under that umbrella as - 555 00:29:08,240 --> 00:29:11,720 it's old hat and you shouldn't be liking him, 556 00:29:11,760 --> 00:29:14,040 because we were against all that nonsense. 557 00:29:14,080 --> 00:29:16,800 I don't think that is the case. 558 00:29:16,840 --> 00:29:18,800 I don't think he ever fell into that bag 559 00:29:18,840 --> 00:29:22,160 as being out of flavour, you know? 560 00:29:22,200 --> 00:29:25,080 When I was growing up in the '70s, 561 00:29:25,120 --> 00:29:28,800 Roy was kind of an anachronism, really. 562 00:29:28,840 --> 00:29:31,960 He was completely out of kilter with the times, 563 00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:35,360 and people I was hanging out with 564 00:29:35,400 --> 00:29:37,240 didn't have Roy Orbison albums. 565 00:29:37,280 --> 00:29:38,920 They just didn't. 566 00:29:38,960 --> 00:29:40,840 He was from a different era. 567 00:29:40,880 --> 00:29:45,080 But then, as the '70s begat punk rock, 568 00:29:45,120 --> 00:29:48,440 there became an interest in the '50s. 569 00:29:48,480 --> 00:29:50,680 I think it was... 570 00:29:50,720 --> 00:29:53,840 you know, punk rock was a '50s thing, 571 00:29:53,880 --> 00:29:56,680 in a way - Rebel Without A Cause, 572 00:29:56,720 --> 00:30:01,360 the short haircuts, the stance of Elvis, 573 00:30:01,400 --> 00:30:03,520 stripping things down to the bone. 574 00:30:03,560 --> 00:30:07,720 So it was through the door that punk rock opened 575 00:30:07,760 --> 00:30:10,040 that Roy Orbison walked into my life. 576 00:30:10,080 --> 00:30:13,040 You have to remember Roy didn't get to be Roy Orbison 577 00:30:13,080 --> 00:30:15,640 by being like... 578 00:30:15,680 --> 00:30:18,520 anything but outside the norm. 579 00:30:18,560 --> 00:30:23,840 Those guys in Memphis, when they created rockabilly, 580 00:30:23,880 --> 00:30:28,440 they didn't create rockabilly by being the boy next door. 581 00:30:28,480 --> 00:30:32,360 # Just runnin' scared 582 00:30:34,360 --> 00:30:37,480 # Feelin' low... # 583 00:30:37,520 --> 00:30:40,920 OLIVIA HARRISON: Although he was right in there at the very beginning 584 00:30:40,960 --> 00:30:43,200 with Jerry Lee and Elvis, 585 00:30:43,240 --> 00:30:47,520 I think because he was so unique - his particular type of singing - 586 00:30:47,560 --> 00:30:51,440 that he didn't really come in or out of fashion, 587 00:30:51,480 --> 00:30:55,800 and I think when rock and roll came to England 588 00:30:55,840 --> 00:30:59,280 and then English music went back to America, 589 00:30:59,320 --> 00:31:02,640 Roy was sort of outside of that. 590 00:31:02,680 --> 00:31:07,000 # His head in the air 591 00:31:08,480 --> 00:31:12,000 # And my heart was breaking... # 592 00:31:12,040 --> 00:31:15,160 ROBIN GIBB: It's not a sissy thing for a man to sing about emotion. 593 00:31:15,200 --> 00:31:17,960 It's just what it is. It's real, 594 00:31:18,000 --> 00:31:21,000 and everybody can relate to that. 595 00:31:21,040 --> 00:31:25,280 And he does it in such a way that's so open - 596 00:31:25,320 --> 00:31:27,160 he opens his heart completely. 597 00:31:27,200 --> 00:31:30,840 Not being a wimp - 598 00:31:30,880 --> 00:31:33,200 I think that was the magnificent part 599 00:31:33,240 --> 00:31:37,280 about the singer and the songwriter Roy Orbison. 600 00:31:37,320 --> 00:31:40,080 He turned something that could have been a weakness 601 00:31:40,120 --> 00:31:41,960 into a total strength. 602 00:31:42,000 --> 00:31:44,080 It was really very unusual at the time. 603 00:31:44,120 --> 00:31:47,040 Since then, everybody's crying like a tart, 604 00:31:47,080 --> 00:31:51,000 but in them days it was quite bold to say that you cried. 605 00:31:51,040 --> 00:31:56,600 He was one of the first top-40 artists 606 00:31:56,640 --> 00:31:59,320 to take away or veer off 607 00:31:59,360 --> 00:32:03,480 from the traditional way of saying things, 608 00:32:03,520 --> 00:32:05,640 which he did in all those classic songs. 609 00:32:05,680 --> 00:32:08,960 ROY ORBISON: I had to write the songs that I wanted to sing, 610 00:32:09,000 --> 00:32:12,760 because no-one else really would at the time, 611 00:32:12,800 --> 00:32:14,880 and then I thought, since I wrote them, 612 00:32:14,920 --> 00:32:17,360 I might be able to sing them better than the next person. 613 00:32:17,400 --> 00:32:19,360 So it kind of goes like that. 614 00:32:19,400 --> 00:32:21,240 So whatever the style is 615 00:32:21,280 --> 00:32:24,640 is basically me and my personal taste. 616 00:32:24,680 --> 00:32:27,680 Roy the singer people talk about all the time. 617 00:32:27,720 --> 00:32:31,160 Everyone curtsies to the voice, and so they should. 618 00:32:31,200 --> 00:32:34,600 The thing people don't talk about enough, as far as I'm concerned, 619 00:32:34,640 --> 00:32:38,920 is how innovative this music was, how radical, 620 00:32:38,960 --> 00:32:41,800 in terms of its songwriting. 621 00:32:41,840 --> 00:32:45,760 When I write a song, I don't think in terms of two verses and a chorus 622 00:32:45,800 --> 00:32:49,280 or the accepted method of songwriting. 623 00:32:49,320 --> 00:32:52,080 I just start and, wherever I wanna go, that's where I go. 624 00:32:52,120 --> 00:32:54,120 (APPLAUSE) 625 00:32:54,160 --> 00:32:57,000 # In dreams, I walk... 626 00:32:57,040 --> 00:33:00,360 Classic pop structure is, you know, 627 00:33:00,400 --> 00:33:03,120 verse chorus, verse chorus, 628 00:33:03,160 --> 00:33:06,040 middle eight, chorus, end. 629 00:33:06,080 --> 00:33:08,760 Most pop songs in the world are like that. 630 00:33:08,800 --> 00:33:11,480 And then you hear something like In Dreams. 631 00:33:11,520 --> 00:33:15,040 # In dreams 632 00:33:15,080 --> 00:33:17,520 # You're mine 633 00:33:17,560 --> 00:33:19,840 # All of the time... # 634 00:33:19,880 --> 00:33:22,440 I can't remember the structure, but it's something like - 635 00:33:22,480 --> 00:33:26,280 A, B, C, D, E, F, G. Nothing repeats. 636 00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:29,120 From those odd proportions comes the tension, 637 00:33:29,160 --> 00:33:32,760 and from the tension comes the emotional impact, 638 00:33:32,800 --> 00:33:35,640 that it takes you somewhere unexpected. 639 00:33:35,680 --> 00:33:38,920 # Just before 640 00:33:38,960 --> 00:33:41,520 # The dawn... # 641 00:33:43,280 --> 00:33:46,600 He slowly built it from nothing, and built it into this huge climax, 642 00:33:46,640 --> 00:33:50,800 and then it went into another part, which was even better 643 00:33:50,840 --> 00:33:54,240 and got even bigger and better, and that's what I liked about his songs. 644 00:33:54,280 --> 00:33:56,160 # I can't help it 645 00:33:56,200 --> 00:33:58,040 # I can't help it 646 00:33:58,080 --> 00:34:01,440 # If I cry... # 647 00:34:01,480 --> 00:34:06,440 JOE WALSH: That's really hard to do, as a songwriter. 648 00:34:06,480 --> 00:34:11,840 The ability to just have the music flow with the storyline. 649 00:34:13,880 --> 00:34:17,760 Very few people could do that. 650 00:34:17,800 --> 00:34:21,400 # All these things 651 00:34:22,800 --> 00:34:24,480 # Can only happen... # 652 00:34:24,520 --> 00:34:28,920 What you end up with is a pop song that broke every rule, 653 00:34:28,960 --> 00:34:30,920 and won. 654 00:34:30,960 --> 00:34:33,520 It's like a classical composition. 655 00:34:33,560 --> 00:34:40,560 # Only in dreams 656 00:34:42,960 --> 00:34:46,680 # In dreams 657 00:34:46,720 --> 00:34:52,440 # In beautiful dreams # 658 00:34:52,480 --> 00:34:54,520 I was at a classical concert one night, 659 00:34:54,560 --> 00:34:59,840 and this Schumann song started - was in the programme. 660 00:34:59,880 --> 00:35:05,480 And I said, "This is the actual melody of a Roy Orbison song." 661 00:35:05,520 --> 00:35:10,640 # You know I can't help myself 662 00:35:12,160 --> 00:35:16,520 # And now I'm crawling... # 663 00:35:16,560 --> 00:35:18,480 The Roy song goes - 664 00:35:18,520 --> 00:35:20,800 # Only you and you alone 665 00:35:20,840 --> 00:35:23,720 # Can keep me crawling back 666 00:35:23,760 --> 00:35:26,840 # After all you've done to me 667 00:35:26,880 --> 00:35:29,400 # The way you put me down 668 00:35:29,440 --> 00:35:33,120 # I still will be your clown 669 00:35:33,160 --> 00:35:34,840 # Cos I love you # 670 00:35:34,880 --> 00:35:39,960 # I still will be your clown 671 00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:42,440 # Because I love you... # 672 00:35:42,480 --> 00:35:45,120 And the Schumann song goes - 673 00:35:45,160 --> 00:35:48,800 (HUMS MELODY) 674 00:35:48,840 --> 00:35:51,640 Has a very similar shape, you know? 675 00:35:51,680 --> 00:35:57,680 # You know I would die for you 676 00:35:57,720 --> 00:36:02,120 I suppose, like anybody of his age, he could have turned on the radio 677 00:36:02,160 --> 00:36:04,480 and maybe heard some gracious melodies there. 678 00:36:04,520 --> 00:36:07,560 It doesn't fit in with any of the other things about his music. 679 00:36:07,600 --> 00:36:10,320 The background in music, as I understand it, 680 00:36:10,360 --> 00:36:13,120 and certainly those early records on Sun and so forth, 681 00:36:13,160 --> 00:36:15,720 they were of their time, and they were good records, 682 00:36:15,760 --> 00:36:18,400 but they were rock-and-roll records. 683 00:36:18,440 --> 00:36:20,920 And at a certain point, 684 00:36:20,960 --> 00:36:22,520 he started writing these ballads 685 00:36:22,560 --> 00:36:24,440 that are just not like anything else. 686 00:36:24,480 --> 00:36:27,960 # Mm-hm-hm 687 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:31,080 # Crawling back... # 688 00:36:31,120 --> 00:36:33,320 Roy was the real thing, 689 00:36:33,360 --> 00:36:39,280 at a time where very few people wrote their own material. 690 00:36:40,400 --> 00:36:43,840 There was so much soul in that music and mystery - 691 00:36:43,880 --> 00:36:47,440 and it was - it was mystery music. 692 00:36:47,480 --> 00:36:49,600 They were very dramatic songs, 693 00:36:49,640 --> 00:36:54,120 and he was kind of dramatic too. He was very dark 694 00:36:54,160 --> 00:36:56,240 and always in black and the glasses. 695 00:36:56,280 --> 00:36:59,560 # Wild hearts run out of time 696 00:37:00,720 --> 00:37:03,920 # And you'll need a love like mine 697 00:37:05,920 --> 00:37:08,800 # To show you hope is there... # 698 00:37:08,840 --> 00:37:10,920 I never knew why he wore the shades all the time. 699 00:37:10,960 --> 00:37:13,360 I think he thought he had weak eyes or something. 700 00:37:15,320 --> 00:37:18,680 # Wild hearts run out of time 701 00:37:18,720 --> 00:37:21,600 ROY ORBISON: I simply left my clear pair on the aeroplane 702 00:37:21,640 --> 00:37:25,600 when I did the tour with The Beatles and Gerry & The Pacemakers in '63. 703 00:37:25,640 --> 00:37:27,680 By the time the pictures came back, 704 00:37:27,720 --> 00:37:30,360 and by the time he had played a couple of nights, 705 00:37:30,400 --> 00:37:34,040 he never changed. He always wore sunglasses 706 00:37:34,080 --> 00:37:36,760 every night he played, for the rest of his life. 707 00:37:36,800 --> 00:37:41,240 # Don't let the bright lights burn you 708 00:37:41,280 --> 00:37:43,640 BARBARA ORBISON: Buddy Holly made it OK 709 00:37:43,680 --> 00:37:47,800 to wear prescription glasses on stage, 710 00:37:47,840 --> 00:37:52,880 and then Roy made it cool to wear prescription sunglasses. 711 00:37:52,920 --> 00:37:54,600 They're still cool today. 712 00:37:55,880 --> 00:37:59,120 # It could be yours or mine 713 00:37:59,160 --> 00:38:01,880 # It happens all the time 714 00:38:04,160 --> 00:38:07,040 # Wild hearts run out of time 715 00:38:08,560 --> 00:38:14,240 # Wild hearts run out of time # 716 00:38:25,000 --> 00:38:29,720 # A candy-coloured clown they call the sandman 717 00:38:29,760 --> 00:38:33,440 # Tiptoes to my room every night 718 00:38:33,480 --> 00:38:35,280 # Just to sprinkle stardust 719 00:38:35,320 --> 00:38:36,960 # And to whisper 720 00:38:37,000 --> 00:38:38,240 # Go to sleep... # 721 00:38:38,280 --> 00:38:40,520 Dennis Hopper was supposed to sing it, 722 00:38:40,560 --> 00:38:43,280 and so I got him the music 723 00:38:43,320 --> 00:38:47,600 and told him to learn the lyrics and practise, 724 00:38:47,640 --> 00:38:51,040 and I thought he was memorising it. 725 00:38:51,080 --> 00:38:55,600 And Dean Stockwell was a good friend of Dennis's, 726 00:38:55,640 --> 00:38:57,560 so Dean said he would work with Dennis. 727 00:38:57,600 --> 00:38:59,520 And so I pictured the two of them going... 728 00:38:59,560 --> 00:39:01,280 and Dennis, you know, having it down. 729 00:39:01,320 --> 00:39:04,440 But in the process, 730 00:39:04,480 --> 00:39:08,440 Dennis had kind of... 731 00:39:08,480 --> 00:39:10,640 burned himself pretty bad 732 00:39:10,680 --> 00:39:13,080 from his past living, 733 00:39:13,120 --> 00:39:15,440 and he wasn't able to memorise these things. 734 00:39:19,320 --> 00:39:21,240 # In dreams 735 00:39:21,280 --> 00:39:24,320 # I walk with you... # 736 00:39:24,360 --> 00:39:25,920 But Dean memorised it, 737 00:39:25,960 --> 00:39:28,200 and so, when we started rehearsing the scene 738 00:39:28,240 --> 00:39:30,760 where this song was supposed to be, 739 00:39:30,800 --> 00:39:33,920 at a certain point, 740 00:39:33,960 --> 00:39:36,040 the two of them were sort of singing. 741 00:39:36,080 --> 00:39:38,240 At a certain point Dennis just dropped out, 742 00:39:38,280 --> 00:39:39,920 and was just watching Dean, 743 00:39:39,960 --> 00:39:42,720 and Dean was letter perfect, 744 00:39:42,760 --> 00:39:47,320 and it just was so obvious what was supposed to happen. 745 00:39:47,360 --> 00:39:50,680 (SONG STOPS ABRUPTLY) (CASSETTE PLAYER CLICKS) 746 00:39:50,720 --> 00:39:52,640 All right, let's hit the road. 747 00:39:52,680 --> 00:39:57,600 I heard rumours that, after the film was released, 748 00:39:57,640 --> 00:40:01,240 Roy saw it, and was upset about... 749 00:40:01,280 --> 00:40:04,840 That song meant something to Roy, you know, 750 00:40:04,880 --> 00:40:07,720 and it didn't mean what it was in the film. 751 00:40:07,760 --> 00:40:11,440 There was such a... 752 00:40:11,480 --> 00:40:14,720 sexual conflict going on in his songs. 753 00:40:14,760 --> 00:40:17,640 They weren't about holding hands. 754 00:40:17,680 --> 00:40:19,480 They were about, you know... 755 00:40:19,520 --> 00:40:24,200 There was a grind to them. There was a sweatiness, you know. 756 00:40:24,240 --> 00:40:27,200 There was a longing, an anxiousness about them. 757 00:40:27,240 --> 00:40:30,040 And they were basically songs about sex. 758 00:40:31,360 --> 00:40:34,440 # Before the dawn 759 00:40:34,480 --> 00:40:38,040 Then he saw it again and changed his mind, 760 00:40:38,080 --> 00:40:40,720 and appreciated it from a different point of view. 761 00:40:40,760 --> 00:40:44,280 So, by the time I met Roy, 762 00:40:44,320 --> 00:40:49,240 he was pretty happy about Blue Velvet. 763 00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:54,680 # Only in dreams 764 00:40:57,480 --> 00:41:03,480 # In beautiful dreams # 765 00:41:04,600 --> 00:41:07,480 I had David Lynch's soundtrack to Blue Velvet, 766 00:41:07,520 --> 00:41:10,280 and I kept... 767 00:41:10,320 --> 00:41:13,800 I had it on repeat, and it was going round and round and round, 768 00:41:13,840 --> 00:41:17,680 and kept stopping appropriately on In Dreams. 769 00:41:17,720 --> 00:41:20,880 And I couldn't sleep and this song was going through my head. 770 00:41:20,920 --> 00:41:23,560 When I woke up the next day, I had a song in my head, 771 00:41:23,600 --> 00:41:26,640 which I presumed was another Roy Orbison song 772 00:41:26,680 --> 00:41:28,440 that was on the soundtrack, 773 00:41:28,480 --> 00:41:30,440 and I looked for it and I couldn't find it. 774 00:41:30,480 --> 00:41:32,440 I thought, "Where's this tune? 775 00:41:32,480 --> 00:41:34,320 Maybe I've just written it." 776 00:41:34,360 --> 00:41:36,640 So I took it down to the sound check, 777 00:41:36,680 --> 00:41:39,480 and I played the tune to the rest of the band. 778 00:41:39,520 --> 00:41:41,200 They really liked it. 779 00:41:41,240 --> 00:41:43,760 And I said, "It's kind of like a Roy Orbison song, is it?" 780 00:41:43,800 --> 00:41:47,160 And they said, "Yeah, yeah, Roy Orbison. Yeah, great. We like him." 781 00:41:47,200 --> 00:41:51,320 And we played the concert and then after the show 782 00:41:51,360 --> 00:41:53,200 I was sitting and I had the guitar up again 783 00:41:53,240 --> 00:41:55,000 and was trying to finish the song. 784 00:41:55,040 --> 00:41:57,400 And there was a knock at the door, 785 00:41:57,440 --> 00:42:00,760 and John our security guy said, 786 00:42:00,800 --> 00:42:04,520 "There's Roy Orbison and his wife Barbara outside. 787 00:42:04,560 --> 00:42:07,200 Um...um... 788 00:42:07,240 --> 00:42:09,240 Can I bring them in? 789 00:42:09,280 --> 00:42:11,120 They'd really like to meet you." 790 00:42:11,160 --> 00:42:14,800 So the band looked at me like I was... 791 00:42:14,840 --> 00:42:18,720 I'd either been winding them up or I had some voodoo in me. 792 00:42:18,760 --> 00:42:21,240 My wife and kiddies 793 00:42:21,280 --> 00:42:23,880 had been to see U2 794 00:42:23,920 --> 00:42:25,680 and told me about them, 795 00:42:25,720 --> 00:42:27,920 and I hadn't heard them or seen them. 796 00:42:27,960 --> 00:42:31,720 And I went to one of their concerts in London when I was there, 797 00:42:31,760 --> 00:42:34,240 with fresh ears, 798 00:42:34,280 --> 00:42:38,560 and I wasn't expecting anything. 799 00:42:38,600 --> 00:42:40,840 I just went to see and an open mind. 800 00:42:40,880 --> 00:42:42,880 He said in his very quiet voice, you know, 801 00:42:42,920 --> 00:42:45,520 "I really liked the show. I can't tell you why I liked it, 802 00:42:45,560 --> 00:42:47,480 but I really liked it." 803 00:42:47,520 --> 00:42:50,240 He said, "You wouldn't have a song for me? 804 00:42:50,280 --> 00:42:52,080 Shall we write a song together? 805 00:42:52,120 --> 00:42:55,520 Because I just, you know, I'm kind of into what you're doing." 806 00:42:55,560 --> 00:42:59,200 So everyone's kind of falling round, 807 00:42:59,240 --> 00:43:01,760 and no-one could quite believe their ears, 808 00:43:01,800 --> 00:43:06,000 and I played him there and then the song She's A Mystery To Me. 809 00:43:06,040 --> 00:43:09,560 # I wanna run, she's pulling me apart 810 00:43:09,600 --> 00:43:12,760 NARRATOR: In 1988, Roy was working on his album Mystery Girl 811 00:43:12,800 --> 00:43:16,160 with producer Jeff Lynne, who had also worked with George Harrison. 812 00:43:16,200 --> 00:43:18,640 During long hours in the studio, 813 00:43:18,680 --> 00:43:20,760 George and Jeff had often talked about 814 00:43:20,800 --> 00:43:22,640 the line-up of their dream group. 815 00:43:22,680 --> 00:43:26,440 As Lefty Wilbury, Roy Orbison was about to become 816 00:43:26,480 --> 00:43:29,320 the ultimate musician's musician. 817 00:43:35,080 --> 00:43:36,800 I know that George and Jeff, 818 00:43:36,840 --> 00:43:39,840 when they were in the studio working together, 819 00:43:39,880 --> 00:43:43,680 had sometimes had this thing about, "Oh, yeah, we could have a band." 820 00:43:43,720 --> 00:43:47,520 George would say, "We should have a group, you know?" 821 00:43:47,560 --> 00:43:51,200 And I'd go, "Yeah, that would be good. Let's have a group." 822 00:43:51,240 --> 00:43:54,920 And it was literally - who do you want in it? 823 00:43:54,960 --> 00:43:56,960 and I said, "I'd love Roy Orbison in it," 824 00:43:57,000 --> 00:44:00,200 and he said, "I want Bob Dylan in it." 825 00:44:00,240 --> 00:44:03,360 It was just like that, just like a pair of school kids, really. 826 00:44:03,400 --> 00:44:06,560 It wasn't a contrived thing that happened. 827 00:44:06,600 --> 00:44:10,160 They weren't out to make a band. 828 00:44:10,200 --> 00:44:13,600 It just happened, you know - one event lead to another. 829 00:44:13,640 --> 00:44:15,680 And I was working with Tom as well at the time, 830 00:44:15,720 --> 00:44:19,320 and George knew Tom by then, and we said, "Let's have Tom as well." 831 00:44:19,360 --> 00:44:22,200 All that remained was George to ask these people 832 00:44:22,240 --> 00:44:26,000 if they wanted to be in it, in the group, which they all did, 833 00:44:26,040 --> 00:44:28,520 and the one we had to convince last was Roy. 834 00:44:28,560 --> 00:44:32,080 We went to see Roy in concert, I think out in Anaheim somewhere. 835 00:44:32,120 --> 00:44:34,280 We all piled in the car and went out to see him. 836 00:44:34,320 --> 00:44:36,120 # You make it on time 837 00:44:36,160 --> 00:44:37,480 # Oh, don't relax 838 00:44:37,520 --> 00:44:38,880 # I want elbows and backs 839 00:44:38,920 --> 00:44:42,560 # I want to see everybody from behind 840 00:44:42,600 --> 00:44:46,160 # Cos you're working for the man... # 841 00:44:46,200 --> 00:44:50,080 It was a brilliant show, just like normal, in a theatre, 842 00:44:50,120 --> 00:44:52,840 and all the people were going mad, and we were all going mad, 843 00:44:52,880 --> 00:44:55,560 like, "Yeah, give it some!" 844 00:44:55,600 --> 00:44:57,800 And George was so keen. It was so exciting, 845 00:44:57,840 --> 00:44:59,200 and we all watched the show. 846 00:44:59,240 --> 00:45:01,600 It was the first time I'd ever seen Roy perform. 847 00:45:01,640 --> 00:45:03,520 We went in his dressing room afterwards, 848 00:45:03,560 --> 00:45:06,120 and George said to him, "Do you want to be in our group?" 849 00:45:06,160 --> 00:45:08,600 It was kind of like a proposal, you know? 850 00:45:08,640 --> 00:45:10,720 I think George even got down on his knee 851 00:45:10,760 --> 00:45:12,360 and said, "Will you be in our band?" 852 00:45:12,400 --> 00:45:14,480 And he sort of went, 853 00:45:14,520 --> 00:45:17,960 "Yeah, I suppose. I suppose so, yeah." 854 00:45:18,000 --> 00:45:21,280 And he offered to join there and then. 855 00:45:21,320 --> 00:45:25,200 So he was in the Traveling Wilburys then, from that moment. 856 00:45:25,240 --> 00:45:27,040 # Handle me with care 857 00:45:28,760 --> 00:45:33,120 # Reputations changeable 858 00:45:33,160 --> 00:45:36,080 # Situations tolerable 859 00:45:37,440 --> 00:45:41,560 # Baby, you're adorable 860 00:45:41,600 --> 00:45:44,920 # Handle me with care 861 00:45:44,960 --> 00:45:49,200 # I'm so tired of being lonely 862 00:45:49,240 --> 00:45:53,640 # I still have some love to give 863 00:45:53,680 --> 00:45:55,680 # Won't you show me 864 00:45:55,720 --> 00:45:58,400 # That you really care? 865 00:46:01,360 --> 00:46:03,440 # Everybody's 866 00:46:03,480 --> 00:46:05,720 # Got somebody 867 00:46:05,760 --> 00:46:07,400 # To lean on... # 868 00:46:07,440 --> 00:46:10,600 TOM PETTY: Sometimes we'd sing the same song, 869 00:46:10,640 --> 00:46:13,720 just to see who sounded good or if this key fits somebody. 870 00:46:13,760 --> 00:46:15,240 That was a lot of fun. 871 00:46:15,280 --> 00:46:18,320 George would kind of audition us, 872 00:46:18,360 --> 00:46:20,400 which could be really intimidating, 873 00:46:20,440 --> 00:46:22,960 because Roy Orbison would sing the song, 874 00:46:23,000 --> 00:46:24,960 and then they'd send you out to sing it, 875 00:46:25,000 --> 00:46:27,960 and it was like, "Well, damn, that's really intimidating." 876 00:46:28,000 --> 00:46:31,280 # Last night 877 00:46:31,320 --> 00:46:33,960 # Thinking about last night... # 878 00:46:34,000 --> 00:46:38,400 They had a lot of fun, but they didn't goof around. 879 00:46:38,440 --> 00:46:42,200 It wasn't just one big party. They were working. 880 00:46:42,240 --> 00:46:43,640 # Last night... 881 00:46:43,680 --> 00:46:46,120 ROY ORBISON: There wasn't a lot of deciding what to do, 882 00:46:46,160 --> 00:46:49,120 not a lot of time spent planning out anything. 883 00:46:49,160 --> 00:46:52,440 So we just wrote the best songs that we could write, 884 00:46:52,480 --> 00:46:54,200 and sang them as best we could. 885 00:46:54,240 --> 00:46:56,040 I got out of the car... 886 00:46:56,080 --> 00:46:57,480 No, she was long and tall. 887 00:46:57,520 --> 00:46:59,200 Or short and fat. 888 00:46:59,240 --> 00:47:00,560 (LAUGHTER) 889 00:47:00,600 --> 00:47:01,920 She was dressed to kill. 890 00:47:01,960 --> 00:47:03,400 Yeah, that's good. 891 00:47:03,440 --> 00:47:05,720 To give me a thrill 892 00:47:05,760 --> 00:47:08,080 was over the hill. (LAUGHTER) 893 00:47:09,480 --> 00:47:14,240 I don't think it was a conspiracy or something, but if we decided... 894 00:47:14,280 --> 00:47:16,280 And he was funny - that was the thing 895 00:47:16,320 --> 00:47:20,720 that George enjoyed about him the most was that 896 00:47:20,760 --> 00:47:23,240 he seemed to be a tragic figure, 897 00:47:23,280 --> 00:47:26,320 or there was tragedy attached or projected to Roy, 898 00:47:26,360 --> 00:47:29,280 but in reality he was very funny, 899 00:47:29,320 --> 00:47:34,800 and that was the sort of secret Roy 900 00:47:34,840 --> 00:47:36,840 that he loved to be around. 901 00:47:36,880 --> 00:47:41,560 And sometimes Roy would have George and the guys in hysterics. 902 00:47:41,600 --> 00:47:45,680 He loved Monty Python - that was his favourite comedy stuff, 903 00:47:45,720 --> 00:47:50,000 and he could do all the sketches on his own. 904 00:47:50,040 --> 00:47:52,240 He had that slightly Southern lilt, 905 00:47:52,280 --> 00:47:57,600 and yet he would recite lines from Monty Python. 906 00:47:57,640 --> 00:48:02,240 He'd break into a sketch of one of Python's routines, 907 00:48:02,280 --> 00:48:05,360 playing all the parts, and end up just giggling himself, 908 00:48:05,400 --> 00:48:08,600 like a maniac, giggling away, and we'd all start giggling. 909 00:48:08,640 --> 00:48:10,600 # I'm so tired of being lonely 910 00:48:10,640 --> 00:48:12,600 # I still have... # 911 00:48:12,640 --> 00:48:16,160 He was surrounded by all friends that he really loved, 912 00:48:16,200 --> 00:48:17,720 and they really loved him, 913 00:48:17,760 --> 00:48:22,040 and the basis of the Wilbury record was lots of laughter 914 00:48:22,080 --> 00:48:24,480 and just lots of fun 915 00:48:24,520 --> 00:48:26,760 and incredible creativity. 916 00:48:26,800 --> 00:48:28,800 # Every time I look 917 00:48:28,840 --> 00:48:32,280 # Into your loving eyes... # 918 00:48:34,840 --> 00:48:38,760 And so it came towards '88 Thanksgiving, 919 00:48:38,800 --> 00:48:40,800 and we had all decided 920 00:48:40,840 --> 00:48:44,280 that we would go to George and Olivia's house in England 921 00:48:44,320 --> 00:48:47,720 and spend Thanksgiving with them. 922 00:48:47,760 --> 00:48:51,520 # I drift away 923 00:48:51,560 --> 00:48:54,880 # I pray that you... # 924 00:48:54,920 --> 00:48:58,480 Roy and I got stuck in Paris and never made it, 925 00:48:58,520 --> 00:49:02,480 and Roy flew back to America 926 00:49:02,520 --> 00:49:04,600 because he had to fulfil... 927 00:49:04,640 --> 00:49:08,760 He had booked two shows in Boston and in Ohio, 928 00:49:08,800 --> 00:49:12,200 and those shows were like long-time booked. 929 00:49:12,240 --> 00:49:13,480 # You got it 930 00:49:13,520 --> 00:49:17,000 # Baby... # 931 00:49:17,040 --> 00:49:19,440 And I decided to stay in Europe. 932 00:49:19,480 --> 00:49:21,280 # Every time I hold you 933 00:49:21,320 --> 00:49:24,440 # I begin to understand... # 934 00:49:24,480 --> 00:49:27,560 The last thing I heard from Roy was a message on my answerphone 935 00:49:27,600 --> 00:49:29,480 in England saying, 936 00:49:29,520 --> 00:49:32,200 "Hey, Jeff, I'm sorry I couldn't see you this trip, 937 00:49:32,240 --> 00:49:33,960 but I'm all about Wilbury'd out." 938 00:49:34,000 --> 00:49:37,360 And he was really tired from doing all the Wilbury interviews, 939 00:49:37,400 --> 00:49:39,160 and he'd got his own album coming out 940 00:49:39,200 --> 00:49:41,080 at the same time called Mystery Girl. 941 00:49:41,120 --> 00:49:43,240 And he said, "I'll see you when I get back. 942 00:49:43,280 --> 00:49:44,960 I'll be back over in a few weeks." 943 00:49:45,000 --> 00:49:47,240 # No-one can do 944 00:49:47,280 --> 00:49:51,840 # The things you do... # 945 00:49:53,080 --> 00:49:55,840 BARBARA: I got a call one night from Roy 946 00:49:55,880 --> 00:49:57,680 that basically said 947 00:49:57,720 --> 00:50:01,120 he had given in to come back to England. 948 00:50:01,160 --> 00:50:05,400 George had asked over and over for a second Wilbury video. 949 00:50:05,440 --> 00:50:07,160 # Baby... 950 00:50:07,200 --> 00:50:09,320 And I said, "Are you really sure?" and he said, 951 00:50:09,360 --> 00:50:10,720 "When I get off that plane, 952 00:50:10,760 --> 00:50:13,960 I know your smiling real nice will be waiting for me," 953 00:50:14,000 --> 00:50:16,880 and he said, "For that, I will do anything." 954 00:50:16,920 --> 00:50:19,960 So that was the last time I ever talked with him. 955 00:50:23,000 --> 00:50:24,880 (DISTANTLY) # Pretty paper 956 00:50:24,920 --> 00:50:30,280 (BECOMES DISTINCT) # Pretty ribbons of blue 957 00:50:30,320 --> 00:50:35,320 # Wrap your presents to your darling 958 00:50:35,360 --> 00:50:38,480 # From you 959 00:50:38,520 --> 00:50:41,280 # Pretty pencils 960 00:50:41,320 --> 00:50:45,120 # To write - I love you 961 00:50:47,080 --> 00:50:49,720 # Pretty paper 962 00:50:49,760 --> 00:50:51,960 # Pretty ribbons 963 00:50:52,000 --> 00:50:55,040 # Of blue # 964 00:50:59,200 --> 00:51:03,400 NEWSCASTER: Roy Orbison, one of the first and greatest rock performers, 965 00:51:03,440 --> 00:51:05,760 has died from a heart attack. He was 52. 966 00:51:05,800 --> 00:51:08,360 In his prime, he topped bills above The Beatles, 967 00:51:08,400 --> 00:51:10,840 and just this year was in the charts again 968 00:51:10,880 --> 00:51:14,160 in a supergroup that included George Harrison and Bob Dylan. 969 00:51:14,200 --> 00:51:16,440 GEORGE HARRISON: Roy would have liked us 970 00:51:16,480 --> 00:51:18,960 to have continued to do The End Of The Line. 971 00:51:19,000 --> 00:51:22,240 It's a very optimistic song, and we love Roy 972 00:51:22,280 --> 00:51:25,320 and life flows on within you and without you, 973 00:51:25,360 --> 00:51:28,120 and he's around in his astral body. 974 00:51:28,160 --> 00:51:31,200 # The end of the line # Maybe somewhere down the road 975 00:51:31,240 --> 00:51:32,640 # When somebody plays... 976 00:51:32,680 --> 00:51:35,760 You know, we played it like he was there, 977 00:51:35,800 --> 00:51:37,680 like, we'd all look at the armchair, 978 00:51:37,720 --> 00:51:39,880 and there would be Lefty, 979 00:51:39,920 --> 00:51:42,560 but it was just his guitar. 980 00:51:42,600 --> 00:51:44,960 # Well, it's all right 981 00:51:46,000 --> 00:51:48,320 # If you got someone to love 982 00:51:48,360 --> 00:51:50,520 # Well, it's all right 983 00:51:51,720 --> 00:51:53,640 # Everything'll work out fine # 984 00:51:53,680 --> 00:51:57,000 BARBARA: If Roy would have been giving you the interview today, 985 00:51:57,040 --> 00:51:59,760 and you would have asked him about his songs - 986 00:51:59,800 --> 00:52:01,960 what was his best song ever - 987 00:52:02,000 --> 00:52:05,640 and he would have said, "I haven't written it yet." 988 00:52:05,680 --> 00:52:07,480 # At the end of the line 989 00:52:07,520 --> 00:52:09,800 # I'm just glad to be here 990 00:52:09,840 --> 00:52:11,400 # Happy to be alive... # 991 00:52:11,440 --> 00:52:14,600 BARBARA ORBISON: The artists today that have come along 992 00:52:14,640 --> 00:52:16,280 in the last 20 years 993 00:52:16,320 --> 00:52:18,520 probably don't even remember 994 00:52:18,560 --> 00:52:21,400 that the Wilburys in '88 had a number-one album. 995 00:52:21,440 --> 00:52:25,240 (GUITAR FINALE) 996 00:52:27,760 --> 00:52:30,560 # I love you even more 997 00:52:31,560 --> 00:52:34,960 # Than I did before 998 00:52:35,000 --> 00:52:40,640 # But, darling, what can I do? 999 00:52:41,560 --> 00:52:46,200 # For you don't love me 1000 00:52:47,920 --> 00:52:52,800 # And I'll always be 1001 00:52:54,640 --> 00:52:58,160 # Crying 1002 00:52:58,200 --> 00:53:00,080 # Over you 1003 00:53:01,200 --> 00:53:04,360 # Crying 1004 00:53:04,400 --> 00:53:06,200 # Over you... # 1005 00:53:06,240 --> 00:53:08,800 I'm totally amazed 1006 00:53:08,840 --> 00:53:11,520 that so many artists today 1007 00:53:11,560 --> 00:53:14,560 still use Roy as their inspiration. 1008 00:53:14,600 --> 00:53:18,840 # Over you... # 1009 00:53:27,040 --> 00:53:28,640 # Only the lonely 1010 00:53:28,680 --> 00:53:30,960 # Dum-dum-dum dummy-doo-wah 1011 00:53:31,000 --> 00:53:33,440 # Know the way I feel... # 1012 00:53:33,480 --> 00:53:36,200 At the very end, when he was asked 1013 00:53:36,240 --> 00:53:40,160 how he wanted to be remembered, 1014 00:53:40,200 --> 00:53:42,600 and he paused for a minute and he said, 1015 00:53:42,640 --> 00:53:46,440 "Hmm, I just would like to be remembered." 1016 00:53:46,480 --> 00:53:49,280 # Pretty woman, stop a while 1017 00:53:50,320 --> 00:53:52,960 # Pretty woman, give your smile 1018 00:53:53,000 --> 00:53:55,200 # To me 1019 00:53:57,800 --> 00:53:59,320 # Pretty woman... # 1020 00:53:59,360 --> 00:54:02,000 OLIVIA HARRISON: My lasting memory of Roy would be 1021 00:54:02,040 --> 00:54:04,720 him walking down the stairs 1022 00:54:04,760 --> 00:54:07,440 coming to dinner and all of us were already down, 1023 00:54:07,480 --> 00:54:12,520 so looking at Roy in his black shirt, black trousers 1024 00:54:12,560 --> 00:54:15,440 and his dark glasses, and we all stood at the bottom of the stairs 1025 00:54:15,480 --> 00:54:17,440 watching Roy come down the staircase. 1026 00:54:17,480 --> 00:54:19,440 It was like, "Wow, 1027 00:54:19,480 --> 00:54:21,800 you know, the Big O." 1028 00:54:21,840 --> 00:54:24,840 # It's too bad 1029 00:54:24,880 --> 00:54:28,800 # That all these things 1030 00:54:31,320 --> 00:54:34,360 # Can only happen 1031 00:54:34,400 --> 00:54:38,080 # In my dreams 1032 00:54:41,320 --> 00:54:47,320 # Only in dreams 1033 00:54:49,680 --> 00:54:56,640 # In beautiful dreams # 1034 00:54:58,760 --> 00:55:00,760 (CHEERING AND APPLAUSE) 1035 00:55:02,920 --> 00:55:04,920 (WOLF-WHISTLING) 1036 00:55:09,400 --> 00:55:12,680 # Still missing you 1037 00:55:13,800 --> 00:55:16,640 # California blue 1038 00:55:18,960 --> 00:55:21,280 # Still missing you 1039 00:55:22,960 --> 00:55:25,000 # California blue 1040 00:55:27,880 --> 00:55:30,440 # Still missing you 1041 00:55:32,200 --> 00:55:36,120 # California blue # 1042 00:55:36,160 --> 00:55:38,280 AccessibleCustomerService@sky.uk 74550

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