Norman Gunston
The "little Aussie bleeder" Norman Gunston (played by
actor Garry McDonald) was one of the most famous Australian media
personalities of the 1970s. The original Norman Gunston Show remains a
genuinely funny and innovative television variety show.
Musical satire
was also one of Norman's strong points. Norman's debut single,
Salute To Abba, reached Number 12 on the Australian charts in December
1976.
His debut album, The Popular Ballad Animal , also included his
very special re-workings of Tom Jones' Delilah , Shirley
Bassey's I
Who Have Nothing , Elvis Presley's Jailhouse Rock and Billy
Joel's
Piano Man .
Mushroom Records issued Norman's topical I Might Be A
Punk (But I Love You Baby) in May 1977 (co-written by Ross Wilson of
Mondo Rock) and an album called Nylon Degrees (in response to the Boz
Scaggs' album Silk Degrees ) which featured live performances from
Norman's tours over the previous year when he was backed by The
Gunstonettes and The Norman Tabernacle Choir (i.e Cheetah).
A cover of Sherbet's Howzat was issued as a single in June 1978, and
KISS Army
b/w Normdrum was a national Number 13 single in November 1980.
McDonald then "retired" the Gunston character to
concentrate on his acting career. Norman re-emerged in 1990 and
performed a version of the INXS song Suicide Blonde with the Salvation
Army Band at a variety extravaganza.
Gunston then recorded a version
of Amigos Para Siempre (the theme song to the 1992 Barcelona Olympic
Games) as a duet with Effie (Mary Coustas) - a character from
Australian sitcom Acropolis Now .
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