Teenyboppers
As
the pop music scene matured in the early 70s, so its audience widened
to a younger age group - the Teenyboppers. No longer the strict domain
of the teenager, pop music was now often specifically targeted to much
younger audiences - and largely female.
The hormonal structure of women tends to send their emotions and moods
slightly berserk at the best of times, but at no time more so than in
the turbulent time of adolescence and puberty when they are just
beginning to develop both physically and sexually. Enter the
Teenybopper.
David Cassidy appeared in The Partridge Family (1970 - 1974)
and had a number of hits with the teenybopper market, such as How
Can I Be Sure? (1972). The Osmonds, a Mormon family from Utah, scored highly in teenybop
popularity stakes. After their joint smash hit Crazy Horses,
heart-throb Donny recorded the hit Puppy Love, and Little
Jimmy
- aged nine - triumphed with Long Haired Lover From Liverpool. Britain's own teen idol was
David Essex who had played Jesus in the
rock musical Godspell and starred in the film That'll Be The
Day (1973). Meanwhile in Scotland, a band chose their name by
sticking a pin in a map of America, and The Bay City Rollers were
born. The height of 'Rollermania', with its tartan outfits and other
souvenirs, came in 1974 with Number One hits Bye Bye Baby and
Give A Little Love.
Mass
hysteria and idol worship prompted teenage fans to write letters to
their favourite pop stars professing undying love . . . "I would
die for you!". And at times it was quite conceivable that she
just might die for him, because a massed auditorium full of
rabid teenyboppers lost all sense of reason and proportion. On one
occasion during a David Cassidy
tour of Britain, his fans found out where he was staying and hundreds
of teenyboppers climbed on to a 60-foot high roof, dangled their feet
dangerously over the edge and refused to come down until he appeared.
Later they plunged fully-clothed into the swimming pool in the hope
that they would be invited in to dry off.
Donny Osmond
attracted over 600 teenyboppers when he arrived at London Airport.
They invaded the roof garden, broke through into 'no access' areas,
overturned benches and rubbish bins, and scrambled up scaffolding.
They wept on each other's shoulders, fainted with grief, and screamed
themselves into a hysterical frenzy. Airport officials later summed it
all up by saying they were alarmed "because the hysterical fans
simply don't know how to look after themselves and are quite incapable
of spotting dangerous situations". Helen
White, a 13-year-old who fasted for three days before a pilgrimage to
see David Cassidy summed up a
teenybopper's dangerous dedication to her idol; "One
day I'm going to be Mrs David Cassidy," she said at the time,
"I just know it. You can laugh but it won't stop me believing it.
I think if he ever met someone else I'd kill myself. I won't even hold
hands with another boy now because I want to be faithful to him. When
he sings I feel as if he's speaking only to me. It's as if no other
woman exists in his life - only me". Which
is all very well when spoken calmly to a reporter, but carry this
attitude with you into a crowded emotional theatre or concert hall and
anything could happen . . . Thousands of teenyboppers
injured themselves at concerts during the 1970s, and hospitals were
usually alerted when a particularly famous singer or group were
appearing in the area because inevitably girls would need treatment
for cuts, bruises, heat-exhaustion or fainting. |