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Toni Basil | |
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Birth name | Antonia Christina Basilotta |
Born | September 22, 1943 |
Origin | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Genres | Dance, New Wave |
Occupations | Singer, Songwriter, Dancer, Choreographer, Actor |
Years active | 1964–present |
Labels | Chrysalis Records, Virgin |
Website | Toni Basil's Site |
Antonia Christina Basilotta (born September 22, 1943, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), better known by her stage name Toni Basil, is an American singer-songwriter, actress, filmmaker, film director, choreographer, and dancer, best known for her multi-million-selling worldwide #1 hit "Mickey" from 1982.
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Basil was born Antonia Christina Basilotta in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her mother, Jacqueline Jessica Anderson, was a vaudevillian acrobatic comedian in her family's act "Billy Wells and The Four Fays." Her father, Louis Basil, was an orchestra leader who conducted orchestras at The Chicago Theatre and at The Sahara Hotel in Las Vegas, among others.[1]
Toni Basil had been dancing professionally since childhood, but her adult career started when she served as an assistant choreographer and dancer on Shindig!, a breakthrough music variety show which premiered on the ABC network in 1964. She was also assistant choreographer on the 1964 concert film The T.A.M.I. Show (Teen-Age Music International) choreographed by David Winters,[2] which also featured fellow dancer and friend, Teri Garr. Some of her 1960s film choreography work include "Village of the Giants" (1965), "The Cool Ones" (1967), and the Monkees' 1968 film "Head", in which she is partnered onscreen with Davy Jones during "Daddy's Song."
Basil choreographed, and co-directed with David Byrne, the music video for "Once in a Lifetime" by Talking Heads. She worked with Talking Heads again to direct and choreograph the video for the song "Crosseyed and Painless." She also choreographed David Bowie's Diamond Dogs Tour in 1974, and Glass Spider Tour in 1987. She has worked with Bette Midler for many years, most recently on her 2008/2009 Las Vegas show The Showgirl Must Go On. She also served as the associate director and choreographer of the worldwide Tina Turner Live: 50th Anniversary Concert Tour in 2008/2009. Her expertise as a choreographer led her to be invited to sit as a guest judge on season four and five of Fox Television's So You Think You Can Dance. In addition, she is credited with bringing street dance to prominence as a founding member and manager of The Lockers.[citation needed]
Her film choreography through the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s include George Lucas's American Graffiti (1973), "The Rose" (1979), "Peggy Sue Got Married" (1968), "Something to Talk About" (1995), "That Thing You Do" (1996), "My Best Friend's Wedding" (1997),[3] "Legally Blonde" (2001), "Legally Blonde 2: Red, White, & Blonde" (2003), "Charlie Wilson's War" (2007), and "The House Bunny" (2008).
Basil is one of the seven original Lockers, the street dance group considered 'the group that changed the face of dance.' She is recognized as a seminal influence in bringing street dance to the attention of the American public. A 2012 Dance Magazine article cited Basil as the pioneer in merging ballet with street dance for a piece she choreographed for Saturday Night Live "Swan Lake" in 1978.[citation needed]
The Lockers [4] opened and toured with Frank Sinatra including nights at Carnegie Hall. They also opened for The Funkadelics at Radio City Music Hall and many acts in Las Vegas, and made countless television appearances including the second ever Saturday Night Live.
Basil choreographed TV Land Awards' salute to Soul Train in 2005, as well as TV Land Awards' salute to Sid & Marty Kroft in 2009.
Basil's recording career began in 1966 with a single for A&M Records which was the title song from the short film Breakaway. This film was made by internationally famous filmmaker and artist Bruce Conner, and backed with "I'm 28," an obscure Graham Gouldman song.[citation needed] Basil was asked as a solo artist to sing the swinging jazz number "Wham Rebop Boom Bam" in the first season of Saturday Night Live. This came as a result of her sold out solo shows at The Roxy in Los Angeles, and singing the song on The Merv Griffin Show. She appeared as a guest during the first season of Saturday Night Live as one of The Lockers and on later seasons as a singer as well as a filmmaker with her urban style Swan Lake. In 1982, she released the single "Mickey", which went on to achieve international success. This song is a cover of "Kitty," a 1979 release by the UK band Racey, written by British songwriters Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman and produced by Mike Chapman. The original song did not include the famous 'Oh Mickey, you're so fine' chant, which Basil added.
"Mickey" was actually recorded in 1980 and the video was conceived, directed, and choreographed by Basil herself for the UK-based label Radialchoice nearly a year before the inception of MTV in 1981. Issued on Chrysalis Records in September 1982, the song knocked Lionel Richie from #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December. The infectious 45 was quickly certified Gold and in early 1983 reached Platinum status for sales of over 2 million copies in the United States alone. The music video for "Mickey" was one of the most popular early MTV videos. In the video, Basil wore her head cheerleader uniform from Las Vegas High School from which she graduated. During an interview on VH1's "100 Greatest Songs of The 80's", Basil revealed that she still owns the same cheerleader sweater she wore in the video. In 2003, VH1 ranked "Mickey" Number 6 on its list of the 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the '80s.[5]
For television, Basil has appeared as an actress and featured singer/dancer in many television shows and specials. She co-directed and choreographed two BBC specials with Adam Walsh and Ken Stephenson called "Toni Basil Tape 1" and "Toni Basil Tape 2".[6]
Basil's recording career consists of only two albums. Her first album, 1982's Word of Mouth included a second Hot 100 single "Shoppin' from A to Z," as well as three songs by Devo, with the group providing the backing track. The track "Space Girls" was a re-recording of a 1974 Devo demo titled "Space Girl Blues" that would later be released on Devo's "Hardcore Devo: Volume One". Devo member Gerald V. Casale and Basil were in a relationship at the time, and Basil had been an early supporter of the group.
Toni Basil (1983), her eponymous second album, yielded a third and final Hot 100 charting single, "Over My Head," which also reached #4 on the U.S. Dance chart. Her song "Girls Night Out" appeared on the soundtrack to the 1986 movie Modern Girls. To date, there have been five Toni Basil best of collections released on CD. In 1999, DJ and producer Jason Nevins's dance remix of "Mickey" was a club hit in Europe and Australia.
Basil had others hits internationally, like her single "Street Beat" which was a smash hit in the Philippines.[citation needed] Basil also contributed vocals for the Devo song "The Only One" in 1987, which wasn't released until 2000 on the demo compilation Recombo DNA.
As an actress, Basil started off in the films Easy Rider and Five Easy Pieces. Some of her other films include The Last Movie directed by Dennis Hopper, Greaser's Palace directed by Robert Downey, Sr., Mother, Jugs & Speed, Village of the Giants, Rockula with Thomas Dolby and Slaughterhouse Rock. On TV, she has appeared in episodes of Laverne And Shirley and in Baywatch Nights as a fortune teller.[7]
Basil directed short art films including "Game of the Week," "A Dance Film," "Out Trip," and "The Ping Pong Match." Predating music videos, these avant garde pieces found a new audience and were exhibited at the Santa Monica Museum of Art, Getty Museum of Art, and New York's Grey Art Gallery. The Los Angeles Times noted Basil's 'deft editing transformed an ordinary ping pong match between Gray & Stockwell (both noted American actors) into an energetic dance routine.
Basil's "Word Of Mouth" video album was nominated for both a Grammy Award and an MTV Video Music Award.
Basil's late 1960s 8mm and 16mm films recently toured the U.S. with the show "Semina Culture: Wallace Berman and His Circle".[8][dead link]
Aside from directing her own video for "Mickey," she also directed and choreographed the video for Talking Heads' "Once in a Lifetime", featuring lead singer David Byrne against a white background in a similar style to Basil's "Mickey."
Basil won an Emmy in 2007 for her choreography in the commercial "MC Hammer: My Braves". Her awards include Hip Hop International's Living Legend Award, a Grammy nomination for Long Form Video ("Word Of Mouth") 1983, an Emmy nomination and win for Outstanding Achievement in Choreography / The Smothers Brothers 1988,[9] two MTV Award nominations, American Choreography Awards: Four nominations & two wins including Lifetime Achievement Innovator, and The Los Angeles Theater Ovation: Street Dance Award. Exhibitions include the Museum of Modern Art: videos and the Santa Monica Museum of Art: Short films. She has also received platinum and gold discs in the USA, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Philippines, and France. Her single Mickey was installed in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as one of the groundbreaking singles of the 1980s.[10] She was given tribute at The Carnival: Choreographer’s Ball, Monsters of Hip-Hop Masters of Movement, and in Portraits of America's Great Choreographers. She was featured in the Museum of Modern Art Calendar of Artists and on the cover of Dance Magazine.
Year | Album details | Peak positions | Certifications (sales threshold) |
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US | AUS [11] |
NZ [12] |
UK [13] |
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1982 | Word of Mouth
|
22 | 43 | 27 | 15 | ||||
1983 | Toni Basil
|
— | — | — | — | ||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US | US Dance | UK [13] |
NZ [12] |
NL [14] |
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1966 | "Breakaway" | — | — | — | — | — | Non-album song | ||
1981 | "Time After Time" | — | — | — | — | — | Word of Mouth | ||
1982 | "Mickey" | 1 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 39 | |||
"Nobody" | — | — | 52 | — | — | ||||
1983 | "Shoppin' From A to Z" | 77 | 4 | — | — | — | |||
"Street Beat" | — | 63 | — | — | — | Toni Basil | |||
"Over My Head" | 81 | 4 | — | — | — | ||||
1984 | "Suspense" | — | 8 | — | — | — | |||
"Do You Wanna Dance" | — | — | — | — | — | ||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Toni Basil is Toni Basil's second album, released in 1983 on Chrysalis Records. Despite the success of her previous album and the single "Mickey", the album was a complete commercial failure and did not enter US albums chart. A single from the album, "Over My Head", reached #81 in the Billboard Hot 100 entry, her third and final song to do so.
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey
Hey, Mickey
You've been around all night and that's a little long
You think you got the right but I think you got it wrong
Oh, can't you say goodnight so you can take me home, Mickey?
'Cause when you say you will, it always means you won't
You're givin' me the chills, baby, please, baby, don't
Every night you still leave me all alone, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, what a pity you don't understand
You take me by the heart and you take me by the hand
Oh, Mickey, you're so pretty, can't you understand?
It's guys like you, Mickey
And what you do, Mickey, do, Mickey
Don't break my heart, Mickey
Hey, Mickey
Now if you take me by the, who's ever gonna know?
Every time you move, I let a little more show
There's something you can use so don't say no, Mickey
So come on and give it to me anyway you can
Anyway you wanna do it, I'll take it like a man
Oh, please, baby, please, don't leave me in the damn, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, what a pity you don't understand
You take me by the heart and you take me by the hand
Oh, Mickey, you're so pretty, can't you understand?
It's guys like you, Mickey
And what you do, Mickey, do, Mickey
Don't break my heart, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, what a pity you don't understand
You take me by the heart and you take me by the hand
Oh, Mickey, you're so pretty, can't you understand?
It's guys like you, Mickey
And what you do, Mickey, do, Mickey
Don't break my heart, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, what a pity you don't understand
You take me by the heart and you take me by the hand
Oh, Mickey, you're so pretty, can't you understand?
It's guys like you, Mickey
And what you do, Mickey, do, Mickey
Don't break my heart, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, what a pity you don't understand
You take me by the heart and you take me by the hand
Oh, Mickey, you're so pretty, can't you understand?
It's guys like you, Mickey
And what you do, Mickey, do, Mickey
Don't break my heart, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind
Hey, Mickey, hey, Mickey
Oh, Mickey, you're so fine
You're so fine, you blow my mind