How '80s LGBTQ band Bronski Beat’s haunting ‘Smalltown Boy’ made a difference: ‘It was very bold’

Thirty-five years ago, director Bernard Rose lensed two very important music videos that shifted the needle of ‘80s queer culture. One was the original, wild, and widely banned version of Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s controversial smash hit “Relax,” which took place in a Caligula-style S&M nightclub. But on the other end of the spectrum was Bronski Beat’s much grimmer depiction of a suburban teen’s gay-bashing and subsequent ostracization from his disapproving family, “Smalltown Boy.” Arguably, it’s that video that truly resonates today.

“It's a piece of work that I'm still very proud of, certainly,” Rose tells Yahoo Entertainment in an interview commemorating both Pride Month and the groundbreaking “Smalltown Boy” video’s anniversary. “It was much quieter in its impact than ‘Relax,’ but I think just as powerful in terms of the story it told. That was the good thing about it.”

The stark and narrative video, described by Rose as an “un-glamorous” “silent movie” (it features no flashy performance footage, dance sequences, or neon fashions like many other MTV videos of the era), depicts the titular character, played by the new wave trio’s openly gay frontman Jimmy Somerville, clumsily and unsuccessfully making a pass at a handsome jock at a local swimming pool; this unfortunately leads to him being vicious attacked in an alley by the jock’s homophobic friends. When the bruised and bloodied Somerville is escorted home by police and basically outed to his outraged parents, he realizes he has no choice but to leave town for somewhere safer and more accepting. In the video’s subtlest but most gut-punching scene that focuses solely on the two men’s faltering hands, the father gives Somerville some cash for the one-way journey, but refuses a hug or handshake and cruelly turns away.

“I think it was a very common story, and I think that's a really interesting example of how to make a scene impactful just on the picture alone. I think it's a very common experience for people, and I think it even goes beyond the gay issue: people who just are rejected and thrown out like that,” says Rose. “That was Bronski Beat's message. They were going to point out the essential problems and oppressions involved in being gay at that time, which was you were quite likely to get beaten up somewhere, or thrown out by family. There's really no question that that's true. It is still true. In that sense, it was very bold.”

Jimmy Somerville faces a homophobic gang in Bronski Beat's "Smalltown Boy" video. (Photo: London Records)
Jimmy Somerville faces a homophobic gang in Bronski Beat's "Smalltown Boy" video. (Photo: London Records)

Rose says he got the job to direct “Smalltown Boy” because of the success of “Relax,” which sold a whopping 2 million copies in Britain alone and is still the seventh-best-selling single in U.K. history. But he says Bronski Beat “weren't very keen on the Frankie Goes to Hollywood thing. They were giving me a hard time about it. I think that they [thought it was too] mainstream, upbeat, and commercial, and they had more of a message.” But Rose does believe Frankie’s chart breakthrough paved the way for “Smalltown Boy,” Bronski Beat’s statement-making debut single (off their recently reissued Age of Consent album), which eventually went to No. 3 in Britain.

“There were a lot of artists [in the ‘80s] who were gay but not open about it, like Boy George, George Michael, Freddie Mercury, Elton John — these people we now think have always been out, but they were not out in 1984. And they were all at the height of their fame. Frankie Goes to Hollywood were really the first ones who came out and said, ‘Well, yeah, we're gay.’ And it caused a shockwave, but it also didn't hurt them — it did the opposite. It propelled [“Relax”] to being huge. … Bronski Beat were around before that happened, but their record came out after, and they were coming out into a market where the Frankie thing had already happened. So in a sense, I don't think it wasn't like their thunder was stolen, but they weren't the first. But I do think their approach was much more politicized and much more serious.”

Somerville wasn’t a professional actor (and neither was the man who convincingly played the video’s stern-faced policeman, London Records’ openly gay executive Colin Bell), but his nuanced performance was so gripping because, as Rose explains it, “The story was very close to him. And we did it in real places, in a very low-key way. I just ran the scenes without too much rehearsal, so that they felt quite real, and then cut them to the music. There wasn't this thing of doing it to playback, which makes everything a bit artificial.

“This song, although obviously it's a dance record, the way it had a narrative to it, it was almost like a country & western record. It had a very specific story in the lyrics, and it seemed it would lend itself to doing it in a naturalistic way that was very un-music-video-y.”

Jimmy Somerville recalls his beating in Bronski Beat's "Smalltown Boy" video. (Photo: London Records)
Jimmy Somerville recalls his beating in Bronski Beat's "Smalltown Boy" video. (Photo: London Records)

Rose also made the decision to not actually show Somerville’s gay-bashing, mainly to conform to children’s TV standards in Britain (and thus get the airplay that the infamous “Relax” had understandably been denied). “There was no way you could have shown [the attack],” he says, “but I think in a weird way, it's quite interesting that you don't see it — because what you imagine is worse, really.”

Rose says the “Smalltown Boy” was warmly received, and he recalls 1984 being a progressive year for gay culture, as evidenced by the success of both Bronski Beat and Frankie Goes to Hollywood. “I think things were moving in a much more open direction in '84, and in a way the Frankie thing was the height of it, where people were going, ‘Oh, there's something wonderful and great and fun going on with all this,’” he says. But the good times would not last for long. “Shortly after that, the mood changed. The whole AIDS thing came along, and everything was different. And then suddenly, the AIDS thing was tremendous — to call it a ‘backlash’ is an understatement. It was a holocaust.

“I think it was changing in '84, and I think things like ‘Relax’ and Bronski Beat were at the forefront of that. There was actually a fair bit of public acceptance of it, and then it just went way the other direction,” Rose elaborates. “And people I knew at the time, [English filmmaker/artist] Derek Jarman being the most obvious example — obviously Derek did die in 1993 [of an AIDS-related illness] — but in early '80s, guys like Derek were just totally comfortable with being out and being pretty outrageous, being open about being promiscuous and having fun, doing all kinds of crazy stuff. And suddenly, people were suddenly so horrified by that, and it became so unacceptable. It was a cultural backlash as much as anything.”

Still, “Smalltown Boy” has endured; a skim of the video’s mostly positive and grateful comments on YouTube shows how much its all-too-realistic storyline has connected over the past 35 years. “I think if people recognize themselves onscreen and go, ‘That happened to me, that's how I felt,’ then it helps people,” says Rose. “If people see themselves reflected, then they don't feel invisible.”

However, it’s the feedback from his friend Jarman that really sticks with Rose. “Derek was working in the same production company as me, and he was annoyed that I was making the video, because I think he wanted to [direct] it. And so, as soon as I had it finished, he was waiting for me by the video machine, saying, ‘OK, put [the videotape] in. Let's have a look at it.’ He was definitely a gatekeeper, and he was going to view it harshly if he didn't approve. But he was very moved, and openly moved. And I thought, ‘If Derek likes it, then it's OK.’ I was very pleased,” Rose recalls.

While the “Smalltown Boy” video is largely gray and depressing, it does end on a happy note, with Somerville being joined on a train by his friends (played by fellow openly gay Bronski Beat bandmates Larry Steinbachek and Steve Bronski) and setting off on their big-city adventure together. So, what does Rose, who went on to direct feature films like Candyman, Immortal Beloved, and Frankenstein, think would have happened in the music video’s sequel? “I assume that they would have formed a band and had a hit record,” he smiles.

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