Jump to content

Simon Wicks: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m Reverted 1 edit by Joshua Guest (talk) identified as vandalism to last revision by Gungadin. (TW)
Line 18: Line 18:
|nieces = [[Bianca Jackson]]
|nieces = [[Bianca Jackson]]
}}
}}
'''Simon "Wicksy" Wicks''' (né '''Beale''') is a [[fictional character]] from the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[BBC]] [[soap opera]] ''[[EastEnders]]'', played by [[Nick Berry]] between 1985 and 1990. Wicksy was introduced to take on some of the more adult storylines that had been scripted for another character, [[Mark Fowler]]; Mark's actor [[David Scarboro]] had left the serial prematurely due to personal problems. Wicksy was the soap's first male, pin-up and proved extremely popular with female fans. An early storyline saw Wicksy perform a song in the serial, "[[Every Loser Wins]]", which was subsequently released as a single in 1986 and reached number one in the [[UK singles chart]]. One of Wicksy's most prominent storylines was his adultery with [[Cindy Beale]], and a subsequent feud with Cindy's husband [[Ian Beale]] ([[Adam Woodyatt]]). Nick Berry quit the role in 1990, fearful of typecasting, and after five years on-screen, Wicksy departed in December that year. He is the son of [[Pat Evans]] and [[Brian Wicks]] and is also the young half brother of [[David Wicks]].
'''Simon "Wicksy" Wicks''' (né '''Beale''') is a [[fictional character]] from the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[BBC]] [[soap opera]] ''[[EastEnders]]'', played by [[Nick Berry]] between 1985 and 1990. Wicksy was introduced to take on some of the more adult storylines that had been scripted for another character, [[Mark Fowler]]; Mark's actor [[David Scarboro]] had left the serial prematurely due to personal problems. Wicksy was the soap's first male, pin-up and proved extremely popular with female fans. An early storyline saw Wicksy perform a song in the serial, "[[Every Loser Wins]]", which was subsequently released as a single in 1986 and reached number one in the [[UK singles chart]]. One of Wicksy's most prominent storylines was his adultery with [[Cindy Beale]], and a subsequent feud with Cindy's husband [[Ian Beale]] ([[Adam Woodyatt]]). Nick Berry quit the role in 1990, fearful of typecasting, and after five years on-screen, Wicksy departed in December that year.


==Storylines==
==Storylines==

Revision as of 11:18, 21 November 2011

Simon Wicks
EastEnders character
File:Simonwicks88.jpg
Portrayed byNick Berry
Duration1985–90
First appearance8 October 1985
Last appearance27 December 1990
ClassificationFormer; regular
Introduced byJulia Smith
Book appearancesSwings and Roundabouts
Heroes
Elbow Room
In-universe information
OccupationBarman
FatherBrian Wicks
MotherPat Evans
Half-brothersDavid Wicks
SonsSteven Beale
NiecesBianca Jackson

Simon "Wicksy" Wicks (né Beale) is a fictional character from the British BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by Nick Berry between 1985 and 1990. Wicksy was introduced to take on some of the more adult storylines that had been scripted for another character, Mark Fowler; Mark's actor David Scarboro had left the serial prematurely due to personal problems. Wicksy was the soap's first male, pin-up and proved extremely popular with female fans. An early storyline saw Wicksy perform a song in the serial, "Every Loser Wins", which was subsequently released as a single in 1986 and reached number one in the UK singles chart. One of Wicksy's most prominent storylines was his adultery with Cindy Beale, and a subsequent feud with Cindy's husband Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt). Nick Berry quit the role in 1990, fearful of typecasting, and after five years on-screen, Wicksy departed in December that year.

Storylines

Backstory

Simon (or Wicksy, as he was commonly known) was the second child born during Pete Beale's first marriage to the promiscuous Pat Harris, and after their marriage deteriorated, Wicksy and his older brother David were adopted by Pat's second husband Brian Wicks, who was abusive to Pat and the children.

In his teens, Simon and Eddie Hunter belonged to a pop music band and Simon had borrowed money from loan sharks to keep their band afloat. The band fell apart with Simon owing "The Firm" £1500 which he couldn't pay, so Simon fled from home in October 1985 in search of the man he thought was his father, Pete.

1985–90

Pete is pleased to see Simon and bails him out with loan sharks after thugs trace him to Walford. Wicksy attempts to form another band, but rivalry between the members prompts him to quit and go solo. He does not get very far however, and by the end of the year he gives up his dream of becoming a musician. Instead, Simon finds work as a barman in both The Queen Victoria public house and later the Dagmar wine bar, where he frequently plays the pub piano, singing Cockney favourites to the regulars

Wicksy's mother, Pat, turns up in 1986, much to Pete's dismay. Pat drops the bombshell that there is a strong possibility that Simon is not Pete's biological son as she had various affairs during their marriage, including one with Pete's brother Kenny. This causes a rift between Simon and his mother, a relationship already damaged due to Simon's disapproval of her nonchalant style of parenting. Pat later admits that Simon's father is Brian Wicks, his adoptive father. Simon visits Brian following this revelation, but his father is abusive towards him and so Simon cuts all contact.

Wicksy proves popular with women. He has flings with Donna Ludlow, Mary Smith and Naima Jeffery among others. In 1987 he dates Sharon Watts, but soon gets bored when she refuses to sleep with him. His first serious relationship is with caterer Magda Czajkowski. They move in together, but both want different things out of the relationship and Simon eventually jilts her in 1988 on the advice of his boss Den Watts, whose womanising he idolises.

In 1988, Wicksy has a fling with Cindy Williams and Donna Ludlow at the same time. Cindy refuses to tolerate Simon's womanising and when his stepbrother, Ian Beale, starts wooing her, Cindy dates him instead. Initially Cindy is only interested in making Simon jealous, but when she discovers that Ian is a budding entrepreneur, she agrees to marry him. Confused by Cindy, Simon reignites a relationship with Sharon. Jealous that Simon is moving on, Cindy seduces him and they have sex on the floor of The Queen Vic after closing time. This tryst culminates in Cindy falling pregnant with Simon's child. When Simon learns of the pregnancy, he refuses to have anything more to do with Cindy. Rejected, Cindy marries Ian and deceives him into thinking that her baby is his. She gives birth to Steven on Boxing day 1989.

Meanwhile, Simon and Sharon's relationship continues. Sharon makes plans to buy The Vic and run it with Simon. However, Simon finds this commitment daunting; he starts pining for Cindy and develops paternal feelings towards his son. Simon and Cindy resume their affair and when Ian finds out, he becomes obsessed with breaking them up and ruining Simon's life. Simon is accused of theft from The Queen Vic when marked notes are found in his pocket; however, Ian planted them. When Simon loses his job he accepts Ian's offer of employment at his catering company, despite protests from Cindy. Ian attempts to frame Simon for theft at his company and when this fails, he tries to kill Simon by sabotaging the brakes of his van on Christmas day 1990. Furious, Simon and Cindy leave Walford to start a new life together the following day.

In 1992, Cindy returns and reunites with Ian, stating that Simon has abandoned her and Steven and moved abroad. Simon eventually settles in New Zealand and in 2002, Steven, who has so far been brought up by Ian, discovers his true paternity and moves to New Zealand. When Steven returns in 2007, he suggests that he left New Zealand because Simon does not approve of his bisexuality. Pat discovers in 2009 that Simon's girlfriend Miriam is pregnant; she occasionally visits Simon off-screen. In 2011, Pat discovers that Simon is going to lose his house and needs a loan of £500,000, which Pat's friend Norman Simmonds offers to help with.

Creation

Simon Wicks was introduced by creator and executive producer Julia Smith in 1985, making his first appearance in October that year.[1] According to Smith, Simon was thought up overnight as a means to restore the cast balance distorted by the unexpected departure from the serial of actor David Scarboro who played the original Mark Fowler.[1] Scarboro's departure meant many of his functions as the slightly eldest of the young characters would need to be taken over by another character and thus Wicksy was invented.[1]

Simon Wicks was associated with one of EastEnders' original families, the Beales. Specifically, he was introduced as the estranged son of Pete Beale (Peter Dean), born from his first marriage - events that had been written into Pete's backstory at the start of the programme.[1] According to Smith, the producers and writers of the soap had always planned on introducing Pete's estranged son on-screen, but Wicksy's premature inclusion meant introducing him a year before it had originally been intended.[1]

File:Wicksy piano.jpg
Simon in his first episode (1985). The haircut seen here was given to the actor specifically to make Berry appear smarter.

Actor Nick Berry was cast to play Wicksy with minimal delay.[1] Smith has described his casting as one of the fastest on record.[1] Berry auditioned in front of the soap's creators, Smith and Tony Holland, and was offered the part immediately.[1] Berry was whisked into costume and make-up and given a new haircut, which Berry claimed was because the producers wanted to smarten his appearance up.[2] Berry was already a fan of the soap at the time of his casting. He has told interviewer Dan Abramson, "I auditioned on a Wednesday and then on Friday I arrived in Albert Square and began shooting my first scenes with Dirty Den, whom I had enjoyed watching on the box for some time. For my first few episodes, I walked around with a big smile on my face, grinning at everybody. It was funny."[3]

Wicksy has been described by writer Colin Brake as a major arrival during EastEnders' first year. The character drove into EastEnders in a bright yellow sports car in episode 67. He suggested that with Wicksy's arrival, Walford gained a new pin-up.[4]

Characterisation

Berry stated in 1986 that he modelled his portrayal of Simon on his younger brother, who was also called Simon.[2] He commented, "he's already quite the ladies' man. He's extremely good-looking and is almost always the centre of attention wherever he goes."[2]

Author Hilary Kingsley dubbed Wicksy in 1991 as Walford's "only sexy man". She added, "there is a cheekiness about Simon Wicks that's very attractive. In his early days he was happy-go-lucky, interested only in girls and paying off his debts [...] Simon put it about a bit".[5] Kate Lock, author of EastEnders' official book, Who's who?, described Simon as a "smoothie and a charmer [...] shallow, lazy and unreliable." She suggested that he graduated from the "love 'em and leave 'em school of relationships" and that he could not cope with commitment.[6] Additionally, author Rupert Smith has suggested that, "with his blow-dried hair, rolled-up jacket and toothy grin, [Wicksy] was the apotheosis of 80s manhood. He went through the women of Walford like a dose of salts, but at the end of the day slippery Simon was a bolter".[7]

Discussing Wicksy's characterisation in 1993, Berry inferred that he was not entirely happy with the changes that producers attempted to introduce surrounding his character. Berry suggested that when Wicksy first arrived, he was "sort of the boy next door [...] But then they changed it. Dirty Den had left the show [in 1989] and they chose Wicksy as the new romantic lead. I resisted that change as I never really saw Wicksy like that and you have to be consistent with these characters."[3]

Development

The Banned

In 1986, EastEnders decided to tackle a storyline about the ups and downs of a pop group.[1] The group featured the majority of teenage characters in the soap at the time, including Wicksy.[1] Nick Berry was musically trained, having attended London stage schools.[8] He was initially chosen as the group's solo singer, who named thelmselves "The Banned" after they were banned from the Queen Victoria public house.[9]

The storyline proved to be a successful merchandising tool for the serial, as it spawned two hit singles in the "real world".[1] Actor Nick Berry released a ballad entitled "Every Loser Wins" in October 1986, having previously sung the song in character on-screen (accompanied by a piano).[10] The song was written and produced by Simon May, who famously composed the EastEnders theme tune. "Every Loser Wins" was a smash hit, reaching number 1 in the UK singles chart, where it stayed for three weeks, knocking Madonna's "True Blue" off the top spot.[11] It was the second biggest-selling single in the UK that year after "Don't Leave Me This Way" by The Communards, and held the record as the highest climbing chart single ever until 2001, when it was eclipsed by "It's the Way You Make Me Feel" by Steps (which climbed from 72-2).[12] "Every Loser Wins" sold over a million copies and earned composer Simon May an Ivor Novello award.[13] The song "also provided levity" on-screen, when it was used as Lofty Holloway's break-up song after Michelle Fowler had jilted him at the altar.[14] Although the plot produced two hit singles in the real world, the actual storyline was not a great success with viewers. EastEnders creators Julia Smith and Tony Holland both felt it lacked credibility and branded it an experiment that failed.[4]

Paternity

1986 heralded the beginning of a storyline that Colin Brake has described as one of the soap's most complicated, convoluted, confusing and mind-boggling: The paternity of Simon Wicks.[4] As part of the original storyline, Wicksy's mother Pat (Pam St Clement) was introduced as a major antagonist for the Beale family, when she announced that her former husband Pete was not Simon's biological father, as had previously been claimed.[4] So began a long-running storyline played out throughout the year and continuing into 1988, which included other characters being implemented as the potential father of Simon, including Pete's older brother Kenny Beale (Michael Attwell). In the on-screen events, Simon was shown to bond with Kenny, despite Pat admitting that she did not know which of the Beale brothers had fathered Wicksy. A final plot twist mid 1988 saw Pat finally reveal what she thought was thr truth, that Simon's real father was Brian Wicks (Leslie Schofield), Pat's second husband and Wicksy's adoptive father.[4]

Despite this revelation on-screen, Colin Brake stated in an official EastEnders' book in 1995 that the true parentage of Simon was still uncertain in the minds of the producers.[4] He stated, "At various times over the years the story has been amended, until the only certainty is that we will never be certain about the actual facts."[4] He added that, at the time of writing the book for EastEnders' 10th anniversary in 1994, "the current producers believe that Pete was the father of [Simon's older brother] David and may have been the father of Simon."[4]

Love triangle

Another long-running storyline featuring Wicksy was began in 1988 with the on-screen arrival of a love-interest for Wicksy, Cindy Williams (Michelle Collins).[4] In the storyline, Cindy had a fling with womanising Wicksy before opting to have a more serious relationship with his setpbrother Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt). Colin Brake suggested that with this storyline, EastEnders were sowing the seeds of a situation that would provide much story material for many years to come: an affair between Wicksy and Cindy resulting in a pregnancy.[4] In a plot twist, Cindy, rejected by Simon, married Ian and appropriated him as the father of Steven Beale, Wicksy's baby. The eternal triangle continued into 1990, resulting in Cindy leaving Ian for Wicksy.[4]

The episode where Ian finally discovered that Simon was Cindy's other man was dubbed by the script department as "the Devon Cottage Climax" and aired in September 1990.[4] Colin Brake has hailed it as the best episode of that year.[4] Brake says that after having set up the secret that Steven was Wicksy's son rather than Ian's, the script writers knew that this was a secret that had to be blown, and the entire story built to this moment.[4] In the on-screen events, Wicksy was spending time with Cindy at her parents house, and Ian was released from hospital following a suicide bid after Cindy left him. Brake stated that "the scene was set. Debbie Cook's scripts took Pete and Ian, with his leg in plaster, to Devon for a confrontation that would contain elements of tragedy and farce. Particularly memorable was Ian furiously throwing bricks through the window of the house, followed by one of his crutches. This episode ended ominously with Ian finding Cindy's father's shotgun and stealing it ... Directed by Matthew Evans, these episodes not only brought the story to a good climax but also laid the roots for the next three months' worth of stories, building up to Wicksy and Cindy's final exit."[4]

Departure

After five years playing Wicksy, Nick Berry quit the role in 1990 and the character was written out in December that year, Berry having been offered a lucrative deal with BBC's rival network, ITV.[4] Berry has since suggested that he left the role as he feared being typecast.[3]

When asked in interviews, Berry has refused to rule out a possible return to Eastenders.[15] In 2001, Berry commented, "Well, they never did kill off Wicksy. Maybe one day, he'll make a dramatic return through the doors of the Queen Vic? Never say never - who knows when I'll need the work..."[16]

In 2007, executive producer of EastEnders, Diederick Santer, stated that Wicksy was the character he would most like to see return to the serial. He commented, "I'd love to see what he's like today. What is this golden boy, who had the world and the women of Walford at his feet, doing now? Has he delivered on his early promise? I loved Nick Berry playing him – Simon was a likeable but complex character. Maybe I should ask him to come back…"[17] He confirmed his desire to get the character back to website Walford Web in 2010, but added that it was not to be; he did not state whether or not Berry had been approached.[18]

Reception

The character proved popular among fans and Berry became a teen pin-up during his tenure, winning Britain's sexiest man title in 1986.[5] The single Berry released as part of a storyline in the soap reached number one in the charts and was the UK's highest selling record that year.[19] According to Hilary Kingsley, Berry received the most fan mail out of all the actors in the show.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Smith, Julia (1987). EastEnders - The Inside Story. Book Club Associates. ISBN 0-563-20601-2. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c "So-shy Nick is a turn-on". London: Evening Times. 2008-03-12. Retrieved 1986-05-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  3. ^ a b c Larry Jaffee (2009). Albert Square & Me: The Actors of Eastenders. iUniverse.com. ISBN 9781440159879.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Brake, Colin (1995). EastEnders: The First 10 Years: A Celebration. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-37057-2.
  5. ^ a b c Kingsley, Hilary (1990). The EastEnders Handbook. BBC books. ISBN 0-563-206010-563-36292-8-2. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)
  6. ^ Lock, Kate (2000). EastEnders Who's Who. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55178-X.
  7. ^ Smith, Rupert (2005). EastEnders: 20 years in Albert Square. BBC books. ISBN 0-563-52165-1.
  8. ^ "Sylvia Young Theatre School". www.sylviayoungtheatreschool.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2007-08-30. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  9. ^ "In pictures: EastEnders' 20 years (pic no.2)". BBC. 2005-02-19. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ Left, Sarah (2001-11-26). "Singing thespians)". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  11. ^ "HEARTBEAT'S POP STARS". Retrieved 2007-10-21. [dead link]
  12. ^ "Pop: UK Charts". The Independent. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help) [dead link]
  13. ^ "Simon May". www.cityspeakersinternational.co.uk. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  14. ^ Coe, Gideon (2004-02-28). "Soundtrack of their lives". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  15. ^ "10 things you didn't know about... NICK BERRY". Coventry Evening Telegraph. 2002-01-05. Retrieved 2011-01-14. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  16. ^ "One lucky b*****d!". Sunday Mirror. 2001-12-30. Retrieved 2011-01-14. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  17. ^ "'Enders boss: 'I'd like to see Simon Wicks return'". Digital Spy. 2007-11-14. Retrieved 2011-01-14. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  18. ^ "'Enders boss wanted Simon Wicks return". Digital Spy. 2010-02-25. Retrieved 2011-01-14. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  19. ^ Munroe, Josephine (1994). The EastEnders Programme Guide. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-86369-825-5.