Some things insist on being written about.
On Christmas Day 1975, BBC Two broadcast a studio-based rock musical retelling the Trojan Wars headlined by the great Bernard Cribbins, alongside former Manfred Mann singer Paul Jones, and with a pre-“Evita” Julie Covington among the cast. The name of the show would be “Great Big Groovy Horse”.
Starring a young adult cast, with the then 46-year-old Cribbins in the nominal role as both teacher, narrator and Agamemnon, the breaking up an argument between two men over a girlfriend in a community club becomes a metaphor for confrontation between the Achaeans and the city of Troy, with Paul Jones plays Meneleaus, whose wife Helen (Patricia Hodge) was taken by Paris (Nigel Williams).
Man, you had to be there… literally, for apart from a repeat showing on BBC One two Christmases later, I don’t think it has been since, save for a viewer with the foresight and money to own an early video recorder.
The songs are catchy, acting as points to highlight emotion amongst Cribbins’s narrative, although the lyrics are very Seventies, and very Musical: “Paris, you’re a rat, you’re a mean cat”, and “Heed my word if you wanna get wiser, it’s the saddest little story that you’ve ever heard, everybody better heed my word”. You will also see people getting to belt out the line “you’re a genuine pony!” after describing the Trojan horse as a “tourist attraction”. The main point is to get across the outline of the story in as entertaining a way as possible, and it achieves that, but just don’t give yourself a test on what information it told you, as you realise you went with the flow of the songs.
You must use your imagination: the performers, singing into microphones with trailing wires, largely wear their own clothes, while the set is made of functional scaffolding, incorporating stairs, gantry and double doors, set on a floor marked out in black and white zones, marking out Troy by writing on the floor in purple. The bare studio walls are also seen occasionally. The Trojan horse itself, nearly twenty feet high and mounted on bicycle wheels, appears to be made of coloured blocks, like a computer game that couldn’t have been made yet.
Like “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” was originally written to perform in schools, Elmgrove Junior School in Harrow originated “Great Big Groovy Horse”, the musical’s writers Simone Bloom & Arnold Shaw being friends of the school’s music teacher. Some BBC staff must have had children who attended there too, for the corporation bought the broadcast rights, recording its fifty-minute production at studio 1 of Television Centre in April 1975. I have seen later evidence from a local newspaper that the stage version was performed in High Wycombe as late as 1979. The producer of the TV version was Paul Ciani, who continued his career with Basil Brush, “Crackerjack!”, The Krankies and Keith Harris, later graduating to producing shows later in the evening like “The Kenny Everett Television Show”, “Call My Bluff” and “Top of the Pops”.
This production of “Great Big Groovy Horse” looked and felt like an upscaled version of “Play Away”, the children’s musical series that Julie Covington appeared in at the time alongside future star Jeremy Irons. Jonathan Cohen, musical director of “Play Away” and of incidental music for “Jackanory” and “Rentaghost”, co-adapted and arranged this production, and performer Kim Goody would later appear in “Play Away” and “Number 73”, alongside her work as a composer for shows like “Playdays” and “Mike & Angelo”. Meanwhile, both Paul Jones and Cribbins had stints reading stories on “Jackanory”, Cribbins in particular having appeared in everything from “The Railway Children” to “The Wombles”, alongside his own musical career with songs like “Right Said Fred”, “Hole in the Ground”, “Gossip Calypso” and a very affecting version of “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” from “My Fair Lady”.
If you can find “Great Big Groovy Horse”, give it a try, for it is a great time capsule for what British children’s TV could produce in 1975. I wonder how many watched at the time, seeing as its competition on BBC One that Christmas Day was “The Morecambe & Wise Show” with Diana Rigg.








