Nell Campbell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nell Campbell
Nell Campbell Photo Op GalaxyCon Raleigh 2019.jpg
Campbell at GalaxyCon Raleigh in 2019
Born
Laura Elizabeth Campbell

(1953-05-24) 24 May 1953 (age 68)
Other namesLittle Nell
Occupation
  • Actress
  • singer
  • dancer
  • club owner
Years active1973–present
Children1
RelativesCressida Campbell (sister)
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentsVocals
Labels

Laura Elizabeth Campbell (born 24 May 1953), better known as Nell Campbell or by her stage name Little Nell, is an Australian actress, singer, dancer, and club owner. She is best known for her role as Columbia in the 1975 film The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and the original stage play from which it was adapted. Campbell released her EP, The Musical World of Little Nell (Aquatic Teenage Sex & Squalor), through A&M Records in 1978. She appeared as Nurse Ansalong in the 1981 film Shock Treatment.

Early life[]

Campbell was born in Sydney, to Ruth and Ross Campbell. Ross, a writer,[1] referred to her as "Little Nell" (after a character in Charles Dickens' The Old Curiosity Shop) in his family life column in the Sydney Daily Telegraph. She has three siblings: Sally, Patrick, and Cressida. Her elder sister, Sally, was a property master, set designer and subsequently a fashion designer; her younger sister, Cressida Campbell, an artist; and her elder brother, Patrick, a solar engineer at the University of New South Wales. Campbell began dancing when she was 10, in order to remain healthy following being diagnosed with hepatitis A. She was called Laura E. Campbell until the age of about 17, when she went by the nickname "Sonny" (pronounced to rhyme with "Donny"), short for "Sonata". She attended high school at Abbotsleigh School for Girls in Sydney, supporting herself as a waitress.

Career[]

Campbell decided to use the name "Little Nell" as a stage name after her arrival in Britain in the early 1970s with her family. She sold clothes at Kensington Market; her stall was next to Freddie Mercury's.[citation needed] She also worked as a busker and as a soda jerk in a café, where her tap dancing is often noted as the reason why she was cast as Columbia in the original production of The Rocky Horror Show following an impromptu audition.[2] She reprised the role in The Rocky Horror Picture Show,[3] released in 1975, and starred as Nurse Ansalong in the 1981 sequel, Shock Treatment.

After The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Campbell signed a recording contract with A&M Records. Her debut single was "Stilettos and Lipstick" backed with "Do the Swim", released in 1975. She also recorded a disco version of the song "Fever" in 1976, which was again backed with "Do the Swim". The B-side of both of these releases became better-known, perhaps helped by a performance on British television in which she accidentally (and repeatedly) exposed her breasts. While edited out of the original broadcast in 1975, the unedited version was shown worldwide on bloopers shows (beginning with the British show It'll be Alright on the Night in 1977).[4] Following this notoriety, another effort was made to promote the recordings made in 1975 and 1976. In 1978, a "triple B-side" extended play titled The Musical World of Little Nell (Aquatic Teenage Sex & Squalor) was released which featured both "Do the Swim" and "Stillettos and Lipstick" along with the track "Dance that Cocktail Latin Way" (also known as "Tropical Isle") which originally appeared as the B-side of her second single from 1976. Following some success with the EP, the other two tracks, singles "Fever" and "See You Round like a Record", were released as a single but that was to be her last release on A&M. A final single, "Beauty Queen" from the film The Alternative Miss World, was released on PRE Records in 1980.

Campbell in 2015

Campbell has also appeared in several stage productions, including the Off-Broadway play You Should Be So Lucky and the Broadway musical Nine. She appeared as Sandra LeMon in the British TV series Rock Follies of '77.

In 1986, Campbell opened the nightclub Nell's on W. 14th St in Manhattan with Keith McNally and Lynn Wagenknecht. In 1995 she opened two restaurants in New York: The Kiosk (uptown) and E&O (downtown). Nell's was sold in 1998 to Noel Ashman and his business partner actor Chris Noth, right before she gave birth to daughter Matilda Violet in June 1998 to ex-boyfriend and business partner Eamonn Roche.[citation needed]

Campbell has written several magazine articles, including regular segments called "MamaTalks" and "FirstLook" in the now defunct Talk magazine, starting in the December 1999 issue.

Personal life[]

Campbell moved to Australia after selling her Boerum Hill house in Brooklyn in December 2005, and is now living with her daughter.

Filmography[]

Film[]

Television[]

Theatre[]

  • 1973: The Rocky Horror Show, at The Royal Court Theatre
  • 1975: And They Used to Star in Movies, at the Soho Theatre
  • 1976: The Rocky Horror Show, in Australia
  • 1977: A Streetcar Named Desire, at the Oxford Playhouse
  • 1977: Censored Scenes From King Kong, at the Open Space Theatre
  • 1978: Stoop, in London
  • 1985: Women Behind Bars, at the Footbridge Theatre at Sydney University
  • 1994: You Should Be So Lucky, off-Broadway
  • 2003: NINE, on Broadway at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre
  • 2006: The Rocky Horror Tribute Show, The Royal Court Theatre

Discography[]

Singles / EPs

Guest vocals

  • Tuff Little Surfer Boy (featured as "Roxanne" for the song by Truth & Beauty) (1974)

Soundtracks and Cast Recordings

References[]

  1. ^ Spencer, Chris; Zbig Nowara; Paul McHenry (2002) [1987]. "LITTLE NELL". The Who's Who of Australian Rock. Noble Park, Vic.: Five Mile Press. ISBN 1-86503-891-1. Archived from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 14 February 2010. Note: [on-line] version established at White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd in 2007 and was expanded from the 2002 edition.
  2. ^ Maynard. "Rocky Horror Night with Little Nell". Planet Maynard (Podcast). Event occurs at 8:00. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
  3. ^ "The Rocky Horror Picture Show". Australian Film Database. Murdoch University. Archived from the original (doc) on 18 September 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  4. ^ "London Weekend Show, closing credits, 1975 (Little Nell losing her top)".

External links[]

Retrieved from ""