Radio Times

‘WE WERE THERE!’

Three Brits reveal how they became Abba fans on day one

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While some UK judges may not have been impressed, even before the show started, Abba’s arrival at the Eurovision

Song Contest turned every head in Brighton, “as if they’d beamed down from the Starship Enterprise”, according to dazzled onlooker

Jacqui Shevlin. She was not quite 16 when she saw them in a hotel lobby, where the contestant­s were gathering on the afternoon before the contest. “When the lift opened and they stepped out, it was like, ‘Wow!’ I’d never seen men in high-heeled silver boots before!” she says. “They had this golden aura around them, and they lit the place up. We were all gobsmacked.”

Also in the lobby that day was a local singer, Bobby Ward, who says he tagged along with a journalist pal (“Fernando, ironically”). “It’s like yesterday. They walked across the lobby and their clothes were incredible,” he says. “In those days, I was used to putting on different clothes for my stage work but this was on another level. They all walked incredibly slowly because their heels were so high! It gave me time to look at them. But they were quiet. They were probably in their own zone, and I don’t think they spoke a lot of English at the time.”

Abba boarded a coach with the other acts for the short journey along the seafront to the Dome, where the contest was held. By contrast, their rival performers didn’t impress Shevlin. “They were very low-key — in tank-tops and beards and woolly hats,” she says. Later, she’d watch the event from the wings.

“The audience were all in black tie, the ladies in long dresses, and I thought they all looked so old. It was meant to be a pop concert, but they were all silent — it was surreal. When Abba came on, Bjorn had a star-shaped guitar and the girls bounded on like the Andrex puppy and lit the place up.”

Also in the crowd were pop star Leo Sayer, who’d just had a hit with The Show Must Go

On, and the man who discovered him, writer/ producer David Courtney. “When I saw Abba in their gaudy, silky outfits, I turned to Leo and said, ‘Where are this lot from?’ ” Courtney says. “And he said, ‘That’s the Swedish entry.’ As soon as I heard them perform Waterloo, I said, ‘That’s it, that’s the winner, that’s a hit record.’ In those days none of us had any great desire to go into Eurovision. It was seen as a bit naff. But Abba changed that. I’m a massive Beatles fan — they’re a great rock band — but when you look at Abba’s music, they have to go down as the best pop band of all time.”

Courtney, now 74, later set up a Brighton attraction called the Walk of Fame and inducted Abba on the 30th anniversar­y of their success. “During my research, I found out that 159 years before they won, the Prince Regent who built the Dome, the future George IV, was enjoying one of his banquets when a messenger arrived on horseback to tell him that Wellington had won the Battle of Waterloo. So it was fated that Abba would win at the Dome!”

That night is now a piece of pop history. “What I witnessed was one of the most famous bands in the world before anyone knew who they were,” says Ward. “No one realised what power they had in their music, and that we’d still be talking about them 50 years on.” STEPHEN SMITH

Jacqui Shevlin and Bobby Ward’s recollecti­ons feature in an exhibition, “Abba: One Week in Brighton”, which is at the Brighton Museum & Art Gallery until 4 August

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Abba winning Eurovision on 6 April 1974, pictured with their manager Stig Anderson and conductor Sven-Olof Walldorf. Right: Olivia Newton-John, singing for the UK, was pictured on the RT cover with Cliff Richard
THEY “WON THE WAR” Abba winning Eurovision on 6 April 1974, pictured with their manager Stig Anderson and conductor Sven-Olof Walldorf. Right: Olivia Newton-John, singing for the UK, was pictured on the RT cover with Cliff Richard

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