HOLLY JOHNSON
Best remembered as the frontman for British pop phenomenon Frankie
Goes to Hollywood, singer Holly Johnson was born February 19,
1960 in Khartoum, Sudan and raised in Liverpool; in 1977 he joined
the short-lived Big in Japan, and after issuing a pair of solo
singles, "Yankee Rose" and "Hobo Joe," he
formed Frankie Goes to Hollywood in 1980.
Buffering their epic, opulent dance-pop with a brilliant marketing
campaign highlighted by a series of provocative videos and sloganeering
T-shirts, Frankie remains one of the Eighties' quintessential
bands, although their success proved short-lived and never really
translated across the Atlantic; rising to superstardom on the
strength of the singles "Relax," "Two Tribes"
and "The Power of Love," their 1984 debut Welcome to
the Pleasuredome was also well-received by the press, but the
group's fall was as meteoric as their rise, and after a disastrous
1986 effort, Liverpool, they disbanded.
Johnson then spent the next several years locked in a court battle
against label ZTT, ultimately winning his artistic freedom; he
returned to music in 1989 with his solo debut Blast, which topped
the UK charts. Dreams That Money Can't Buy followed two years
later, around the time the openly-homosexual singer discovered
he'd contracted HIV, a subject frankly detailed in his 1994 autobiography
A Bone in My Flute. Also a successful painter, in 1996 Johnson
exhibited his work in London; forming his own record label, Pleasuredome,
in 1999 he issued his third LP, Soulstream.