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Full
Name - Christopher Sean Lowe
Date of Birth - 4th October 1959
Birthplace - Blackpool, Lancashire, England
Favorites Musical Artist - ?
Favorites Music - Dance
Favorites Drinks - Tea and Champagne
Hobbies - Nightclubbing and DJing
Favorites Food - Chips, Pizzas
Favorites Clothes - Jeans and T-shirt
Favorites Cars - Porsches
Favorites Holiday Destination - ???
Favorites Records (from Literally March 1996) -
Donna Giles - And I'm telling you I'm not going
Eve Gallagher - Love Come Down
Oasis - Don't Look Back In Anger
Respect Featuring Hannah Jones - Young Hearts Run Free
Groove Theory - Tell Me You Want It Now
The
following extracts are taken from an article called "The Pet Shop
Boys Story" published in Smash Hits magazine in 1989
Christopher
Sean Lowe, as he was christened, was born on October 4th 1959, to be followed
by a brother, Tim, a sister, Vicki, and another brother, Greg. As a youngster
he seems to have been thoroughly normal. At 11 he was responsible enough
to be made House Captain of one of the school's four "houses",
St' Andrew ("I suppose you could say I was quite a 'happening' person
in those days," he quips). Other than that he enjoyed playing with
his brother Tim with his Mini Trix car set and Tim's Hornby train set
and used to go ice-skating at the weekends (one time when he was ten they
all did the conga, it went horribly wrong, a skate went over his wrist
and he had to have ten stitches). His one disappointment was failing his
11+ exam
"I
was never naughty. I used to quite like doing school work. I used to sit
at the front of the class and creep to the teachers and do lots of homework
and get 100 per cent on tests and come top of the class."
He
even liked school food - he had a particular soft spot for the cornflake
pie and remembers the introduction in the fifth form of chips as "really
popular". For a while, however, he used to go home at lunchtime,
to eat apple pie and cream and - in a thoroughly UN-rock 'n' roll fashion
- to watch the news. Somewhere along the line he got lots of spots. He
wasn't a happy boy.
"Spots
are the worst thing in the world," he explains. "Doctors just
think it's a bit of a joke." And it's not. "Having spots makes
you feel like such an ugly geek." Eventually he found a sympathetic
doctor who sent him to a skin specialist - after a course of antibiotics
they all disappeared.
His
main interest, even then, was architecture. "We were always moving
house when I was young," he remembers, "and I used to like designing
houses for us to live in, just for fun."
Music
came a poor second, good as he was at both the piano and trombone. Pop
music, in particular, he simply wasn't very interested in. At 13 he'd
like Diana Ross and The Beatles, then, as he puts it, "something
went wrong". All his friends started liking people like Alice Cooper
and the only thing he thought was "sort of" good was Gary Glitter.
In
the end Chris decided that this pop stuff simply wasn't worth bothering
with. "I ended up listening to my grandma and grandpa's music,"
he recalls, "like Dorothy Squires and Frank Sinatra and Tom
Jones." Then Saturday Night Fever came out and suddenly the world
was full of deliriously simple tacky
disco songs by the likes of the Bee Gees. Chris loved it.
In
the meantime he had been playing some music. He once boasted "I used
to pretend that it could compose through me, and it worked!" - whatever
it was exactly that he meant by that, he did use used to mess about composing
the odd thing. "I recorded lots of stuff onto cassettes," he
remembers, a little sadly, "but my brothers and sisters recorded
top 40 shows over them."
At
one stage he also joined a cabaret type group, called One Under The Eight,
a seven-piece (hence the name). They played old "classics" like
"My Way", "La Bamba" and "Hello Dolly" at
places like the Blackpool Conservative Club and the local Masonic
Lodge.
He
also had hundreds of jobs. He helped a girl with her paper round, he worked
in a kitchen washing cutlery, he did a Christmas shift as a postman, he
operated the big wheel one summer on Blackpool Pleasure Beach and he worked
at WH Smiths, graduating from sales assistant to the accounts desk. (He
was moved off the shop floor after being caught chasing a girl called
Annette around the staff room. "I was running around, weaving in
and out of the pillars and I bumped into the manager.")
Best
of all he worked as a glass collector in a disco called The Dixieland.
"There'd be the most terrific brawls in there," he remembers,
" just like a western." The best moment would be when they'd
play a brilliant disco record, particularly the Gap Band's "ops
Upside Your Head". Everyone - even the bar staff and the glass
collectors - would form one long line and dance along in formation.
"It was suddenly like finding yourself in the middle of a huge musical.
It was absolutely, positively, one of the best and most wonderful experiences
of my life."
Nevertheless
it wasn't glass collecting, formation dancing, or piano playing that he'd
set his heart on - it was architecture. He was accepted to study at Liverpool
University. In the middle of the course, in 1981, he did a year down in
London to gain practical experience - building a staircase in MiltonKeynes
(as Neil Tennant later commented "can John Taylor say that? I think
not.") And being "instrumental in the cladding of an industrial
unit." Perhaps more importantly, one day in August he wandered into
an electrical shop on the Kings Road and got chatting to a bloke called
Neil. . .
This
information, based on Western and Chinese astrology and Chinese face reading,
was published in an unknown magazine
Chris
Lowe. Sun Sign - Libra. Born in the Chinese year of The Monastery Pig
As
a Libran pig, Chris combines the Libran's love of calm and harmony with
the Pig's immense kindness and this makes him one of the sweetest,
most cooperative people you could ever hope to meet. This may come
as a surprise to all the hundreds of people who have had to argue and
plead with him and been driven to despair by his stubbornness but it's
true.
The
confusion comes up because Pig people are complex. Inside Chris is terribly
kind and his close friend get the benefit of it, but he mistrusts
other people and protest himself by often making sarcastic remarks.
It's hard for new acquaintances to get close - and he also has the
Libran's love of romance and freedom which makes him extremely hard to
pin down in lure relationship. But he's not as cool and detached
as he pretends: somewhere in Chris Lowe beats a fiery marshmallow
of a heart. Gosh.
Face
- A jade shape face, showing someone who's lucky and tough. In some cases
it shows a tendency to hold grudges. But not with cuddly Chris,
I most certainly hope.
Eyes - Peacock eyes - this guy's emotional; he flares up and sulks; he
get very, very possessive of things and people he wants and is often
quite prone to throwing tantrums. But then he'll just turn around
and charm his way back into everyone's good books. What a scamp.
Nose - The fleshy tip denotes great artistic, moneymaking talents. Oddly
enough, one of the few lyrics CL has penned is "Let Make Lots
Of Money". This boy means business.
Mouth - Oh curse that thick lower lip - it means people find him a difficult
customer and aren't sure how to take him. Perhaps that's what leads
to his inferiority complex - the secretive hollows in the corners
of the mouth are a dead giveaway that he's got one.
Ears - They are widest at the top, meaning he excels in one thing. Could
it be - music?
Chin - Smooth, full, rounded: crumbs this boy's passionate! And good in
business too. Phew what a scorcher.
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