He spoke to Cultured. North East’s Sam Wonfor.
“Let’s put half a dozen gigs on and see what the response is like…”
Jimmy Nail is recounting the pitch from veteran promoter Tony Denton, suggesting the 72-year-old singer and actor take his back catalogue of music and memories on tour.
“He was too polite to say, ‘to see if anybody still remembers you!’”
Jimmy Nail returns to touring after 25 years away with Stories and Songs, a show built on music and memory as he reflects on a career spanning decades (Image: SUPPLIED)
Cracking on for 50 dates later – including an unprecedented fifth performance just announced in The Glasshouse’s Sage One – it was Jimmy who put the brakes on.
“I had to say ‘look, I don’t want to do more than 50 – I’m a pensioner! Where would it stop.
“But I mean, going from six to 50…. It’s incredible, really.. and they’re still trying to sneak them in.”
The proposal came during a recent sell-out run at Live Theatre in Newcastle, where Jimmy revisited songs from his 1990s TV series, Crocodile Shoes, with a full band.
Jimmy Nail (Image: SUPPLIED)
“I’d been chatting to Jack (McNamara, Live’s artistic director) about doing something and I said I could maybe do a few gigs to blow the cobwebs off.”
As it turned out, they couldn’t put extra dates on fast enough, resulting in 19 nights – including a run of 13 consecutive performances.
“I was on my knees at the end of that – sounded like a frog, but it went really well.”
But while the new tour was prompted by a look back at Crocodile Shoes, the resulting show, Stories and Songs, will cast the net much wider.
Jimmy Nail returns to touring after 25 years away with Stories and Songs (Image: SUPPLIED)
Kicking off on July 4 in Basingstoke, it’s Jimmy’s first national tour in 25 years.
“That sounds like I don’t like touring,” he smiles.
“And that’s not the case.
“I love it – but I tend to only go out if there’s a good reason to.
“When I started thinking about it, I thought I’m at a point in my life where I can still put on a decent show.
“I can still sing, I can still recall stories and I’ve got a career which goes back over seven decades, so I’ve got plenty to talk about.”
More than plenty if his last touring mash-up of music and memoir is anything to go by.
“I got so carried away with telling the stories that I had to instruct my drummer, Geoff Dugmore, to give me a double bass-drum kick when I was talking too much!”
This time around, it’ll be longtime collaborator Tony Davis who keeps things on track.
Despite his enthusiasm for sharing stories, Jimmy doesn’t court attention.
For someone whose stellar career has taken him from the North East music scene of the 1970s to chart-topping success, television icon status via his portrayal of Oz in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet and international film and theatre work including a pivotal role opposite Madonna’s Eva Peron in Alan Parker’s Golden Globe-winning Evita – he remains instinctively wary of the spotlight.
“I didn’t want to become famous – I didn’t want everybody in the country to recognise me.
“But once it happened, that genie, once it’s out the bottle, you can never get it back in.
“And I struggled with it.
“I still struggle with it.”
And yet, he’s heading back out in front of audiences across the country.
“I’ve always been happier on a stage than I am on a pavement,” he says simply, “but I have tried to lean into it a bit more.
“When we did the Auf Wiedersehen, Pet 40th anniversary concerts at Newcastle City Hall a few years ago, it was impossible not to be affected and moved by how much people really love that show.
“So instead of pushing against it, I’ve been trying to go with it… although I’ll never get used to selfies.”
In the North East alone, demand has been extraordinary, with multiple dates added across the region.
“It’s gratifying and it’s humbling… You never really know what’s going to happen.
“You never know if people are gonna think you’re still worth the price of a ticket.”
That uncertainty is something he learned a long time ago.
Travelling with George Harrison on the way to the Royal Albert Hall and what would become the former Beatle’s final full concert performance in 1992, Jimmy was surprised to hear him admit to nerves.
“I said to him, ‘George, you were a Beatle…’ but what he was saying was, ‘don’t ever take the public’s support for granted, because you don’t ever know if somebody’s going to put their hand in their pocket come out on a wet Tuesday’.”
Moments like that are just scratching the surface.
There are stories of how a chance meeting turned into what Jimmy still calls an “unfathomable” friendship with George, and the time Steven Spielberg offered him career advice backstage on Broadway – the kind of encounters you wouldn’t dare make up, but which have all played their part in the paths he’s taken.
Meanwhile, when it comes to the setlist, there is plenty to choose from too.
“I did sit down and make a list… and there were about 50 songs on there, so that’s no good.
“I’ll have to get it down to 20 or so.”
Alongside material from across his seven studio albums, he’s also looking back to the songs which first shaped him… starting with a still vivid memory from primary school, and a baritone-voiced teacher.
“He introduced us to the music of Owen Brannigan and he would sing to us – traditional folk songs.
“I can still see him at the front of the class singing.”
For all the global success, the through-line of Jimmy Nail’s story begins, and continues, in the North East.
He’s been back living in Newcastle for the past decade, something he clearly treasures.
And while acting has brought him fame, it’s music that remains closest to his heart.
“You know, you get in the shower and you sing in the shower, you’re happy… You don’t ever hear of anybody acting in the shower… one’s a craft and the other’s a feeling,” he says.
“How could you ever not want to do that?”
Jimmy Nail’s Stories and Songs 2026 tour will be playing the following North East dates: July 8 – Princess Alexandra Auditorium, Yarm, July 9 – Middlesbrough Town Hall; July 10 and 21 – The Witham, Barnard Castle and August 1 – Alnwick Playhouse.
The tour will also play at The Glasshouse Gateshead, from October 11-13 (including a matinee on Oct 11) and November 3.
Sam Wonfor is the editor of Cultured. North East, a website and newsletter spreading the word about North East culture.
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