The Tommy Steele Story


The Tommy Steele Story is a 1957 British film directed by Gerard Bryant and starring Tommy Steele, dramatising Steele's own rise to fame.
It was released in the US as Rock Around the World, since it was felt no one in America knew who Tommy Steele was.
Along with Rock You Sinners, it was one of the first British films to feature rock and roll.

Plot

Tommy Steele lives with his mother and father in their London home. He works with a bellboy until he injures his spine doing judo. In hospital he is given a guitar to help with his therapy and he starts to play to entertain patients and staff. He works on an ocean liner, performing in his spare time, and gets a job playing in a coffee bar. He is popular with audiences and gets a recording contract.

Cast

Steele was approached to make the film by Nat Cohen and Stuart Levy. He later wrote in his memoirs, "They were quite different from that other British film mogul, J. Arthur Rank. Where Rank was C. Aubrey Smith, Cohen and Levy were Abbott and Costello. They didn't so much as hold a meeting as do an act." He added "there was a degree of madness about them - but you had to be mad to take the chances they took - with a little eccentricity for good measure."
Steele agreed to do the film. He met with Mike Pratt and Lionel Bart and they spent a month writing the songs. Two weeks later the film was shot.
He was paid £3,000 for the lead role.
Steele says director Gerald Bryant "was more like a poet than a showman."

Reception

The Tommy Steele Story was the 13th most popular film at the British box office in 1957. Steele was voted the seventh most popular star in Britain for that year.
The Tommy Steele Story was one of the few British films screened in Russia.

Soundtrack

Steele helped to write every song on the soundtrack except one.
The soundtrack was released in May 1957. The following songs appear: