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The Runaways

The Runaways were an American all-female rock band that recorded and performed in the second half of the 1970s.
The band released four studio albums and one live set during its run.
Among its best-known songs are "Cherry Bomb", "Hollywood", "Queens of Noise", "Neon Angels On the Road to Ruin", "California Paradise", "Dead End Justice", and the cover of the Velvet Underground’s "Rock n Roll".
The Runaways, though never a major success in the United States, became a sensation overseas, e.g.
in Japan, thanks to the hit single "Cherry Bomb".Early yearsThe Runaways were formed in late 1975 by drummer Sandy West and rhythm guitarist Joan Jett after they had both introduced themselves to producer Kim Fowley, who gave Jett's phone number to West.
The two met on their own at West's home and later called Fowley to let him hear the outcome.
Fowley then helped the girls find other members.
Two decades later he said, "I didn't put The Runaways together, I had an idea, they had ideas, we all met, there was combustion and out of five different versions of that group came the five girls who were the ones that people liked."Starting as a power trio with singer/bassist Micki Steele, The Runaways began the party and club circuit around Los Angeles.
They soon added lead guitarist Lita Ford who had originally auditioned for the bass spot.
Steele was fired from the group, later resurfacing in The Bangles.
Local bassist Peggy Foster took over on bass but left after just one month.
Lead singer Cherie Currie was found and recruited in a local teen nightclub called the Sugar Shack, followed by Jackie Fox (who had originally auditioned for the lead guitar spot) on bass.FameThe Runaways were signed to Mercury Records in 1976 and their debut album, The Runaways, was released shortly after.
The band toured the U.S.
and played numerous sold-out shows.
They headlined shows with opening acts such as Cheap Trick, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Van Halen.
The documentary Edgeplay: A Film About the Runaways, directed by former Runaway bassist Vicki Blue (aka Victory Tischler-Blue) revealed that each girl patterned herself after her idols: Currie patterned her look after David Bowie, Jett after Suzi Quatro and Keith Richards, Ford as a cross between Jeff Beck and Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, West after Queen drummer Roger Taylor, and Fox after Kiss bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons.Their second album, Queens of Noise was released in 1977 and the band began a world tour.
The Runaways quickly became lumped in with the growing punk rock movement.
The band (already fixtures on the West Coast punk scene) formed alliances with mostly male punk bands such as Blondie, The Ramones and The Dead Boys (via New York City's CBGB) as well as the British punk scene by hanging out with the likes of The Damned, Generation X and The Sex Pistols.In the summer of 1977, their booking agent David Libert sent the group to Japan where they played a string of sold out shows.
The Runaways were the number 4 imported music act in Japan at the time, behind only ABBA, Kiss and Led Zeppelin in terms of album sales and popularity.
The girls were unprepared for the onslaught of fans that greeted them at the airport.
The mass hysteria was later described by guitarist Jett as being "like Beatlemania".
While in Japan, The Runaways had their own TV special, did numerous television appearances and released the live album Live in Japan that went gold.
Also in Japan, Fox left the band shortly before the group was scheduled to appear at the 1977 Tokyo Music Festival.
Jett temporarily took over bass duties and when the group returned home they replaced Fox with Vicki Blue.It was reported in 1977 that they were thrown out of a photo session by Disneyland because "one of the girls threatened one of our people with a homosexual act", cited a rep.
"They were fondling one another or something." He also went on to say that "they were doing weird things with french fries".
However it seems while he didn't have a problem with the girls hugging, it was more "the gestures they were making...
with their middle fingers"...
Lita Ford hit back saying that Cherie wasn't hugging her, "she had her arms around my neck like she was strangling..." She also said they didn't have any french fries.Currie then left the group after this blow-up with Ford in the fall of 1977.
Jett, who had previously shared vocals with Currie, took over lead vocals full-time.
The band released their fourth album, Waitin' For The Night and started a world tour with their friends The Ramones.
Currie released a solo LP, Beauty's Only Skin Deep, produced by Kim Fowley, and began a separate U.S.
tour, which included her identical twin sister Marie.
Mercury Records chose not to release Currie's album Stateside, although it was available as a pricey import via France.
In 1980, billed as Cherie and Marie Currie, the sisters released a poorly received rock album for Capitol, Messin' With The Boys, produced by Steve Lukather, who was engaged to and later married Marie Currie.
Cherie had some success after The Runaways.
"Since You Been Gone", a duet with Marie, off the album Messin' with the Boys charted number 95 on US charts.DissolutionDue to disagreements over money and the management of the band, The Runaways and Kim Fowley parted ways in 1977.
The group quickly hired new management, Toby Mamis, who also worked for Blondie and Suzi Quatro.
When the group split with Fowley, they also parted with their record label Mercury/Polygram, to which their deal was tied.
In the Edgeplay documentary, members of the group (especially Fox and Currie) as well as the parents of Currie and West, have accused Fowley, and others assigned to look after the band, of broken promises as to schooling and other care, using divide and conquer tactics to keep control of the band, along with the verbal taunting of band members.
The band reportedly spent much time enjoying the excesses of the rock n' roll lifestyle during this time.
They partnered with Thin Lizzy producer John Alcock, after Jett's future partner Kenny Laguna turned down the job, to record their last album And Now...
The Runaways.Vicki Blue left the group due to medical problems and was briefly replaced by Laurie McAllister in November 1978.
Laurie McAllister was referred to the band by her neighbor, Duane Hitchings, who played keyboards on And Now...
The Runaways.
Before joining The Runaways, Laurie played with Baby Roulette and the Rave Ons, who had one song released on a Kim Fowley compilation LP called Vampires From Outer Space.
Laurie appeared onstage with The Runaways at their final shows in California during the last weeks of December 1978 and McAllister quit soon after in January 1979.Disagreement between band members included the musical style; Joan Jett wanted the band to take a musical change, shifting towards punk rock/glam rock while Lita Ford, backed by drummer Sandy West, wanted to continue playing hard rock/heavy metal music.
Neither would accept the other's point of view.
Finally, the band played their last concert on New Year's Eve 1978 at the Cow Palace near San Francisco and officially broke up in April 1979.TimelinePost-breakupJoan JettJett achieved the most success after the Runaways.
She went on to become a partner and work with producer and former Shondell Kenny Laguna.
After being rejected by 23 record labels, they formed their own label, Blackheart Records, in 1980.
In doing so, Jett became one of the first female recording artists to found her own record label.
The label continues to release albums by The Blackhearts, and also other new up and coming bands.
Jett went on to have massive success with a cover of the Arrows' song "I Love Rock 'N' Roll", as well as other hits such as "Crimson and Clover", "Bad Reputation" and "I Hate Myself For Loving You".
Jett also co-starred in the 1987 film Light of Day with Michael J.
Fox, and appeared in the 2000 Broadway revival of The Rocky Horror Show as Columbia.
Jett is also on Rolling Stone magazine's list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time".
She still continues playing to this day and is still touring all over the world.
She recently released a new studio album called Unvarnished which charted number 47 on US charts.Sandy WestWest continued her association with John Alcock once the group disbanded.
She and Ford attempted to record some music, but nothing materialized.
She formed the Sandy West Band and toured California throughout the '80s and '90s, sometimes with Cherie Currie.
She also did session work with John Entwistle of The Who and became a drum teacher.
West was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2005 and, after many treatments, succumbed to the disease in October 2006.
A memorial tribute concert was later held in Los Angeles, featuring The Sandy West Band, Cherie Currie, The Bangles, The Donnas and the Appice Brothers, among several others.Micki SteeleSteele joined the all-girl band The Bangles in the early 1980s and went on to success with songs like "Manic Monday", "Walk Like an Egyptian" and "Eternal Flame".Lita FordFord returned as a solo artist to Polygram in the 1980s, where she released several albums before pairing with manager Sharon Osbourne.
She also had success with songs like "Kiss Me Deadly" and "Close My Eyes Forever" (the second a duet with her manager's husband Ozzy Osbourne).
She was married to Chris Holmes of W.A.S.P., and to former Nitro singer Jim Gillette, with whom she has two sons.
After a long hiatus, Ford staged a comeback, performing at Rock The Bayou, and other hard-rock festivals during the summer of 2008.
She released Wicked Wonderland, her first studio album in 14 years, on 6 October 2009.
During 2009, Lita toured as a special guest during many shows of the American Soldier tour for the progressive metal band, Queensrÿche where she performed two songs from Wicked Wonderland and reprised her duet "Close My Eyes Forever" with Queensrÿche lead singer, Geoff Tate.
Ford is also currently making her rounds on TV, appearing on Vh1's Rock 'n Roll Fantasy Camp, That Metal Show, and recently filmed a guest spot on the Nickelodeon show Big Time Rush.In early 2012, Ford announced that she would likely be touring, and possibly recording new songs, with Cherie Currie.Cherie CurrieUpon leaving The Runaways, Currie released a 1978 solo album entitled Beauty's Only Skin Deep and a 1980 duet album with her sister Marie, Messin' With the Boys, in which the duo was backed by most of Toto.
Cherie and Marie Currie's song "Since You Been Gone" charted number 95 on U.S.
charts.
She also appeared in a number of films, most notably Foxes with Jodie Foster.
Throughout the 1990s, Currie worked as a drug counselor for addicted teens and as a personal fitness trainer.
She married actor Robert Hays; they have a son together, Jake Hays, but the couple divorced in 1997.Currie still performs and records but her current passion is chainsaw carving.
She has an art gallery in Chatsworth, California where her works are currently on display.
She is also currently under contract with Jett's Blackheart Records label.In 2012, she has been recording songs co-written with her son Jake, produced by Steve Lukather.
Lukather suspended the project for summer 2012, to go on tour with Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band.
In the meantime, Currie announced plans to perform and possibly record new material with Lita Ford.In 2013 Cherie recorded 2 songs with Alexx Michael for the upcoming Shameless album "Beautiful Disaster" which will be released later this year.Cherie Currie made a guest as herself in the S4/E16 "Runaway" episode of the Syfy series "Warehouse 13" broadcast on 10 June 2013.Jackie FoxFox returned to using her birth name of Fuchs and graduated from UCLA summa cum laude, with a B.A.
in Linguistics and Italian, and received her J.D.
from Harvard becoming a lawyer, focusing on entertainment.
She has lived abroad and is an amateur photographer.
Fox has photographed many other famous actors such as James McAvoy and George Clooney.
She co-wrote "Delilah's Scissors" with Tischler-Blue and executive-produced and appeared in Edgeplay, Tischler-Blue's 2005 documentary about the Runaways.
She also writes an L.A.
cat care column for Examiner.com and is an occasional contributor to Listverse.com.
She has a popular website and blog at www.myspace.com/jackiefuchs and was the first guest blogger for the Environmental Working Group’s Pets for the Environment website.
She is the author of The Well, an unpublished work of young adult historical fiction, and is currently working on her second novel.
She appeared as a contestant on the ABC television game show "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" which aired September 6, 2013.Vicki BlueVicki Blue, now known as Victory Tischler-Blue, briefly had a band with Currie in the early '80s (Currie-Blue Band), but never released an album, though they did appear together in the film This is Spinal Tap.
After leaving The Runaways, she shifted her focus to film and television production eventually becoming a producer/director for several reality- and magazine-based television shows, including Entertainment Tonight, Access Hollywood and Real Stories of the Highway Patrol—receiving an Emmy nomination along the way.
She went on to form Sacred Dogs Entertainment Group—a motion picture production company and released a documentary on The Runaways called Edgeplay: A film about The Runaways.
"Edgeplay" went on to win numerous awards and became the highest rated rock documentary film on the Showtime Networks.
In 2005, Tischler-Blue directed Naked Under Leather, a documentary about fellow female rocker, Suzi Quatro, which was selected for the Santa Cruz Film Festival in May 2004 and released on December 25, 2005.
Focusing on music driven productions, she is currently executive producing a network special: The Bee Gees "Unbroken Fever"—The 30th Anniversary of Saturday Night Fever (2007).
Additionally, Tischler-Blue and Ford have teamed up together with Ford recording music for El Guitarrista, an animated series that Sacred Dogs Entertainment Group is producing.Laurie McAllisterMcAllister joined another of Fowley's all-girl bands, The Orchids, who released a single LP in 1980.
The original Orchids members were Laurie Bell on drums, Jan King on vocals, McAllister on bass, Sunbie Sinn rhythm guitar, and Che Zuro lead guitar.
Laurie retired from the music industry and worked as a veterinarian technician in Eugene, Oregon.
McAllister died of complications from an asthma attack on August 25, 2011.

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