First published in Great Britain in 2012 by
Michael OMara Books Limited
9 Lion Yard
Tremadoc Road
London SW4 7NQ
Copyright Michael OMara Books Limited 2012
All rights reserved. You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-84317-968-9 in hardback print format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-990-0 in trade paperback print format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-973-3 in EPub format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-974-0 in Mobipocket format
Designed and typeset by Design 23, London
www.mombooks.com
INTRODUCTION
A month can be a long and eventful time in pop music just ask One Direction. For instance, for Liam, Louis, Niall, Harry and Zayn, the thirty days of April 2012 were packed with international incident and intrigue, terrific triumphs and torturous torment. Just two years previously they had been five ordinary teenage boys, counting the days before they auditioned as solo hopefuls on The X Factor. Their lives have been anything but ordinary ever since.
During April they were invited to the White House by Michelle Obama. They announced and then sold out in record time a headline concert at Americas most prestigious concert venue, Madison Square Garden. They entered the studio to record with the Canadian king of pop, Justin Bieber. As the United States fell in love with the band, they appeared on the top American entertainment television programmes The Today Show and Saturday Night Live. Meanwhile, a shadow was cast over their American dream as they faced a lawsuit from a US band of the same name. Members of the American band soon received death threats from furious fans of their British namesakes.
As April continued, the band jetted to the southern hemisphere. There, they were delighted to discover that Australian and New Zealander girls are just as devoted to them as their American and British counterparts. The band was mobbed by an army of fans in Sydney and, on one occasion, a young man with no connection to the band was even surrounded by screaming fans in a moment of mistaken identity. As security tightened, one Australian fan said she would be willing to risk being shot to get close to them. Then, a slice of toast, half-eaten by band member Niall, went to auction. It attracted bids of nearly 100,000.
While celebrating the news that their debut single had passed the one million copies sold milestone in America, each band member pocketed a reported 2 million. Louis decided that he quite fancied buying a pet monkey. As if all this was not enough for one month, they were simultaneously flattered and deflated when they were praised by pop princess Rihanna and then told that Madonna had announced that she does not know who they are. Before the month was over the band also kissed some koalas, prompting fears that they had caught chlamydia from the bears that had urinated on them, and then they went surfing in the Pacific Ocean. There was still time for Niall to contract food poisoning and for two other members to take part in a 192-metre bungee jump. Then they arrived back in Britain, greeted, as ever, by thousands of screaming fans.
No wonder the frenzy that surrounds One Direction has been compared to Beatlemania: their popularity is simply immense however you measure it. They are the first UK pop group to debut at number one on the American album chart. The same album went straight to number one in Britain and twelve other countries. They have over 12 million followers on Twitter and 3.6 million on Facebook. They have amassed over 204 million YouTube views. A Google spokesperson has revealed that 3.35 million people are typing One Direction related phrases into the search engine each month.
One Direction are Britains and arguably the worlds biggest boy band. How they became so is a fascinating and inspiring story.
HARRY STYLES
When the five members of One Direction finally get a chance to stop working for a moment, take a proper breather and begin to survey the success they have made of their pop careers to date, none will be as calm and unruffled about it as Harry Styles. Harrys loveably nonchalant persona is not some contrived attempt at achieving an image of pop cool; he really is, at heart, a laidback chap. His detachment has been tested, too: life had bowled him some cruel balls in the years before he became famous but he played them all with a cool, straight bat, rarely breaking sweat for long.
As for Harrys mum, Anne Cox, when she stops and thinks about the fame her son has acquired and his many professional achievements, she finds it harder to get her head around it. To the outside world, he might well be the pin-up singer from One Direction, a young man known in many countries and endlessly discussed by both his fans and the mainstream media. To Anne, he will always be something else as well: At the end of the day, hes my little baby and there he is on stage in front of millions of people, she said.
Annes little baby was born on 1 February 1994. He was her second child she already had a young daughter called Gemma. Anne was just as thrilled when she became a mother second time around. She named her precious baby son Harry Edward. No one knew it then, but a star had just been born.
His early years were spent in Cheshire, in the north west of England. It is an area of lush rural beauty surrounding a number of built-up towns and villages. Holmes Chapel, one of those villages, is where Harry spent much of his childhood. It is a comfortable neighbourhood with most basic amenities, including easy public transport for those who want to hit the big smoke of Manchester for something wilder. Cheshire itself is not an area with a massively famous artistic heritage, though rock singers of yesteryear Ian Curtis and Tim Burgess both come from there. When he auditioned for The X Factor, Harry described the area as quite boring nothing much happens there, though on a more admiring note he admitted, with a cheeky smile, that it is picturesque. He is now one of Cheshires most famous sons.
As the baby Harry became a toddler, he was sent to a nursery called Happy Days. Harry feels it is an appropriately named institution as he had so many enjoyable times there. It was a small establishment so he was never short of attention and care. During his nursery years he was a well-behaved boy and concentrated on playing with toys and participating in games. He has always been a fun-loving chap. A creative one, too: he began to show his artistic side at home at the breakfast table, where he would draw on his toast with food colouring before he ate it. He was always encouraged to express himself, a key factor in the development of any budding artist. In time he learned to juggle and tried his hand at learning some musical instruments. Always funny and entertaining, he was becoming something of an all-rounder. Hes always loved attention and making people laugh, Anne told NOW magazine. Hes certainly not shy about himself. Ever since he was young hes made people smile. I always thought hed end up on the stage.
When he was seven, Harrys life, which had been generally very happy and enjoyable until then, took a darker turn when his parents told him that they were going to get divorced. His first reaction to this bombshell was to burst into tears. He loves both his parents, so hated to think of them going their separate ways. At seven years of age Harry would most likely to have been in a double-bind: old enough to understand the pain caused by the separation but not yet old enough to understand or control his own reaction to the pain. Children of that age who face such a testing upheaval typically go through feelings of grief, shame, resentment, confusion and even anger as they come to terms with the situation.
Next page