We Love the Monkees (2012)

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this is the story of four boys he changed the face of pop we're monkeys always us together against the rest of the world against the crazy Adams with a revolutionary TV series the only time you saw long haired kids on television we're being arrested and sons that lit up the charts at the height of the 60s it came at the right time and it was really the Beatles that made it possible with a hard day's night over the next hour we'll hear the extraordinary tale of the made-up group who became a proper band he had to become a real rock group and play their own instruments and so then it became a real labor of love of the Manchester lad he became a pop legend people used to stop around in the street CEO David's on-again alone is it gonna be famous and I said I think so and of the monkey mania that followed them around the world Davy was waving he was gorgeous - fans run up to them all the monkeys were pushed into a car Davey forever man for a short time in the late 60s the monkeys delivered some of the catches toons the pop charts have ever seen they were written by great songwriters like Carole King and Neil Diamond Oh Tommy boyce and Bobby Hart got these great songwriters wrote amazing songs with their own TV show blasting into homes around the world each week the Monkees brought something completely new to pop fans then I saw her face the resonates with people they just they just love it generation after generation the incredible story of the monkeys starts nearly fifty years ago in 1964 The Beatles in their groundbreaking movie a hard day's night were taking America by storm impressed by the irreverent tone of the film - rookie TV producers Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider began to develop a show about an American pop group trying to make their way in the music business they advertised for four insane boys aged 17 to 21 to make up their new band then a line form and it was about I don't know 600 guys outside of Columbia Pictures this was the start of an unusual casting process it was very laid back I remember was very casual two feet up on the couches and there was pizza boxes and they had coffee cups everywhere it's funny he's been asking about you too and I would sit and talk to them oh no because that's a very dumb story however I will tell you and it was really kind of an interesting way of trying to let them be themselves catch them a bit off guard what I really make it another job that's where I normally cast by the way announce us not necessarily with the camera I'm def Q school nut Christopher wick says that is the alphabet abaca defecation cool knock mr. butchers I remember feeling awkward I've since seen it and I think I look awkward but there were some funny things in there why do you alone well it's my natural inheritance but apparently it wasn't disqualifying because they invited me back for a screen test I want to help ask Jay to but I can't he's feeble-minded hey knock it off I do remember David because we really clicked both had knew how to look at a script and memorize it and move on and you know I want to help us Jade but I can't he's feeble man knock it off Wendell's right a little while later I call them so what's the story we'll call you back so how does it feel to be a monkey I put down the font excuse me ii walked out of the office i was sitting feels fine thank you what do we do next autumn 1965 the four monkeys were now in place former child stars Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz were joined by budding musicians Peter Tork and Michael Nesmith Mickey and I were the actors Peter and Mike were the musicians you know when they said who's gonna be the drummer Micky you know was the unfortunately the one that didn't step back you know we just left him standing I didn't want to be the drummer to prepare the boys for their new roles 28 year old comic actor Jim Frawley was brought on board well I was hired to work for three months with these four guys who had never worked together before and to establish their relationships one with the other as improvised actors all right guys you have to do the scare the old the old monkey spilled monkey scared monkey scared man come on it's a groovy bit man eyes let's do the scary I was actually uncomfortable with improv yeah Jim came in and was throwing the imaginary ball and okay you're a captain of a ship captain I'm captain air about Santa seven seas off the early days I found it found it difficult found it uncomfortable now you can't shut me up now get me up that's another ship hi Jim boy in the battle fellas hey hey come on guys what is this I mean you got 60 guys in the set Artie the monkeys got on so well with Jim Foley that the producers signed him up as lead director for the new TV series out of 30 to share with 29 were directed by guys who hadn't directed before they didn't know any more about television idents so they just went off half-cocked and did their thing and we loved it they then set about recruiting a team of comedy writers including TV novice David Evans the only thing I had ever written before professionally was greeting cards here's some rent you can say you can kick them loan reach for the sky the producer called us into a meeting and he said I have a screening room available for you guys it's just like a movie what we're gonna be doing is screening continuously the Marx Brothers and the two Beatles movies help and hard day's night and at the end of the week he called us all together he said now go out and write like that don't you want to be famous the idol of millions no we just want to be revered by a small minority like a tribe of African pygmies get it pygmies huh network must have been scared cuz there was nothing like that on television all the time you saw long haired kids on television they were being arrested got to help us off into the no time lab the real genius of the monkeys TV show was that there was no authority figure there's always us together against the rest of the world against the crazy against the crazy Adams you know we were kind of the outlaws in town and we were doing forbidden things the energy was bouncing off the walls the monkeys were breaking new ground but that meant keeping to a punishing schedule you start seven o'clock in the morning makeup and wardrobe and then go ten twelve hours on the set but very quickly you know there was such a demand for the music we would end up at the studio after work at least a few hours but they had to they needed so much material they wanted a couple of new songs in every episode to meet the demand for new material the producers called in many of the greatest songwriters of the day including Carole King and Gerry Goffin Neil Diamond and Bobby Hart and Tommy boyce Bobby and Tommy are probably the most responsible for the early monkey sound most of the tracks on the first two monkeys albums were produced by Bobby Hart and Tommy boyce the first time we met the guys really in a working situation where we met at the studio here's your microphone here's your earphones we go take one and we don't hear anything when this was to come in so we look out and there just don't climbing around and so who is okay come on guys and just get it together we got to record this thing so take two same thing take three they're wrestling with each other on the floor whenever we got together as the four of us it ignites just like that and we're just like men by doing that among we're you hey how long bumpy new yeah and so when we leave the set and go to the studio didn't shut that off and Tommy and I vowed to never have more than one monkey in the studio at a time after that the way we worked with him is we would have everything prepared ahead of time we'd call for either David or Mickey to come over they would put a vocal on in two or three takes and that's what you're still here today we'd cut I think ten songs or so for the first album we need another song I heard just the fade-out of the Beatles new record had just come out paper bang I heard take the last don't know why but that's what I thought they were saying and I said to myself will take them it's got to be about a train take the last train this is a song this kind of be less cancer we need riff and Louis Sheldon just just went right into it while musician Peter Tork enjoyed filming the TV show making the records would lead to frustration and disappointment they said we're having a recording session tonight come on in I brought my guitar in this is why did you bring any be tired why don't I bring a my guitar no tracks all done I was devastated what I didn't realize at the time was that the music was going to have to be cranked out in massive amounts and that we were going to have to have people who knew how to make music quickly and well and on order David and I worked my card and it says that here it is take the last train to Clarksville the monkeys just looked at each other wow that's really cool I didn't even know that was gonna be the single I don't think they told us following Doctor Who on a Saturday night the Monkees a new series for the young at heart first aired in Britain on New Year's Eve in 1966 launching a lifelong love affair for a generation of teenage girls the trailer was shown just a few days before and it was Davey upon the table swashbuckling in a white shirt and instantly I just knew that he was mine well I was hooked wasn't I absolutely hooked I was into the Beatles at the time so Paul McCartney were the best thing since sliced bread and the monkeyest came on and this guy just was there and I thought Paul McCartney who you know it's from then on it was Peter talk my mum opened the door and she said just said to your father there's this bloke on the telly with his big brown eyes and as soon as she sees him that'll be it when I saw Mike Nesmith and that was it and that's when I fell in love with the Monkees and my dad said I grow out of it and I will one day the Monkees was a ratings hit around the world then I saw her face in January 1967 I'm a believer reached number one in the UK chart monkey mania was about to sweep the planet as the boys hit the road that was the kind of mayhem that we expected at the height of the Summer of Love I was sitting there thinking this is what life is about this is what I want to be about as the band started to find their own voice and this is when this imaginary group became a real group 1967 The Monkees had a hit TV series and an increasing grip on the pop charts they started a world tour promoting a record on which they haven't been allowed to play their own instruments we hit the road in 67 as the cover band for our own album we were a cover band we played Monkees cut hits Monkees covered we played two hundred concerts to be just the four of us and these are for guys are not supposed to play their own music the monkeys arrived at Heathrow for a series of London concerts 14 year old Linda Williams was at the airport to meet them she recorded that memorable day in her diary going to the airport to see the monkeys as the plane approached I sang monkey songs to myself to keep myself calm we landed come out in a staircase and the girls are all welcoming the monkeys and these of course were the younger brothers and sisters of the Beatles fans you know you have your Beatles you know I want the monkeys it was the kind of mayhem that we expected Davey was waving he was gorgeous they waved until two fans run up to them Nicky ran they got Davey all the monkeys were pushed into a car Davey forever the boys slowly made their way to their London base pursued by hordes of tearful teenagers so I went to the Kensington Gardens hotel to see the monkeys didn't tell my mum screaming girls hysterical girls and that's without a monkey coming onto the balcony when the monkeys come out onto the balcony he just went berserk Davey came out with no shirt on and I have a photograph of Davy with no shirt on I know that that's Davy Jones with no shirt on but it looks like a block of flats it was like these raging hormones and girls just screaming baby and it's always baby Davy Davy I'm not a screaming myself and I turned and said to one of my friends that I was with this girl behind me is really getting on my nerves and she was going to turn around and punch me one and then she realized it was me she recognized me because we were at the same school our friendship forged from there and we've been best friends ever since the ear-splitting monkeys sisterhood even triggered a regal reprimand the Pierce has got a royal note from Princess Margaret who was living at the Kensington Palace could one keep one's fans quiet or something like that one cannot sleep nope sorry Maggie I can't do it teenage monkey follower Jan Swanton arrived early one day at Kensington Park where fans were camped out next to the hotel and was among those who shared a magical morning with Micky Dolenz Mickey came walking from the hotel and just walked up and said you're not going to chase me I'm just gonna walk and I'm gonna go and sit on the bandstand and he sat up there and he just started singing to us I started singing monkey songs and then I said you sing to me and all these hundreds of little girls start singing their school songs he divided us up into groups and he got a singing row row row your boat and we were all singing that and I was sitting there thinking this is what it's about this is what life is about this is what I want to be about we almost are crying the girls are crying and I'm crying and I'm singing monkey songs and they're singing back and it becomes this life you know beautiful why can't we're all if the Ellery would be happy and then he just walked back to the hotel and it was the most perfect moment ever it really was wonderful few years afterwards we used to come up on the anniversary and put flowers on the bandstand and stand sing row row row your boat Micky Dolenz had another reason to look back fondly on his time in London it was there that a British sitcom inspired him to write a monkeys classic I hear the Afghan occur say to you Tony booth yeah Randy's cows get and idle is really funny oh there's a new trait of a scarf get ready Scouts what I'm gonna call this new song I'm writing about the Beatles at me in about England and all it's on I get a call from the publisher and he says they want to release Randy scouts get in England a single she's a wonderfully and she's mine all mine oh wow how cool but the title is kind of rude what does it mean they said a horny Liverpudlian putz basically I said hopper god sake and they said you need an alternate title and so that's what it's calling England alternate title you in July 1967 the monkeys played three sellout concerts at Wembley Arena I was absolutely desperate to be noticed at the castle wasn't going to be so I made myself a white bell-bottom jumpsuit with Mike embroidered all over it Lulu came on to start and the fans were awful to how they were shouting at her and calling her abusive names because they'd been a rumor that she and Davy were having a fling at the time the noise and and just the euphoria and everyone's screaming their hearts out it was the most wonderful experience it was hysteria it was something that you can't even imagine is impossible to hear it was going on so Mike said I'll tap my heel and that was my click track there's a visual click track cuz I couldn't hear me couldn't hear them I had no clue looks like all over the place the monkeys had become a real live touring band but was still taking flak for not playing the instruments on their records is it true that you don't play your own instruments wait a minute I'm busy I work out there in front of 15,000 people man if I don't play my own this unless I'm in a lot of trouble hey give me a G the line went you know a bunch of four talentless musicians anybody could do what they did musically oh I felt the the jibes pretty sharply that was just the way you made pop records at the time they were hiring the same musicians that everyone was hiring to play on the tracks the Beach Boys the Byrds Mamas and Papas I think everybody just kind of you know picked on us because we were accessible and huge an easy mark fed up of the criticisms the monkeys led by Mike Nesmith decided to seize control of their own musical destiny what does that mean it means the monkeys strike back Nesmith started by recruiting producer chip Douglas who as the bass player in the Turtles had just scored a massive hit with happy together when Mike heard happy together he knew that I had a lot to do with the way that sounded I think he thought well here's a guy that I might be able to control a little bit and he approached me said I think we want you to be our new record producer I said well I don't know a thing about producing records huh but he said don't worry I'll teach you everything you need to know with their own producer at the helm the monkey set about recording their third album this time they would play their own instruments making that oven was a wonderful experience I could bring my enthusiasm and and what musicianship I did have what a delight and the band wrote most of the songs including for pete's sake by Peter Tork we must be what we're going to be doesn't make much sense today and what we have to be liberation I'm all over it you know what I'd like to do now what the monkeys had newfound confidence but they were inexperienced musicians which meant it was slow going in the studio for engineer Hank zocalo I was getting these calls constantly and so was Jeff Douglas you got to finish the album got to finish the album the executives were calling well when are we gonna have the album it's so well as soon as we get it done so I keep saying guys there's no time and they needed one more song for the album we did a straight 12 bar blues track didn't have any lyrics it became no time no time at all the gift to Hank zocalo because he was working with us and everybody else had a little tune on the album they gave him credit for the writing I mean that they made me the writer of the song and I'm very appreciative of the fact that they did that you know that one furnished the house and build a pool I was somewhat disappointed when we got the album done because I expect it I'll pick up the paper tomorrow morning and they'll be these headlines monkeys play their own instruments at last but nothing what they had was access to the top songwriters in the business and they said no we don't want that we want to write our stuff well more power to you you did but I think it was feet the beginning at the end whether we made all the right decisions is really not the point that the point was that we were able to make the decisions and this is when this imaginary group sort of became a real route down the street is trying hard to end this as the monkeys took control of their music they also wanted to change the way the world saw them photographer Henry Diltz helped to catch the new look for the second series the first season they were actually playing the part of these young boys monkeys and they wore their four button outfits and Mike with his green hat but I think by the second season they weren't playing a role anymore they were being themselves they started wearing more of what they felt comfortable in like Mickey water big poncho and he just wore what they would normally wear the style of the TV series was changing to second year was much looser and they didn't really follow the scripts the way that they did the first year me back heard $800 right okay guys let's go come on we were much more confident about how to make a TV show much more confident about writing jokes and that makes for a much livelier show I think the second year is vastly better than the first for that reason what is the ship I say the second series is great but it was time to move on I mean I remember feeling a little like I've done that scene I've done that joke I've done that stuff we started getting a little bored I think everybody did 16 shows straight now I know every time we start up a show you start on the monkey you pull back it may not have had the same zip that it had the first year because we had done it already you see what I mean all the monkey episodes max carries the monkeys were growing up Davy Jones was about to find true love it was decided that we should be married the band would make an experimental movie does anybody to this day know what that film was about and they began to reach the end of the road when the showing off here there was no monkeys it didn't exist by 1968 the monkeys were international pop and TV stars but at the heart of the Bands British appeal was a boy with his roots firmly embedded in working-class manchester though Davy Jones was now spending much of his time abroad he still found time to make trips back to England Granada television filmed this visit to the street where he and his three older sisters grew up this was a row of terraced houses facing our row of terraced houses and we lived at number 20 at the end there just the two up two down the back was the kitchen the front room was a sitting room two bedrooms and there was four children in one room and mum and dad in the other at the age of just three Davey first appeared on stage at nearby Lee's Street Church with his sisters in supporting roles my dad always wanted a seat on the front row because he had four children in it he used to say if I don't get a front seat while you're all coming out it's just as job but everything revolves around Lee Street it was our life what is it really young Davey's talents were brought to the attention of television bosses we had an antics I think she was one of reactor coronation she wrote so the student you know to the studios and said my nephew was in a lot of plays at school and he's very good in 1961 at the tender age of 14 Davy joined the cast of Coronation Street I became an actor I got my feet wet and in smaller support wasn't as as however I delivered the dialogue that was my first taste of professional show business and give you Grand Marquis Leslie Marlins only and even dr. kisses drummer well sure I don't like it he was in the Sharples grandson and cozinha was the big towering dominant frightening woman and he was this lovely endearing little boy so what she had to say about my face again say you look like a Butchie that's attorney to pick eni's he came in with that extra bit that that energy that vibrancy and that liveliness and good humor and likability after a short spell on the street young Davey started to train as a jockey the beginning of a lifelong love of horses when I started riding people said oh that's ena Sharples grandson and that was the first time I really sort of knew that show business could bring you this applause this recognition and so I thought I want a bit more of that the starstruck teenager was cut from the stables to join the West End cast of Oliver Davee transferred with the show to Broadway signed for Columbia Records and went on to make his fame and fortune with the Monkees some of that newfound wealth was spent buying his father a new house back home in Manchester the problem was getting past the fans to see it how old the street was fall from one end to the other it wasn't a yeah between anybody them spawn hundreds and hundreds of them it was quite frightening naturally one of the world's most recognizable pop stars was left scrambling over the neighbors back walls to get to his father's house they climbed over all these fences and later came out and she said what you think you're doing and he says I'm trying to get in he said oh she said it's David John she said it's all she dress them up in a frock and the headscarf she put lipstick on him and I looked out the back window said there's a girl coming over the fence and I ran out let's check her back and it's me dear but mr. Jones wasn't overly impressed by the return of the prodigal son and I knocked on the door he says hello I said yeah David I've come from America you're not my son I came 2,000 miles he's gonna get your hair cut back in his new home of LA David Jones faced a more difficult challenge his bosses insisted that the monkeys heartthrob kept secret from his fans an increasingly serious relationship with girlfriend Linda Haines we'd always go out in groups and I'd always sort of be in the background it was like whatever works let's just do it you know after I became pregnant then it became a little more difficult to go out and about it was decided that we should be married so even though it had to be kept secret the decisions were still coming from on high that we should at least be married in case it was discovered it was sometime later that he was doing an interview with an Australian journalist David just told him he said this is this is my wife and my daughter and seems like such a small thing but it was very big step for him to some matters in his own hands revealing his hidden family was a weight off Davey's shoulders but a devastating shock to his army of young fans teenager Linda Williams recorded her reaction in her secret diary Saturday the 7th of June 1969 Carol phoned Davey is married oh god why you don't have to answer that he loves Linda 18 months and I didn't know anything about it help I don't know why it was kept secret for so long but it it was and had to deal with it but I can remember being really devastated the monkeys were desperate to shake off their t-bob image they saw their planned feature film to be titled head as an opportunity to appeal to more mature audience we did not want to do a 90-minute version of the show an extended episode we wanted to maybe push the bundle up or something with that in mind director Bob Rafelson recruited a promising young actor called Jack Nicholson to write the screenplay he had not heard of the monkeys and so he said you know monkeys what's that and I told them and then proceeded a long courtship to figure out what would be in this movie and then he just was around all the time soaking up the whole monkey thing and we began to write the same one of us would go onto a rant about okay now this is what's happening and the monkeys doing this and then they go into water and the water changes color and then there's porpoises and the other one would sit and say yeah that's good that's good okay let's get that down Rafelson then signed up Tony basil who would later find fame herself as a pop star to choreograph the film head was like really progressive and really abstract and experimental it was everything he went from Broadway to experimental film Tony Basil's big performance would be a duet with Davy Jones on daddy song it had a very interesting Hollywood musical feel to it but what was progressive about the song was the way Bob shot it I just had the idea to shoot it entirely on a white stage entirely on a black slate and then cut just two or three frames at a certain point took that texture then it's very hard to look at these things when the flash cuts like that and they hadn't been done that much I had such an aversion after making this bow to doing anything like that again for the rest of my life the film cost $800,000 to make but only recovered sixteen thousand at the box office the whole idea of head was to be different and we succeeded in doing that but we didn't succeed in make a movie that everybody wanted to come see does anybody to this day know what that film was about I can only speak for myself I didn't mind I thought it was kind of cool in the summer of 1968 during the production of the film NBC decided not to Commission a third Monkees television series I think my good competitors at the time has come to split up oh no no man what about the boom I didn't feel like I was like I was getting anywhere with these guys I didn't feel heard or seen listened working out you know I expected more from you Michael the Monkees was a television show about AB and an imaginary band so when the show on earth here there was no monkeys it didn't exist just two years after their television debut and the global outbreak of monkey mania the band were breaking apart but their story was not complete in the decades to come the monkeys would be back the three of us went on the road and it was explosive until tragedy finally put an end to the reunions I'd never had a brother he was the closest thing your brother I ever had after selling more than 20 million records and making nearly 60 episodes of their hit TV show by the turn of the 70s the Monkees were no more the four members of the band set about making their own ways in the world Davy Jones moved out of the Los Angeles limelight with his wife Linda and their young family and set out on a solo career are you going to Scarborough Fair Davian Linda separated some years later but he remarried and by the late 80s was the proud father of four daughters me tomorrow lives there three of the girls met up recently in California to remember good time shared with their famous dad seeing him on stage I would remind myself that this wasn't average but not tonight adult life I have to say not until my adult life did I go okay that's just weird that's my dad up there and he sounded so good and he had so much energy once you go up on stage and you just felt this palpable energy and it's almost indescribable but it just made everybody feel so good yeah Davey's newfound freedom also gave him the chance to enjoy his other great love horse riding dad had a passion for horses that was like almost indescribable yeah I want you to go seven furlongs nice steady we have lots of brothers and sisters over the horse kind yeah in the mid-90s Davy Jones finally fulfilled a lifelong ambition when he won his first race as a jockey at the age of 50 here's the trophy to prove it I'm not big on trophies or you don't see any gold records you see around but I'm very grateful and it's it's a nice addition to the family the other monkeys were also busy with new ventures after the breakup of the band Mike Nesmith would have a solo career of his own scoring a worldwide hit with Rio in 1977 down the psalm also launched him as a pop video pioneer Nesmith would go on to play an important role in the creation of mtv meanwhile Micky Dolenz moved to Britain and started an unlikely career directing children's television shows that's all I did no singing no acting no Mickey the monkey I was Michael Dolan's the television producer and I was thrilled it was wonderful it's good to get me away from that life in 1986 on the 20th anniversary of the Monkees creation a promoter proposed breaking the band out of cold storage the temptation proved too much for three of the group you know I've been working pretty steadily a year and you're out directing and producing these television shows yeah this guy was stood for eight weeks or whatever it was ten weeks joining Micky Dolenz on tour were Davy Jones and Peter Tork who'd been working as a musician since the breakup of the band the three of us went on the road and it was explosive it was just the biggest tour of the summer that year and it was a wonderful Mike Nesmith declined to join the 86th tour but he did get together with the rest of the band on another reunion in 1997 only to face a grilling from Richard and Judy you've been the one who's kept back from the unions for all this time why well I've been busy with other things dancer yeah do you think that sort of once it was over it was over and there's no point getting back it's never over it's like the Mafia want you you know I just did other things for the intervening years but I've always been a part of this spiritually and emotionally I enjoyed it quite a bit 1997 would be the last time the four monkey's toured together in February 2012 news came through that meant the band was no more the Monkees Davy Jones has died in Florida at the age of 66 he had a heart attack yeah that was a very sad morning I had gotten up and on my phone was a missed call from Florida and it was rather early and the first thing I thought was that something was terribly wrong and then I got a phone call telling me that he had had a heart attack just really unexpected and he's really young in some ways I felt like oh my god he's finally resting he was the hardest-working person I have ever known he just never stopped you know you always look forward to things you're gonna do you're not going to do them anymore you know through the kind of thing that we did such pressure such emotion success/failure he was the closest thing to a brother I ever had but he was so funny and he was such a charming guy and he would kill for you would take the shirt off his back by Phyllis oh I could hang meat the wings of the Bluebird as Davy Jones and the rest of the monkeys recorded some of the greatest songs of the 60s songs that sound as fresh today as they did over 40 years ago they would be the first and perhaps finest of a long line of so-called manufactured pop groups put together by producers from scratch the Monkees was you know it was one of those things it came at the right time to Oh it was real joy what we did when we came to work every day and it manifested itself on film there was a chance for me to be my fullest self you don't look lightly on those moments I think you have to think about all the good times it's been a good journey of enjoy I'll have enjoyed it it was for young kids that were just friendly and fun we're just too busy singing to you know to put anybody down it makes you feel good because there's that joy and hope and optimism and getting along together well that wraps up another laugh riot and this is Magnus my Micky Dolenz and Peter Tom and Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz here we go warning down the street we anybody is everyone well it's the last in the series of love your garden and Alan esteem find themselves at Bluebell would Children's Hospice in South Yorkshire making some youngsters very happy that's tomorrow night at 8:00 the solana residents need to watch out a con man starts working his way through the holidaymakers Benny Dawn is at 9:00 tomorrow you
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Channel: Minikitkatgirl
Views: 233,699
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: the monkees, monkees, davy jones, micky dolenz, peter tork, michael nesmith
Id: UU573hc7CNw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 46min 24sec (2784 seconds)
Published: Thu Aug 02 2012
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