In 2008 the Victoria and Albert Museum staged one of its most unusual exhibitions.
Visited by over 60,000 people, the exhibition brought a little bit of Motown to London.
The exhibition had at its heart the dresses and costumes worn by the most successful girl pop group ever - The Supremes.
It even saw the attendance of one of the band’s founding members for a special one-off talk.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Mary Wilson of the Supremes, c'mon.
This show was- The Story of the Supremes from the Mary Wilson Collection.
The costumes in the Exhibition show how The Supremes' image was created
and how it was the changing face of American society in the 1960s.
The show was put together by Geoffrey Marsh and Victoria Broackes.
What we’ve tried to do in the exhibition is interweave the story of the civil rights movement in the 50s and 60s
with the story of the Supremes' success.
The Supremes represented a sort of counterpoint to the political activism of the time
because they represented beauty, elegance, style, and above all, success.
The core of the exhibition is in fact the fashions and the collection here is Mary Wilson's own collection of dresses
and we have about 50 dresses in the exhibition.
The beaded dresses that you see on the revolve were the dresses they wore to meet the Queen Mother in 1968
and every bead was sewn on by hand and they weigh 35 lbs each.
And this case where you see a cascade of records
is about how they found success in 1964 when they released 'Where did our love go?'
they'd actually signed with Berry Gordy at Motown in 1961 but they’d had 3 years without a single hit
and they had come to be called the no-hits Supremes.
But from then on they had five hits in a row and that’s a record, I think, to this day.
From then they went on to represent success on an international stage and there’s a poster at the back of the case
which shows them opening the Lincoln Centre in 1965.
And a very early example of product endorsement down at the bottom in the shape of the Supremes bread
where you see them on the cover of the bread.
The recording desk which we've tried to recreate with an example of how the studio looked behind and so on,
is where we talk a bit about the Motown technology which was, at the time, amongst most advanced in the world.
There was only united western in LA and Abbey road where the Beatles recorded that could compete with them at all
and even those not in the terms of numbers of hits. On the desk we have an original version of 'Babylove'.
'Babylove' was actually recorded before 'Where Did Our Love Go?' but when 'Where Did Our Love Go?' went to number one,
Berry Gordy sent them back to the studio. He said he wanted their second hit to sound just like the first.
And that’s when they added the foot stomps and the hand claps.
We wanted to bring film into the exhibition where we could to show how things looked at the time.
And we recorded Mary Wilson talking about what it was like to be a Supreme
Also Maxine Powell who played such a major part.
She ran the Motown charm school which was a bit like the Hollywood star factories of the 1940s and 50s.
She taught the Supremes how to… how to sit, how to be interviewed, as she says on the film,
'how to meet kings and queens.'
So then they learned the basic standing position. How not to protrude the buttocks. How to roll under.
And if they didn't know the step, then smile and not act tough about it.
We wanted to look at the legacy of the Supremes and what they might mean to people today,
we talked to Trevor Nelson about that and he finishes off the exhibition by talking about girl groups now
and how they've been influenced by the Supremes. And it’s not just…
it's not that they were the first girl group or the best girl group, it's the fact that following their success
one can see just how incredibly successful a girl group could be.
TREVOR NELSON - I would say as you look at girl groups full stop, they all want that Supremes' success.
And The Supremes have proved that a girl group can last ten years or more at the very top.
The story of The Supremes it's a good story itself but its also a great story to talk about the history of the 1960s.
I think from where we are now, it is hard to imagine a segregated world.
Impossible to imagine having two charts - a black chart and a white chart. It's extraordinary.
And I think it's good remind people that that was how the world was then.
VISITOR - I heard about the exhibition and it was something I definitely wanted to see,
so I specifically came here to see this exhibition.
I didn’t actually have a favourite part because I loved the entire exhibition.
I think the history bit of it was really good and the clothes and of course the music.
MARY WILSON - So here’s to life, to dreamers and their dreams. Funny how the time just flies,
how love can go from warm hello's to sad goodbyes and leave you with the memories
you've left behind to keep your winters warm.
For there's no yes in yesterday and who knows what tomorrow brings or takes away.
As long as I’m still in the game I wanna play - the laughs, the life, the love.
So here’s to life! - And every joy it brings. So here's to life! - To dreamers and their dreams.
May all your storms be weathered and all that's good get better.
Here's to life! Here's to love! Here's to you!
INTERVIEWER - Ladies and Gentleman, the wonderful Mary Wilson!