Micky Dolenz on Monkees misconceptions: ‘It wasn’t a rock ‘n’ roll band’

Even today, there are misconceptions surrounding Micky Dolenz and the Monkees. That a mass murderer auditioned for the band. That Dolenz was passed over for Jim Carrey to play the Riddler. Even, Dolenz notes, that the Monkees were in fact a rock band.

Dolenz has been trying to clear some of these things up, even as he gets set to receive a key career honor in the midst of a series of upcoming solo dates.

“There is the one about Charles Manson auditioning for the Monkees,” Dolenz tells Thom Jennings of the Niagara-Gazette. “That never happened, and it still seems to go around.” Manson was years away from leading a grisly killing spree that made him infamous when casting began for the Monkees TV program, though he had already begun a string of separate jail sentences for lesser crimes. (By the way, Manson did, in fact, have a connection with the Beach Boys.)

Dolenz says he didn’t go after Carrey’s role in Batman Forever, either. “I never auditioned for the part of the Riddler,” Dolenz adds. “I did audition for the role of Fonzie in Happy Days, and Henry Winkler tells the story that when he saw me at the audition he didn’t think he would get it. Of course, he did an amazing job in that role.”

As for the Monkees themselves, Dolenz is quick to caution: “It wasn’t a rock ‘n’ roll band. It was a television show about a rock ‘n’ roll band,” he tells the Huffington Post. “That was a character that I was playing, and I still look at it like that. Now, the other guys may not agree or not look at it the same way, but that’s always the way that I’ve looked at it.”

Dolenz will be honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award on November 17. 2014 as part of this year’s Rockers on Broadway event. He’s also set to perform at Mexico’s Vallarta-Nayarit Classic Rock Festival in December.

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5 Comments

  1. Pardon my question, but are you still playing a character from TV when you go on stage since the show ended? O.o

    • Christopher Smith says:

      Lol, well said. This is a tired old talking point, the reality is that they were always more of a band than a show, they had a hit single before the show even aired.

  2. Randy Burbach says:

    The thing about the Riddler role – Tim Burton had Dolenz in mind for the role before he got yanked from the project, and has said so many times

  3. Derek Christian says:

    There’s a quite interesting true story about the Manson/Beach Boys/Tate
    murders, about how it was a case of mistaken identity that lead to
    Sharon Tate (et al)’s deaths. It’s in a book called THE MAN WHO KILLED
    PAUL MCCARTNEY (and that’s a damn interesting true tale too!)

  4. The Monkees were never INTENDED to be a real band, but when Mike and Peter started seeing the scope of the work their names were attached to, their artistic instincts kicked in, and they insisted on more control. Kirshner refused and got the boot (which was NOT what the guys wanted), and they essentially had little choice but to try to become a real band. Under that concept, they produced ONE album as a band during their initial incarnation. Everything after that moved farther and farther into the realm of collected solo efforts.

    The reunions — that is a different matter. They had much more freedom then. During the ’80s, it seemed to be more of an entertainment act. In the ’90s, it seemed to be more of a band with a nod to the past. It’s fluctuated between the two ever since, mostly dependent on which of the guys have been involved.