Mollie Thompson - Heralding the Dawn

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Introduction

 

Mollie Thompson - from worlds afar

Mollie circa 1965

 

From Worlds Afar is a lovely album of simple country-folky tunes by a woman from St Anne's-on-Sea in Lancashire, her on acoustic guitar, with occasional second guitar guitar and tambourine, singing about UFOs and aliens. But they aren't mean abducting, anal-probing or cattle-mutilating aliens, they are benevolent wise beautiful aliens in one-piece silver suits, offering us a chance of a better future if we only stop fighting wars etc. The music is gentle and optimistic, like all those songs about children being the hope for our future. Sort of funny, but bittersweet and touching in hindsight.

I bought it in the late 1990s - it's a private pressing (essentially a DIY project) from some time in the 1960s. I was getting interested in UFO kitsch and recognised George Adamski's hubcap and ping-pong ball UFO on the cover, so I snapped it up. He had been discredited in 'serious' UFO circles in America by the late 1950s, but his stories were so hopeful and utopian that some just couldn't let them go.

Mollie was introduced to UFOs through Desmond Leslie and George Adamski’s book Flying Saucers Have Landed in the early 1950s. "It spoke to me, it tweaked a nerve that I couldn’t resist" she said. Adamski's tales of advanced and benificent aliens merged with her established interests in spiritualism and reincarnation, and the nascent new age movement. She met Adamski himself on his last trip to the UK in 1963 - "The Brothers have work for you" he told her.

A keen but untrained guitarist, she started to write the songs that would be released as 'From Worlds Afar' in 1965: "Words and music dropped into my mind. At first I thought it was my imagination, but I did begin to write them down. They fit together…I somehow knew they were going to be a song."

One night Mollie wrote three songs in 90 minutes. She became convinced that the songs were the work of others, using her as an instrument. Sir Anthony Brooke, ex Raja of of Sarawak, taped some of her songs and was instrumental in arranging the recording of the LP at Nield and Hardy's studio in Stockport.

Released on Nield & Hardy's small Asteroid label in 1966, it mainly sold through mail order and at UFO conventions, but in the world of ufology, Mollie was a hit! In July 1966, Gabriel Green invited her to perform at his Amalgamated Flying Saucer Clubs of America Convention in Reno, Nevada. She spent the rest of 1966 in the US, travelling with her songs and her guitar, much as she had in Britain, meeting famous ufologists and contactees such as Mel Noel, Howard Menger, Dan Fry and others. She spoke of her belief in a prophecy of a major world upheaval that would happen by the end of the year.

Returning home disillusioned in January 1967, she rapidly lost interest in singing, UFOs and aliens, preferring to work behind the scenes since then in various spiritualist organisations. UFO researcher Andy Roberts tracked her down in 2005, and interviewed her for a piece in the STAR Fellowship magazine Amscaya. Most of my information, quotes and photos come from this source. See All The Planets Are Inhabited! for more.

Thanks to Andy, Joe McGonagle, MS, and of course to Mollie, wherever she is.

Simon Murphy

 

Original order form

Mollie Thompson, imagined by Simon Murphy

For years I didn't know what Mollie Thompson looked like, and this is how I imagined her. This was the main image on the original version of this page.