Good heavens, Miss Sakamoto, you’re beautiful!
Dolby later said that he wrote the line “Good heavens, Miss Sakamoto” because he wanted a Japanese woman to appear in the video. He was quoted as saying. “I was boldly ahead of the times in fetishizing Asian women.” The name is a reference to Ryuichi Sakamoto’s wife Akiko Yano, who was in the studio at the time; she had previously sung backing on Dolby’s 1982 single “Radio Silence”, and he would collaborate with Sakamoto on the single Field Work a couple of years later.
Priceless