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Characters Of Fitzrovia

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Characters Of Fitzrovia

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Description

This remarkable book provides an irresistibly idiosyncratic portrait of London in miniature. From its marvellously illustrated pages leaps a collection of tender, comic, shocking, sometimes alarming vignettes, a rogues' gallery of characters past and present -the famous, infamous and unfamous -who have, over the last 400 years, made this bohemian corner of the city what it is.Between Oxford Street and Euston Road, bordered by Portland Place, Gower Street and Tottenham Court Road, lies a mysteriously evocative area, close to London's heart, known as Fitzrovia. It has a strange and varied history, one that also holds up a mirror to the rest of the capital. For the avant-garde, from painters to actors and artisans, Fitzrovia has been a creative hub, full of studios, craftshops and trysting places. Revolutionaries and radicals gathered in Fitzrovia, which has seen more than its share of murder and mayhem. Spivs and spies, princes and prostitutes jostled in its streets. Alongside grandeur and elegance, exiles and emigres occupied shabby tenements and introduced new styles of cafe and restaurant. Medical professionals mingled, in institutions set up by free-thinkers, with intellectuals and inventors. Radio and television programmes broadcast from Fitzrovia shaped the culture of a nation and an empire. Independent publishing clusters near the legendary pubs of Fitzrovia where writers and poets met and drank in the 1940s and '50s.From bawdy houses to boxing rings, from the haunts for homosexuals to the voices of the music hall, Fitzrovia has celebrated the outrageous and the unconventional, as well as cherishing its community. Its music venues embrace everything from the first classical proms to night clubs, jazz cellars, and the birth of British pop. To know Fitzrovia is to discover what made London, and how.

Author Biography

Mike Pentelow moved to Fitzrovia in the early 1970s. He has worked as a sports reporter and industrial correspondent. He is a member of the Management Committee of the Fitzrovia Association, and Joint World President of the 'Stand By Me' club. Marsha Rowe was a secretary in Fitzrovia, when she co-founded the feminist magazine Spare Rib in 1972. Born in Australia, she worked her passage on a ship to England in 1968. She is a freelance editor and writer, and lives in London.
Release date NZ
November 7th, 2002
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Country of Publication
United Kingdom
Imprint
Pimlico
Pages
272
Publisher
Vintage Publishing
Dimensions
1x1x1
ISBN-13
9780712680158
Product ID
1684721

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