Murdered Earls, bisexual public school men,
and war heroes with dark secrets. The political power of Britain ’s upper
classes may have declined in recent years but their instinct to lie, cheat,
murder and steal is as strong as ever. CHRISTOPHER OTHEN, author of 'FRANCO'S
INTERNATIONAL BRIGADES: ADVENTURERS, FASCISTS, AND CHRISTIAN CRUSADERS IN THE
SPANISH CIVIL WAR' (amazon.co.uk or amazon.com), is your guide through a
library of wrong doing. Please check your morals at the door.
Black Sheep
One Hundred Years of Bankrupt British
Aristocrats, Corrupt Golden Youths, and Frankly Untrustworthy Remittance Men
In a hurry? Read the summary here.
Sitting comfortably? Then put a new
cigarette in its ivory holder and refresh your whisky and soda. Get the
servants to stoke the fire because these old houses can get so cold at night.
And make sure your service revolver in the desk drawer is loaded. Captain
Grimes is coming round tonight to discuss the accounts. The little matter of
those post-dated cheques in the mess tin. You might be forced to take the
gentleman’s way out. Or you might be forced to shoot Captain Grimes.
The wealthiest stratum of our society has
always prided itself on loyalty, tradition, and devotion to duty. But too many
of the aristocrats, trust fund beneficiaries and members of the officer class
who sit at the apex of Britain’s social triangle have a moral backbone like a
bit of wet spaghetti. From Rupert Bellville to Simon Raven, the Earl of Erroll
to John Aspinall, the most respectable part of the country has churned out
black sheep on a production line scale.
So put away that portfolio of artistic
French photographs and leave answering the love note from your brother’s wife
until later. Let’s take a stroll through the last one hundred years of bankrupt
aristocrats, corrupt golden youths, and frankly untrustworthy remittance men.
Books and the odd flick will be our signposts. I’ll be your guide. We’ll start
gently, with some flawed heroes. Let’s go back to the days when we still had an
Empire … .
Edwardian & First World War
Rupert Brooke was the archetypal golden
youth. The kind liked by young girls and bachelor schoolmasters. Handsome,
boyish, and a poet, he was the son of Rugby 's
headmaster and born into privilege. Michael Hasting's 1967 'Rupert Brooke: The
Handsomest Young Man In England' is a comprehensive scrapbook of Brooke's world
and acquaintances (with, for no good reason, two identical photographs of T E
Hume) but the text is poor. Better biographies include Nigel Jones’ 'Rupert
Brooke: Life, Death and Myth' (1999).
In the years before the First World War
Brooke founded the 'Neo-Pagans', a small middle-class grouping of friends that
were part answer to Germany 's
Wandervogel and part back-to-nature ramblers. Paul Delaney's 1987 book The
Neo-pagans: Friendship and Love in the Rupert Brooke Circle looks at the group
in detail although its main selling point was the first publication of a Brooke
letter graphically detailing a homosexual encounter.
Brooke preferred girls overall but had a
nightmarish time of it. One relationship with Catherine 'Ka' Cox led to an
abortion. Brooke had a mental breakdown. It did not help that Cox was entangled
with the Lytton Strachey's Bloomsbury set, the
effete imitators of all things artistic and French, and a whirlpool of sexual
ambiguity that Brooke was trying to escape.
Cox would later die mysteriously in west Cornwall . Writer Paul
Newman has investigated the rumours that link the death with occultist Aleister
Crowley in 'The Tregerthen Horror'. Crowley, essentially an 1890s figure, who
became known as the 'Wickedest man in the World' by the tabloids for his very
public experiments with Golden Dawn ritual magic using sex and drugs, has many
biographies. Two of the most recent are by Tobias Churton and Richard
Kaczynski.
Brooke was well-off enough to travel to Germany , America
and Tahiti in the years before the First World
War but his money could not compare with the truly wealthy aristocracy. Julian
Grenfell, the son of Lady Desborough and product of Eton and Oxford University ,
gets a sympathetic portrait in Nicholas Mosley's 1976 biography.
A man of action with a poetic side to him
Grenfell tried hard to give meaning to his privileged life with a book of
philosophy. Its rejection by publishers, orchestrated by his concerned mother,
led to a breakdown. When he recovered Grenfell rejoined the parentally approved
path and signed up with the army.
In 1914 he enthusiastically threw himself
into the war, his letters home describing it as a 'picnic' and full of hunting
talk. He liked war. His poem 'Into Battle', is an enthusiastic praise of combat
that combines Nietzsche with English pastoralism and has been much criticised
by pacifists since. He also wrote poems attacking the 'red faced majors at the
base', in Siegfried Sassoon's phrase, but these are less well known.
Grenfell died in 1915, hit by a shell splinter.
Brooke died earlier the same year of disease en route to the Gallipoli
campaign. In 1916 the short story writer Hector Hugh Munro ('Saki') was killed
by a German sniper in France .
His last words, to a comrade: 'Put that bloody cigarette out!'
It was the kind of black humour that would
have been appreciated by a man whose mother was killed by a cow and whose
elegant, malicious short stories are still fresh today. Munro was less wealthy
than Grenfell and Brooke but from the same background. He perfected the
languid, cigarette held between drooping fingers aesthete's pose but underneath
was a tough man, right-wing even by Edwardian Imperialist standards. He worked
as a journalist, notably in Tsarist Russia, before finding his role as a short
story writer. He was homosexual to his fingertips. AJ Langguth’s 1982 biography
has the full story. The war seemed to Munro, like many others, a chance to
throw off stale, soft civilian life and re-invent himself as a soldier. He
refused a commission.
Roaring Twenties
Denys Finch Hatton bridged the Edwardian
and Twenties eras. Another golden youth, he attended Eton
with other upper class sons of privilege like Grenfell, Patrick Shaw-Stewart
and the devoutly Catholic Ronald Knox. He did languid, disinterest in worldly
success charisma better than anyone. At a university golf match he gave his
opponent an advantage and was heckled from the crowd by an outraged professor:
'Remember you are playing for your college not for yourself!'
Born into wealth, country houses and vast
estates Hatton had little interest in competition.
'Remember you are playing for neither,' he
replied.
Hatton was charismatic but slipped through
life so elegantly that he seems more shadow than man. Sara Wheeler’s' 2006
biography 'Too Close to the Sun: The Life and Times of Denys Finch Hatton'
devotes most of its pages to Karen Blixen, neurotic Danish author of 'Out Of
Africa' (many years later a Robert Reford/Meryl Streep film) and Hatton's
lover.
The pair met in Kenya where Hatton decamped before
the First World War to fail as a farmer but succeeded as a Great White Hunter.
He brought down leaping lions with seconds to spare on rich men's safaris,
useful experience for the now forgotten East African campaign of the Great War.
The only front in the war where a fire fight between British and German troops
was disrupted by a charging rhino.
'Close To The Sun' succeeds despite the
absence of its subject because the scenery and supporting cast come to vivid
life. Africa is a character, all orange
sunsets and chattering wildlife. The day players are well drawn. Colonel
Richard Meinertzhagen fought alongside Hatton in the Africa campaign but the
splenetic old Africa hand is best know for his pre-war peace negotiations with
a rebellious tribe. He arranged a meeting, strode forward to shake the rebel
chief's hand then pulled a revolver with his spare paw and shot the man.
Meinertzhagen got the Victoria Cross. Brian Garfield's 'The Meinertzhagen
Mystery: The Life and Legend of a Colossal Fraud' (2007) debunks many of the
old soldier’s adventures. Meinertzhagen later claimed members of the Tsar's
family escaped the Bolsheviks and that he tried to assassinate Hitler. He
discovered the Giant Forest Hog (Hylochoerus meinertzhageni).
Hatton was peripherally linked with the
dissolute Happy Valley
set of 1920s Kenya .
Never too decadent himself - he preferred to spend his evenings with the
classics and a gramophone, although he had a fondness for the Ballets Russe -
Hatton occasionally mixed with Josslyn Victor Hay, 22nd Earl of Erroll, the
Valley's leading light. Blond haired charmer Erroll had hero worshipped the
older man at Eton . Out in Africa Erroll went
through other men's wives at a rapid pace but avoided the cocaine and morphine
used by others in his circle.
James Fox's 1982 'White Mischief' tells the
Happy Valley story as he tries to puzzle out
who shot Erroll in the head at close range at a deserted cross roads one night
in 1940. Was it Diana Broughton, Erroll's latest lover? Or Sir Henry ‘Jock’
Broughton, Diana's cuckold husband who was charged, acquitted and committed
suicide? The book spawned 'White Mischief' the movie with Charles Dance as
Erroll, an actor who has perfected the art of the disinterested glance.
Errol Trzebinski’s 2000 'The Life and Death
of Lord Erroll: The Truth Behind the Happy Valley Murder' claims the dead man's
brief membership of Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists led the Secret
Services to assassinate him. Not much evidence for that. Mosley himself was
another son of privilege who moved from conservative right to socialist Left
then out to Fascism. Many books about him but his son Nicholas' 'Rules of the
Game/Beyond the Pale: Memoirs of Sir Oswald Mosley and Family' (1991) and
Robert Skidelsky's 1975 biography are good. Recent works like Martin Pugh’s
2005 ‘'Hurrah for the Blackshirts!: Fascists and Fascism in Britain Between the
Wars' and Stephen Dorril’s 2006 'Blackshirt: Sir Oswald Mosley and British
Fascism' were well reviewed.
The best answer to the Erroll murder was
given by 2005 BBC programme 'Julian Fellowes Investigates A Most Mysterious
Murder' – The Case of the Earl of Errol’ in which the aristocrat actor/screen
writer claimed Jock Broughton really was responsible. Wife Diane was in the car
at the time and had to wear a scarf after to hide the bullet track in her neck.
Fellowes claimed to speak from personal knowledge.
Another murdered wartime aristocrat was Sir
Harry Oakes whose mysterious 1943 death in the Bahamas - bludgeoned and burned in
his bed - spawned a host of conspiracy theories. James Owen's 'A Serpent in
Eden: The Greatest Murder Mystery of All Time' (2006) is a readable account of
the murder and subsequent trial of Oakes' son-in-law Count Alfred de Marigny, a
dubiously titled Mauritian of French descent, who like Jock Broughton escaped
gaol despite much suspicion. Respectable Bahamians were put off by his two-tone
‘co-respondent’ shoes.
The wife-swapping Happy
Valley set were a dark reflection of England 's
Bright Young Things. DJ Taylor's 'Bright Young People' (2007) is a
comprehensive look at the media darlings who partied through the 1920s, most
aristocrats, most rich. Bottle parties, swimming pool parties, paper chases,
fatal car crashes, tuxedos and Brilliantine. Taylor 's
book exhausts the seam of London 's
fun loving rich in the roaring twenties.
A few of the more outstanding BYTs deserve
their own books. Lawrence Whistler's book on his brother Rex, 1975’s 'Laughter
and the Urn', describes a talented artist who decorated the Tate Gallery dining
room in Roccoco style and was brought into the BYT world through his friendship
with Stephen Tennant. The son of Scottish peer Lord Glenconner, Tennant was
aesthete of the aesthetes and campest of the camp, although he lacked any other
talents. He was war hero and poet Seigfreid Sasoon's great love. Phillip
Hoare’s 1992 biography 'Serious Pleasures: Life of Stephen Tennant' is a heavy
weight account of a feather light life.
Part-time BYT, and advisor to Fox's 'White
Mischief', Cyril Connolly was a famously underachieving old Etonian who
investigated the Erroll case in the 1960s for a magazine article. Connolly did
Eton and Oxford
in the twenties but came to prominence the following decade. He went through a
number of wives, the most tempestuous being Barbara Skelton. At a dinner party
where Connolly was making a pig of himself, with food round his mouth:
Skelton: [contemptuously] What’s that on
your face?
Connolly: Hate.
His best remembered work, 1938's 'Enemies
of Promise', is a portmanteau of literary criticism and public school memoir.
Short pieces 'Where Engels Fears To Tread', a parody of upper class BYT
aesthete turned Communist Brian Howard, and ‘Death of an Elizabethan', a
surprisingly reverent review of a memoriam book on a right-wing aristocrat
pilot who died young, stand up better. They can be found in 'The Condemned
Playground', a 1944 collection of essays with a frightening drawing of Connolly
by Augustus John as frontispiece. Brian Howard is the subject of
Marie-Jaqueline Lancaster's 1968’s 'Brian Howard: Portrait of a Failure'.
Howard and Connolly were contemporaries of
Evelyn Waugh, the dominant literary novelist of the twenties. Waugh was not
aristocratic but liked to associate with them. Selina Hasting's 1994 biography
is a monumental account of the misanthropic aesthete but his circle at Oxford
Univeristy is better brought to life in Martin Stannard’s 1987 'Evelyn Waugh:
The Early Years, 1903-39' and Humphrey Carpenter’s 1992 'The Brideshead
Generation: Evelyn Waugh and His Friends'. Oxford
provided the material for much of Waugh's best seller 'Brideshead Revisited'' -
languid men of 'convenient bisexuality', in writer Anthony Powell's words,
blazing through family fortunes on the manicured lawns of Oxford colleges.
It was a world of champagne bottles,
limited poetry editions, Victoriana obsessions and gay crushes. 'Brideshead
Revisited' was an extensive ITV series in 1981, and a less successful 2008
film. Waugh's 1930 'Vile Bodies' was made into a 2003 film by Stephen Fry as
'Bright Young Things'. Watchable but Fry softens Waugh's sharp edges. The novel
was written while Waugh's marriage to Evelyn Gardener was falling apart. She
ran off with a BBC employee called John Heyward. Waugh wrote a 1959 biography
of Catholic priest Ronald Knox, one of the rare survivors from Denys Finch
Hatton’s pre-war circle.
Powell's own 1983 memoirs 'To Keep the Ball
Rolling' provide a clinically detached look at the time. Bevis Hiller’s 1984
biography of John Betjeman's early years (Young Betjeman) has much on the mix
of snobbery, aestheticism, and reaction that made up the lives of the rich in Oxford at the time. Also
worth checking out are 'Poet Ed' about Edward James, fabulously rich Oxford man
and patron of Surrealism, and Mark Amory’s 1988 biography of 'Lord Berners: The
Last Eccentric'. Like Hatton, Berners was a bridging figure between Edwardian
aristocracy and twenties Bright Young Things, although unlike him also fat, eccentric,
musical, and homosexual. Both books are light on atmosphere but fill in the
gaps.
Harold Acton's 1948 'Memoirs of an
Aesthete' should have been essential from the poet who was the central figure
in that circle but are instead a rather dim reflection of that time. Acton declaimed poetry through a megaphone (an Edith
Sitwell touch) to rowers returning from the Isis .
Some of the Brideshead generation were made
of tough stuff, like Robert Byron, subject of James Knox’s 2003 biography.
Angry homosexual Byron travelled widely, wrote well on architecture, and hated
Nazis and Turks. His 1937 'The Road to Oxiana' is still in print and was Bruce
Chatwin's favourite book.
Not everyone stayed in Britain . In the
twenties Paris
throbbed with avant garde art, a cheap cost of living and loose morals.
American and British writers and artists, some even talented, descended on the
bohemian sectors to live life to the full. Englishman English painter
Christopher Wood juggled an in depth knowledge of the latest French techniques
with bisexuality and opium addiction. Jean Cocteau liked him. He returned to England and spent time in Cornwall , then in the early days of its life
as an artist colony. His work is faux-naif. In 1930 Wood threw himself under a
train. Richard Ingleby’s 1995 biography is thorough. Sebastian Faulkes included
him as one of his three portraits in the same year's 'The Fatal Englishman'.
For an American version see Harry Crosby,
scion of a wealthy Boston family but prominent
in the avant garde Paris
art world of the 1920s with Black Sun Press, publishing Ernest Hemingway among
others. Crosby abused drugs, wife swapped, and
made dramatic gestures. His poetry was limited. He died in a 1929 suicide pact
with his mistress in a friend's New
York apartment. Geoffrey Wolff’s biography 'Black
Sun: The Brief Transit and Violent Eclipse of Harry Crosby' (1977) is
excellent.
Hungry Thirties
Martin Green's 1976 'Children of the Sun: A
Narrative of Decadence in England
After 1918' is an unconvincing attempt to connect the aesthetes of the twenties
with the Fascists of the thirties. Its main attraction is a nice photograph of
Randolph Churchill as a young man before Winston's son got fat and red-faced. Randolph has never had a
critical enough biographer to turn in a good book on this ultimate son of
privilege. His own son's 1996 biography is anaemic, while an earlier anthology
of recollections 'The Young Unpretender' (1971), edited by Kay Halle,
entertaining but all surface.
The rich kept their heads down in the Hungry
Thirties as political extremes ramped up across Europe .
Denys Finch Hatton's old schoolmate Ronald Knox and social climbing Jesuit
Martin D'Arcy converted some, including Evelyn Waugh, to Catholicism. A few
went political. Roger Griffiths' 1980 'Fellow Travellers Of The Far-Right'
gives a good summary of the extreme right fringe, with a fair sprinkling of
titled names.
Yuri Modin’s My Five Cambridge Friends
about Philby and co gives an inside look at the militant left version. The
Spanish Civil War radicalised many. Stansky & Abrahams’ 'Journey to the
Frontier' (1966) details the lives of John Cornford and Julian Bell, the first
a Communist, the second a fellow traveller. Cornford was a good conventional
poet whose dedication to Marx gives his verse real attack ('Understand the
weapon/ understand the wound'). Poetry ran in the family - his mother Frances was a
friend of Rupert Brooke and wrote the 'Apollo golden haired' quatrain about
him. Bell was a less talented poet who knew many
of the Cambridge
spy ring around Philby. Both died in Spain .
Rupert Bellville was one of the few who
fought in Spain
for Franco. The heir to Papillon Hall, a Leicestershire country house
redesigned by Edward Lutyens but already crumbling, the argumentative pilot
joined the Spanish Falange militia in the early days of the war thanks to
contacts in the Andalusian sherry industry. He was best known for arriving in Santander by aeroplane to
congratulate the victorious Nationalist troops only to find it was still in the
hands of the Republicans. He narrowly escaped a firing squad. Oxford graduate Peter Kemp contributed more
to Franco's cause, first in the Carlist Requetes and later in the Foreign
Legion. Those two and others can be found in my 'Franco's International
Brigades: Adventurers, Fascists, and Christian Crusaders in the Spanish Civil
War' (2013).
Second World War
BYT Rex Whistler died just after D-Day in France . Cecil
Beaton heard he got drunk and fell under a lorry but the truth was a more
heroic end as a tank commander during a mortar barrage. The apparent fading of
the aristocracy was commemorated in Waugh's 'Brideshead Revisited' and also in
Keith Douglas' wartime poem 'Aristocrats', although with greater distance.
Douglas himself was a man of action, leaning leftwards but entranced by
rightist sentiments of army discipline and patriotism. He also died just after
D-Day. Desmond Graham's 1974 Keith Douglas, 1920-1944: A Biography is thorough.
Others let the side down. John Amery, son
of Secretary of State for India Leopold Amery, was in France when it
fell. He threw his lot in with the Germans, broadcast propaganda to Britain and
tried to organise a British Waffen-SS unit. Caught in Italy at the
end of the war, by future television personality Alan Whicker, Amery was hanged
for Treason. Adrian Weale covers British traitors in 'Renegades: Hitler's
Englishmen' (1994). A good read but his composite biography of Amery and Sir
Roger Casement, 'Patriot Traitors' (2001), is best avoided.
Bad things also happened on the home front.
Neville Heath just pretended to be a gentleman. A fantasist RAF pilot with a
taste for whipping young girls, he killed at least two during the war and was
hanged for it. Francis Selwyn lifts the stone in 1988’s 'Rotten to the Core:
Life and Death of Neville Heath', as does Sean O'Connor in the 2013 'Handsome
Brute: The Story of a Ladykiller'.
On the winning side John Heyward emerged
out of the jungles of Burma
with a native bride, less than five feet high and bought from one of the 'more
primitive tribes' - at least according to Anthony Powell. The man for whom
Evelyn Waugh's wife left him, Heyward deserves a biography of his own.
Something of a womaniser, he toured Europe in
the twenties and thirties, married the former Mrs Waugh and was sacked from the
BBC for his involvement in the divorce. He leant to the right and had an
exciting war in the Far East . Post-war he
drank himself into a stupor and eventually committed suicide. Powell’s
unofficial biographer Michael Barber provides glimpses of an interesting
character.
Barber's biography of Powell (2004) is
relatively tame, the estate not being particularly helpful as they had Hilary
Spurling in the wings for an official version. Barber's writing is as elegant
and juicy as always but his prose is better served in the 1996 biography 'The
Captain'. Its subject is an inferior writer to Powell but far more interesting
person, the frankly satanic Simon Raven ...
Post-War
'Is it true you like both men and women?'
an officer asked Simon Raven during the writer's doomed attempt at a career in
the British Army after the Second World War.
'I like all four kinds.'
'Four kinds?'
'Male and female. Amateur and
professional.'
Raven attended Charterhouse public school
but was forced to leave a few terms early for homosexual adventures too blatant
for the authorities to ignore. Raven joined the army for National Service just
as the empire ended in India ,
much to his disappointment ('I liked the sound of Sahib Raven'). On release he
made it through Cambridge
University seducing
students of both sexes. He got Susan Kilner pregnant so did the decent thing by
marrying her. They lived separate lives, an arrangement aided by Raven
rejoining the Army. He was shifted around a number of colonial hotspots, like
the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya ,
where he did his best to avoid too much action before being kicked out for
gambling debts. A telegram once arrived from Susan: 'Mother and baby starving
STOP Please send money soonest'.
'Sorry no money STOP,' he replied. 'Suggest
eat baby'.
Or so the story goes. It says something about
Raven's capacity for scandalous behaviour that even his friends liked to tell
the telegram story. He was happy to repay the favour and one of his memoirs was
pulped after libel proceedings. Raven was a gifted writer with a flowing, exact
style that owed equal amounts to a Classical education and a love of Evelyn
Waugh's early work. His plotting and characterisation could not always keep up.
Much of his extremely limited success was due to the louche tone of his early
novels - homosexual army affairs and murder (first book 'The Feathers of
Death', 1959), right-wing secret societies (the same year’s not very good
'Brother Cain'), and sexual vampires (1960’s 'Doctors Wear Scarlet' made into
under funded 1970 psychedelic horror movie 'Incense For The Damned' aka 'Blood
Suckers').
His reputation rests on roman fleuve 'Alms
for Oblivion' written in conscious imitation of Powell's superior 'A Dance to
the Music of Time' series, which had begun thirteen years earlier in 1951.
Raven does high class sleaze like no-one else but the best books are 1966’s
'Sabre Squadron', a thriller set in Allied occupied Germany informed by Raven's
own posting there, although let down by an incompletely imagined central Jewish
character, and 'Fielding Gray' (1967), the definitive dark side of public
school novel, whose plot influenced Stephen Fry's 1991 debut novel 'The Liar'.
Raven lived precariously, bouncing checks,
writing novels, and dining well. By the 60s the slim, vulpine army officer had
become round and red-faced. He was kept afloat through the generosity of his
publisher Anthony Blond, like Raven bisexual, unlike him rich. His memoirs 'Jew
Made in England '
(2004) are disjointed but never dull, particularly on his friendships with the
more raffish figures in the post-war world. He knew Alan Clark before the
historian became a Tory MP. The clipped, arrogant and athletic Clark was son of Lord Clark (of cultural tv series
'Civilisation' fame - the book version, illustrated or not, is a good read).
Clark once told Blond he lived in Albany , the
set of bachelor apartments in central London ,
because it needed only a single word of direction to a taxi driver.
'Two words,' said Blond.
Blond explained - 'Albany , please.'
Clark's Diaries ('Into Politics', 'In
Power', and 'The Last Diaries' - 2000, 1993 and 2002 respectively) mix
politics, cars, affairs and hypochondria, and make a more sympathetic figure of
Clark than many thought possible. A 2009
authorised biography by Ion Trewin provided a fuller picture. Reviewers were
polarised, less by the book than by their reactions to Clark 's
personality.
Aspinall & Co
Blond was also friends with John Aspinall
and James Goldsmith from his days at Oxford .
All were part of a hard drinking, hard gambling set. Aspinall and Goldsmith
were ambitious and wanted to be rich. Aspinall went on make his money in
gambling, first with floating Chemin de Feu games around Mayfair
and then with the Clermont Club in Berkley
Square . Goldsmith became an international asset
stripper, admired and hated.
Douglas Thompson's 2007 'The Hustlers:
Gambling, Greed and the Perfect Con' is a good account of Aspinall's career up
until the sale of the Clermont Club in the late 1960s. Great cast of gambling
characters - Lord Derby ('a failing salesman in a rented dinner jacket,'
according to Simon Raven who once won £900 at Chemmy in the late 50s, subsequently
losing a lot more), SAS founder David Stirling who shrugged off a loss of
£174,500 in one night during 1959, and John Bingham, Lord Lucan ('thick as two
planks,' according to Mark Birley, founder of Annabel's nightclub) soon to be
wanted for murder.
Thompson does a good job even though he
describes a louche 50s resort in France where British aristocrats
and gangsters mixed with European playboys and actresses as a place 'you could
lie on the beach and look at the stars or vice versa'. The book attracted
controversy with its revelation that Aspinall routinely cheated gamblers at the
Clermont with the help of Billy Hill, London 's
top gangster. Aspinall's family denied it, his business partner confirmed it.
'The Real Casino Royale' was a 2009 Channel
4 documentary based on Thompson's book. The interviews and archive footage are
good, the reconstructions less convincing. The actor playing Lucan looks more
like Kaiser Wilhelm and Billy Hill's hat is inexplicably four sizes too big.
Back in 2000 Adam Curtis created ‘The Mayfair Set’ for the BBC, a documentary
on Thatcherite capitalism that used the regulars of the Clermont Club as its
hook. Goldsmith got the lion's share of the spotlight. The four parter is
Curtis' usual mix of insight, archive footage and conspiracy theory.
Meanwhile up the road in Cadogan Square , November 1971, an
expatriate American mother and son had a row. The son stabbed his mother to
death. Barbara Bakeland was fabulously rich, married into the family that
invented Bakelite, but had eccentric ideas about curing son Anthony of his
homosexuality. She slept with him. This did not help his paranoid
schizophrenia. The tale is told well in 'Savage Grace: The True Story of a
Doomed Family' (1985) an oral biography by Natalie Robbins and Steven M L
Aronson. It was turned into a movie in 2007.
The Clermont had passed into the hands of
the Playboy organisation by 1974 when Lord Lucan attempted to murder his
estranged wife but killed the children's nanny Sandra Rivett by mistake. By
this time his gambling debts were so high he worked as a house gambler for
Aspinall. And he drank. Surprisingly few books have been written about the
crime although it gripped the country and, with Lucan vanished the night of the
murder and never seen again, continues to fascinate. Most books are written by
retired policemen to boost their pensions and hinge on new theories about
Lucan's whereabouts ie. MacLaughlin and Hall’s discredited 'Dead Lucky - Lord
Lucan: The Final Truth' (2003).
John Pearson's 2005 'The Gamblers' is a
joint biography of Aspinall and Goldsmith and those around them but has a
fairly clear overview of the Lucan murders. 'Bloodlines', a straight to DVD
1997 movie made with Irish money, is a well informed dramatisation although it
goes off the rails at the end with Lucan battling gangsters on a cliff top. It
follows, at least partly, Pearson's theory that Lucan was killed by gangsters -
presumably linked to Billy Hill, although this is never explicitly stated.
Another Clermont gambler accused of murder,
Claus von Bulow was acquitted of the 1979 murder of his wife. 'Reversal Of
Fortune', a 1991 Hollywood movie of the trial based on attorney Alan
Dershowitz's book, is watchable. Jeremy Irons exudes Von Bulow's dark charm:
Dershowitz: We have one thing in our
favour.
Von Bulow: What's that?
Dershowitz: Everybody hates you.
Von Bulow: [Swallows a mouthful of food,
gestures with his fork] It's a start.
James Goldsmith ended his days with a
luxurious Mexican hideaway, more money than he knew what to do with and the
Reform Party, a vehicle to bash pro-European MPs. Hutchins & Midgley's 1998
biography 'Goldsmith: Money, Women and Power' is the latest available. He died
in 1997 of cancer. He outlived Aspinall, Billy Hill and most of his gambling
cronies, including the weak willed artist Dominic Elwes, who he helped drive to
suicide for a perceived betrayal to the press after the Lucan murders. Elwes
was father to actor Cary, star of 1984's 'Another Country' about public school
boys discovering homosexuality and Communism in the thirties.
To everyone's surprise Raven outlived them
all. The novels declined in quality as he got older but he made money working
on television drama scripts. His last words in hospital were 'Who's paying for
all this, I'd like to know?'
Not everyone was dressed up in a dinner
jacket losing money at Berkley
Square . In the 1960s Robert Fraser was a top
modern art dealer, friend of the Rolling Stones (present at the Redlands bust) and heroin
addict. While learning the art trade in early 1960s New York he impressed friends by dropping
coin change on the floor as not worth carrying around. Harriet Vyner’s 1999
oral biography 'Groovy Bob: The Life and Times of Robert Fraser' is a good
read. In the seventies he headed for India and AIDS.
Darker Englishmen were about by the time of
Lucan's disappearance. In fiction Frederick Forsythe's anonymous English
assassin in 1971's 'The Day of the Jackal' summed up the new type of ruthless,
amoral and probably dangerously rightist well spoken types. The 1973 film with
Edward Fox was good.
Andy Beckett’s 2002 book 'Pinochet in
Piccadilly: Britain and Chile's Hidden History' covers the real life ground,
although at heart it is an overgrown article about links between Margaret
Thatcher and Chilean dictator General Pinochet pumped up with speculation about
right-wingers around David Stirling in the 1970s. 'The Wilson Plot: How the
Spycatchers and Their American Allies Tried to Overthrow the British Government'
provides background to Stirling 's activities
with allegations that members of the establishment believed Labour Prime
Minister Harold Wilson was a KGB agent.
But golden youths made a comeback with
writer Bruce Chatwin. Educated, talented, bisexual Chatwin had made his mark at
auctioneers Sotheby’s but burst onto the wider world as journalist and author.
His icy, etched style and love of the esoteric – from nomads to Ernst Junger,
Russian Futurism to Jackie Kennedy - made him great but in his lifetime he was
known primarily as a travel writer. Non-fiction 1989 collection 'What am I
Doing Here' is essential, 1988 novel 'Utz' good and Nicholas Shakespeare's 1999
biography very good.
Chatwin loved Africa and experienced the
grim aftermath of an attempted 1976 coup in Benin when he was suspected of
being one of the foreign mercenaries involved under the command of Frenchman
Bob Denard, who tells his side of the story in 'Corsaire de la Republique'.
Forsythe's third novel 'The Dogs of War'
about overthrowing a corrupt African dictatorship was based on his apparently
real attempt to put together an earlier coup in Equatorial Guinea . Thirty years
later Englishman Simon Mann tried the same deal with the help of, among others,
Mark Thatcher - son of the former Prime Minister and ultimate remittance man.
The coup went wrong and Mann ended up in a hellhole jail in Equatorial Guinea .
The tale is told well in 'The Wonga Coup: Simon Mann's Plot to Seize Oil
Billions in Africa ' by Adam Roberts (2006).
For a fictionalised account of recent black
sheep see Edward St Aubyn's three semi-autobiographical novels 'Never Mind',
'Bad News' and 'Some Hope', most recently combined in 2006's 'Some Hope: A
Triology'. The 1982 film 'Privileged' about rich types at Oxford University
has its fans. Woody Allen’s 'Match Point' (2005) should not work, with its
luxurious London apartments masquerading as down market hovels, unsubtle
Dostoevsky references, and rich families who like both the opera and Andrew
Lloyd Weber. But it succeeds because Allen, inadvertently, taps into a fantasy
of London upper class life that bears little relation to the truth but feels
like a warm champagne bath to anyone who enjoyed 'Brideshead Revisited'' and
wants a version with mobile phones and murder. All that despite the script
originally having been set in the Hamptons .
For other American film versions of this
type see Whit Stillman's 1990 'Metropolitan' and 1998 'The Last Days of Disco'.
Also the off-beat take of 'A New Leaf' (1971) with Walther Mathau, oddly
convincing as a playboy running short of money, despite having a face like a
bulldog chewing a wasp.
Dealing With Grimes
Well, there you have it. One hundred years
of bankrupt aristocrats, corrupt golden youths, and frankly untrustworthy
remittance men. Perhaps it gave you some ideas. Grimes is due soon. Best pick a
spot to greet him. By the roaring fireplace, beneath the portrait of the
seventh Earl? Or looking reflectively at the Big Game trophies on the wall,
with their brass plaques? That gazelle put a bit of a fight. Or perhaps behind
the door with a poker in your hand? Yes, that might be the best place. Bon
chance old chap. Give Grimes my regards.
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