https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00193r6
Savile Row tailor Andrew Ramroop on Desert Island
Discs
LIFESTYLE,
NEWS12TH JULY 2022
https://savilerow-style.com/lifestyle/savile-row-tailor-andrew-ramroop-on-desert-island-discs/
Savile Row
tailor Andrew Ramroop was recently invited onto Desert Island Discs to talk
about his life and musical loves. He
talks about travelling from Trinidad to England when he was 17 and tells host
Lauren Laverne: “I sailed to Southampton not knowing anything. I did what I did
without giving it much thought. I wanted to be where the pinnacle of sartorial
excellence was practised and I wanted to be amongst the finest.”
Andrew grew
up in a remote village in Trinidad and sewed his first garment at the age of
nine, creating a simple pair of trousers from a pillowcase. He left school at
13 and was apprenticed to a local tailor who told him tales about Savile Row –
the place where James Bond’s suits were cut. Inspired by this vision, Andrew
saved up for a ticket to sail to the UK: he emigrated at the age of 17, only
the second person to leave his village. He found work on Savile Row, went on to
complete a degree at the London College of Fashion, and then gained a job at
Maurice Sedwell, eventually taking over the business when Maurice retired.
In recent
years, Andrew has been closely involved in training the next generation of
tailors. He was awarded an OBE in 2009, for his work in tailoring and training,
and was the UK’s Black Business Person of the Year in 2017.
Andrew’s
song choice
Portrait of
Trinidad by The Mighty Sniper
Another
Brick In The Wall, Pt. 2 by Pink Floyd
Time Will
Tell by Jimmy Cliff
The Boxer
by Simon & Garfunkel
It’s a
Man’s Man’s Man’s World by James Brown & The Famous Flames
Desiderata
by Les Crane
Maria La O
by Neil Latchman
Bridge Over
Troubled Water by Simon & Garfunkel
BOOK
CHOICE: Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace
LUXURY
ITEM: A tenor steel pan drum
CASTAWAY’S
FAVOURITE: Bridge Over Troubled Water by Simon & Garfunkel
Savile Row Style Magazine Big Interview: Andrew
Ramroop
March 26,
2018
The Big Interview: Andrew Ramroop, owner of Maurice
Sedwell
From Trinidad to Savile Row: Andrew Ramroop tells
Cindy Lawford about his journey to the top of his trade
Andrew
Ramroop is busy sewing when I turn up at 19 Savile Row for our interview.
Though he has already devoted over 200 hours to the 6½ ounce checked wool suit
he is working on (for exhibition at the Milano Unica textile fair), he is
clearly still relishing the job. “I
enjoy sitting and making,” he says, though running both his tailoring house
Maurice Sedwell as well as the Savile Row Academy does not allow him much time
for it. “People are surprised that I still sit and sew but that’s how I
am. You can’t ask an artist to stop
drawing or painting.”
Andrew, who
is 65, has been making clothes for more than five decades, and 2018 sees him
celebrate three major anniversaries which demonstrate his dedication to the
tailoring craft. The house of Maurice Sedwell is 80 years old, having been
established in Fleet Street in 1938; Andrew himself is marking 30 years as the
sole owner of Maurice Sedwell; and the Savile Row Academy he founded in 2008 is
10 years old. That same year Andrew was awarded an OBE, the first Savile Row
tailor to win one. It truly is an impressive list.
“I was
lucky I found at a young age what I wanted to do for a career,” Andrew says.
That age is a vague, single digit one, when a boy with the name of Madan living
in a village in Tunapuna, Trinidad, began to let his playmates climb trees
without him, as he preferred using “rusty old scissors” to cut clothes out of
newspapers. “My nickname was ‘Madman’, so they would say, ‘Madman, what are you
doing?’ I would say, ‘I am making myself clothes’.”
He
describes his family’s circumstances as “very humble”. His father worked as a
gardener, barman, cleaner, car park attendant and charcoal maker – “everything
to make ends meet”. His mother cooked for the wealthy and got paid in food
rather than money so she could better feed her five children. Habits of
self-discipline and saving were inculcated by a father who “didn’t spare the
rod” and a job at age nine, delivering fresh bread on his bike before school.
Andrew left behind newspaper clothes for ever when he fashioned his first pair
of real trousers from his mother’s pillowcase. Eventually, and not without some
difficulty, Andrew managed to persuade his parents to let him work under a
village tailor. At 14, having successfully avoided going to senior school, he
was making trousers for the men of the village as well as fellow schoolchildren
and earning 45 cents a pair.
When Andrew
then asked his boss – who was himself making $5 for each of Andrew’s trousers –
to teach him to make jackets, his request was refused, and his boss further
threatened, “I will see to it that no one [in the village] takes you.” A period
of enforced idleness ensued until, after several refusals, Andrew’s father
managed to find a tailor in Port of Spain to give the teenager an
apprenticeship. Within four months he was making jackets. Andrew’s employer had
trained at the Tailor & Cutter Academy in Soho’s Gerrard Street and was
fond of bragging about the fabulous craftsmanship he had seen on Savile Row.
Not realising how ambitious and determined his apprentice was, the tailor
“excited my young mind with this mysterious place where the captains of
industry, the prime ministers, presidents, Hollywood stars went to have their
suits made.”
Andrew
compared himself to a young athlete hungry for glory. He had found his goal and
was determined to get to Savile Row – “not to England, not to London but rather
to the street famous for the world’s best tailoring”. Making $4 a suit and
three suits a week in Port of Spain and working from 7.20am when he swept the
shop until 9pm most days, Andrew managed to save $1,000 in three years, which
was enough to buy a return ticket to Southampton. “I had never learned geography, so I didn’t
know where the heck I was going,” he says.
On a late
July afternoon in 1970, a 17-year old Andrew paced up and down for five hours
waiting for luxury liner the Northern Star to arrive, largely alone as “Mummy
had to go home and cook”. But, at the
last minute, the whole family turned up to say goodbye. “I was in pieces,” he says, though the realisation
that one of the six passengers travelling with him was the world heavyweight
wrestler Golden Ray Appollon must have helped divert him a little.
He
remembers the culture shock of arriving in the UK. “Even though I spoke English, it was a very
different English. It took a little while … to understand how people speak …
And then, growing up in the hills and forests, I wasn’t used to having houses
joined up together. I wasn’t used to seeing smoke coming out of chimneys. It
was a very, very foreign environment. But I had a focus and I had made myself
two suits. I wore one [brown-checked] and carried another [green-checked with
an inverted box pleat instead of a vent], and I came to Savile Row looking for
a job.”
That first
Monday morning Madan Ramroop, as he was still known, managed to get himself
hired by Anthony Sinclair but, when a white English candidate named Richard
came in just after him asking for the same position, “I was fired in about 20
minutes”. He then went to Jim Welshman who liked the double breasted that
Andrew was wearing enough to call Colin Hammick. By 10.30 that same Monday
morning, Andrew was working for Huntsman. But he never forgot that first
morning’s firing and, many years later, Andrew took great satisfaction in
buying Sinclair’s business and giving that same Richard a job working at Maurice
Sedwell.
At
Huntsman, Andrew sewed in the workroom but really wanted to be in the front. “I
had heard of all the big names who came to Savile Row and I wanted to be a part
of that. In fact there was a tradesmen’s entrance and we had to come through
there. You couldn’t even walk through Savile Row. You had to walk through the
back, on Heddon Street.”
Andrew soon
understood he needed to learn more of the Savile Row style of cutting fitting
art and design, so he started saving to afford the £900-a-year fees – enough to
buy a house in those days – to attend London College of Fashion, taking on an
evening job making trousers and working as an alterations tailor on Saturdays
amid the bright patterns and wide lapels of the King’s Road. He managed to complete the three-year course
at LCF in two years and received a diploma of distinction created just for him.
In 1974, he
returned to the Row, looking to work as a cutter dealing directly with
customers. However, when potential employers were faced with his “curly hair,
my West Indian accent, that wasn’t happening. I was turned down from every
job”. Although he was the “most experienced and qualified” of the eight
graduates from LCF and, with more than 40 tailoring houses in the Mayfair and
St. James’s area, the demand for new staff was enormous, he still struggled to
find work. “John Dege [of Dege &
Skinner] said, ‘Our customers wouldn’t take kindly to a foreigner but if you
want a job in the workroom, we can give you a job there’.”
This time
Andrew, now aged 22, was determined not to settle for the workroom.
Fortunately, Maurice Sedwell then called LCF looking for a new staff member. “I
still have the piece of paper the head of the college, Mr Clark, gave me: ‘Maurice Sedwell, 78304’, written in pencil,”
Andrew says. “I got a one-month trial.”
To get the job, he had to give up using “Madan” as his first name. “I
was told, ‘We can’t call you that here’.” From then on, he introduced himself
as Andrew.
Andrew does
not attribute his difficulties to racism on the Row, but rather to a lack of
“confidence that [employers could] keep customers if they had a West Indian in
the front of the shop”. Sedwell had Andrew mainly doing back-office work and
alterations, still not what he yearned to be doing but, because so many
alterations were being requested, Andrew was able to convince his boss that he
needed to be present at fittings to see if they could be improved. “It was just
to stand and look, not get involved,” he says.
Only after customers had left could he make suggestions.
Gradually
he was allowed to fit trousers on customers and one day found himself dealing
with MP Mark Lennon-Boyd, then Parliamentary private secretary to the Secretary
of State for Energy. Lennox-Boyd was unhappy about two of his Sedwell
suits. “I made a comment on the suits
and said that if he let us have the suits back, then I would have them fit
perfectly. He sent them back and I fixed
them. He then phoned up Mr Sedwell and
asked what my name was.” Andrew recalls the MP’s exact words: “‘Next time I come to your establishment, I
want him to do my fittings’.” Soon Lennox-Boyd became Parliamentary private
secretary to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Andrew found himself doing
the fittings for six members of Mrs Thatcher’s Cabinet.
“At one
time I was doing 90% of cutting and fitting,” he says. Andrew would go on to
make several suits for Princess Diana, most famously the midnight blue cashmere
jacket she wore for her 1995 Panorama interview with Martin Bashir. “The briefing went to designer Katherine
Walker and I was the tailor,” he says, the goal being to create something
“simple and classic”. Not until he
turned on the television that night did Andrew discover for what occasion the
suit had been made. “It looked black and
sombre. It was a sombre interview.”
He is not
one to name more names, but a few of his customers have willingly displayed
their appreciation, including cricketers Brian Lara and Mark Ramprakash and
film stars Tony Curtis and Samuel L. Jackson. “Soft-structured tailoring” is
the way Andrew likes to describe the suit-making style he has created at
Maurice Sedwell. “There is some firmness to what we do but not hardness. The Italian way is not as structured.” From
the 1970s, Andrew has gradually developed a rather intricate signature style
for Maurice Sedwell, involving slightly narrower shoulders and wider sleeves,
with delta lapels and delta pocket flaps that mirror the bottom front edges of
the jacket, and including a front pocket that follows the line of the shoulder.
Yet Andrew
is keen to say: “I work on expressing an individuality for customers. So
[creating a suit] is more of a communication with that customer, getting to
know their lifestyle . . . trying to some extent to get them not to conform to
a sartorial image that is expected in a business environment”, and, most of
all, encouraging them to “want to stand out”.
He likes to say that a customer does not come to Maurice Sedwell to buy
a suit but rather “to commission a sartorial image”.
Here, where
the 16 people who work for Andrew are all trained to cut, fit and make
garments, there is no room for ready-to-wear or made-to-measure. “The nerve centre of any tailoring business
is the tailoring room, it’s not the cutting room,” he says, aware that his
ambitious younger self might not have said this. “You can be a fantastic cutter, but a tailor
can destroy you with bad workmanship.
But you can be a mediocre cutter, and a handcraft tailor is the one who
can make you look good.”
For his
“ultra bespoke” suits that receive a whopping 130 hours of hand-tailoring and
bear a starting price of £6,000, so much value lies in the details. “No one
makes a suit like us,” Andrew says. He points to the five-button working cuffs
and glossy Milanese button holes that adorn lapels, some sporting an array of
rainbow-thread colours against the suit’s dark background – an oh-so-slight
reminder of the vibrant carnival that Andrew returns to enjoy in Trinidad every
year.
These days
greater challenges are provided by the trend toward lighter weight cloths, and
Andrew is eager to stress that tailoring must “respond to the demands of [a hotter]
environment”. With customers in no less than 60 countries, bespoke suits have
to be made comfortable enough to wear in the most sweltering of climates.
Moreover, the fact that his luxury suits are not subject to fashion trends and
never need to be thrown out makes them a kind of “eco-clothing”. “What we do
[on Savile Row] is unique and relevant,” Andrew observes, “and you’ve got to be
relevant.”
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