(03-09-2016 02:28 )CIA Snooper Wrote: (01-09-2016 19:06 )Kevin555 Wrote: His uncles favourite club was in Beak Street run by a lady called, Helen O’ Brien who was in effect a Romanian national and a lady who had worked the clubs in Europe, check out her obituary, well worth a read, the club today is a upmarket hamburger place but in the 1950s it was the home to a wide variety of individuals, including the aristocracy, the criminals and the spies of their day.
Link to the obituary is below and defiantly worth a read.
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2005/se...icahorwell
Good work Kev, the Eve Club is well worth a mention. In its heyday it was legendary for various reasons and its floorshow was the most daring show in the West End, although eventually the striptease era made its live acts look rather tame.
Hi
Snooper, finding out more about the area, in the war years there were considerable number of prostitutes working the area, as it was the blackout they carried torches, to entice a customer they would open their coats and shine the torch, they were in various states of undress. These ladies were known as, for full time prostitutes “Piccadilly Commando’s” for the part time rent cheque prostitutes they were called the “Piccadilly Irregulars” in addition to these there were the semi-retired who would rent the room from a permanent girl on her day of, these were known as “Piccadilly Occasional” Now in the war years there was almost full time employment people were making decent money and spending it so the girls did well.
The Eve Club may have been the most daring of the mainstream but in the 1940s there were still small unlicensed clubs, this was before the rip of attitudes of the millennium, as so well described by Mr Mann became prevalent and even then at these place, usually in basements Blue Shows would take place.
One place I am trying to find out about is the one at the junction of Walkers Court and Berwick Street, walking along Walkers Court, turn right and that is the area, in the 1980s there was a small unlicensed club shut down by the police, however since then I have found out somewhere in that locality was a club I think 1960s/1970s which was unlicensed and attracted various members of society including aristocracy and captains of industry, the interest is the girls, some of whom came from the same background as the clients. It was into this background that Paul Raymond built his property empire.
Turning to rip of the post by Mr Mann, he says it all, speaking to some of the guys this began in the 1970s, when you paid to go into one strip club, which had the frontage and little else only to be directed to another club where you had to pay again. From there the excessive charges built up as did the occasional violence on a customer who would not pay up.
Overall worth researching and commenting on