Friday, 10 October 2014


The link below will take you to my website The London Guide that has an honest appraisal of the capital - the informative guide tells you more than what the average tourist gets to see and know about - with links on just about every attraction, where to go and what to see or even study and work in the city and so much more - then places to go outside the capital such as Stonehenge, Windsor Castle, Roman towns such as Bath., lovely Norfolk plus places of heritage and of course Duxford where presently stands the Memphis Belle - the famous US bomber together with its history, photographs.....please visit the link below before you leave.

LON
                                                          A Childhood
 ...in the winter months, we would go to the cinema just to get off the cold streets. The cinemas around the sixties in my city were in abundance and a walk or a bus ride would get you there. So, a few errands to run, to get the entry fee and maybe a stick of liquorice or a toffee apple thrown in. The demise of the Victorian churches led speculation to local business men,(hardly well-off themselves) into changing the sombre looking dwellings into a community of excitement and fun. The bringing together of many people filled the buildings with a much more enlivened congregation all sharing the same purpose but not being sombre about it all. The front outside walls were whitewashed, poorly but acceptable, with small boxes fixed to the walls containing a few photographs, probably no more than about four clips from the film. Eventually, large white posters were hung up onto the walls which drew people to the doors. From the front, it looked like a picture house. From side and back it looked like a church. In my district, there were three cinemas. One big one that had a little more investment than the others and attracted the grown-ups or families. The cheaper 'to get in ones' did look a sorrowful sight and sometimes, you could go a week later and still see the same film on. Not that it mattered to us kids, we were out off the street and in the warm and making mischief. I cannot remember the first film I saw, no doubt a cowboy or a gangster; you had to be over sixteen to view the adult films. If you were under age, you would need to stand outside in all weathers, waiting for an adult to take you in. Many a time, I asked and was told to 'push off' of course later on in years, this method was outlawed due to the child's vulnerability. Not that kids thought that much about that, they gave as good as they got and more. Most days, you didn't have the entrance fee so the kids waited till the cinema filled up and gave one kid enough to get himself in. We would all wait at the side entrance and wait. The big bar would be lifted slowly and one by one each kid would disappear behind the heavy curtain and off to the cheaper seats. Of course, this did not always work. The manager would charge down and the culprits were quick to leave their seats towards the exit. It was quite funny sometimes, as long as you didn't get caught. To me, sitting under a big screen with the antics of Cagney and Stewart and a whole other list of favourites was like heaven. The house I lived in was very tiny so this provided a lot of space for me and I liked the volume being high. A lot of people smoked in the cinema then and it was fascinating being in the dark and yet seeing a few faces in the projection stream and all that smoke twisting and twirling and all those that were smoking lifting up their heads to blow out the smoke into the circling tube of light. Looking back, I guess, a whole 2-3 hours of community habits was acted out in that one collective establishment. And not all went to see the films. Not that I took much notice when I went there. Out of respect for the church and the Queen they insisted everyone stayed after the programmes as the anthem was played. Usually, I always found the place empty within seconds of the music playing. Then one day, I stopped going, due to my starting work. But when I returned some months later I noticed many had been taken over by enthusiasts for Bingo. There was something a little more tangible to be gained by that I suppose.....THE LONDON GUIDE updatesTHE LONDON GUIDE

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