Malcolm Robinson Posted December 18, 2014 Report Posted December 18, 2014 Anyone remember this place as was!
threegee Posted December 18, 2014 Report Posted December 18, 2014 I may well know the answer, but it wouldn't be fair to say, right away. Here's a secondary question that's a lot more difficult: What's the connection?
Maggie/915 Posted December 18, 2014 Report Posted December 18, 2014 Could the place be in Newcastle close to the Laing Art Gallery and along from the old City Library?
Ovalteeny Posted December 18, 2014 Report Posted December 18, 2014 the mayfair, with the revolving stage
Malcolm Robinson Posted December 19, 2014 Author Report Posted December 19, 2014 Top prize to Foxy and Ovalteeny. The Mayfair where the real rockers went! 2.15am mail train back to Morpeth every Satruday morning and then the walk home! Anyone else?
Symptoms Posted December 19, 2014 Report Posted December 19, 2014 Yep, all aboard the tootoo ... fond memories. I've posted here before about getting to and from the Mayfair in the late 60s ... I suppose anybody interested could do a search here. The traincops at the Central Station didn't like us lads hanging around for the train and would chase us off ... we would then buy a platform ticket (out of a machine, maybe cost 2d or 3d) and get on the tootoo with that. Obviously, there was no gadgie at Morpeth checking tickets in the middle of the night. Then the tramp home through all sorts of weather, including once knee deep in snow and only wearing my hippy sandals.
Malcolm Robinson Posted December 20, 2014 Author Report Posted December 20, 2014 Opposite the train station Maggie?
Symptoms Posted December 22, 2014 Report Posted December 22, 2014 It was in Pink Lane (the short cut to the Central Station from Clayton St). There were a couple of cafes there but the so-called 'all-nighter' shut at 2.30am ... it might even have been a Wimpy Bar. Anyway, its real claim to fame was the meeting place for the London gangster, Jack Carter, to meet his neice in the 1971 film Get Carter.
Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) Posted December 23, 2014 Report Posted December 23, 2014 I may well know the answer, but it wouldn't be fair to say, right away. Here's a secondary question that's a lot more difficult: What's the connection? Technicolor romance Maytime in Mayfair (1949).
Malcolm Robinson Posted December 23, 2014 Author Report Posted December 23, 2014 Pink Lane, that was where the ....was it Billy Bottos nigthclub was?
willy j. Posted December 24, 2014 Report Posted December 24, 2014 Maggie the late night café opposite the Central Station was called 'BOWERS'. All the groups in the area would congregate there on Fri/Sat/Sun nights after gigs. Lots of 'groupies' too.
Maggie/915 Posted December 26, 2014 Report Posted December 26, 2014 I was never brave enough to use the cafe.In the late sixties it was either the Morris Minor or my Dad's A40.(bench seat )Parking did not seem to be a problem.
keith lockey Posted December 27, 2014 Report Posted December 27, 2014 So it wasn't the back room of the Blue Bell?
Maggie/915 Posted December 27, 2014 Report Posted December 27, 2014 Not sure of your comment Keith!Maybe more your life than mine!
paul mann Posted January 1, 2015 Report Posted January 1, 2015 Went to the Majestic more than the Mayfair. Remember seeing The Animals at The Mayfair - with The Junco Partners as the warm-up act. The GoGo was fun any night - got any pictures of that?
John Fox (foxy) Posted January 1, 2015 Report Posted January 1, 2015 No pictures of the Go Go but the Juncos are still going, he was probably wearing that coat when you last saw them,.. this is them at the Journal Tyne Theatre December last year.
threegee Posted January 24, 2015 Report Posted January 24, 2015 Technicolor romance Maytime in Mayfair (1949). Yay! A belated New Year's gong goes to Eggy! And.. the photo is of course of Anna Neagle, who hardly gets a mention today even assuming current generations know the name. Such is tinsel-town fame! A leading star in British films for over 25 years from 1932, she won several awards as Britain's favourite actress and biggest female box-office draw. She was awarded a CBE in 1952 and created DBE in 1969.
Maggie/915 Posted January 25, 2015 Report Posted January 25, 2015 Even the Glen Miller Orchestra.The legend does live on.
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