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The sax player and stunt double from Kilburn

Alan Stuart Spaughton was born at 13 Lowfield Road in Kilburn in 1931. He shortened his name and performed as Alan Stuart. He played tenor sax with Tommy Steele’s Steelmen in the 1950s at the famous 2Is club in Soho and on film and TV shows. On some occasions Alan played sax while lying on his back. In 1957 they had hits with ‘Singing the Blues’, and performed at the Royal Variety Show for the Queen and Prince Philip. Alan stayed with Tommy and the Steelmen until 1959. Tommy Steele and the The Steelmen in 1957 (Getty Images). Tommy Steele and The Steelmen (1957), Alan is on the left In 1956 he married ‘Megs’ Margaret Leggett who had worked as a dancer with the Tiller Girls and an extra in numerous films. Then through a friend he had last seen while playing the back end of a pantomime horse, Alan met Stanley Kubrick who saw a resemblance to Peter Sellers and asked him to play his double in the film Dr Strangelove (1964). In a newspaper interview Alan said, ‘It was quite an undertaking b
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Adele and The Good Ship, Kilburn

There has been considerable publicity recently about Adele who is performing 10 shows in Munich in August 2024.  Announcing the idea in January on Instagram, Adele said: ‘So a few months ago I got a call about a summer run of shows. I’ve been content as anything with my shows in London’s Hyde Park and my residency in Vegas, so I hadn’t had any other plans. … However, I was too curious to not follow up and indulge in this idea – a one-off, bespoke pop-up stadium designed around whatever show I want to put on? Why, Yes!! I haven’t played in Europe since 2016’. The £102M stadium has a 200 metre semi-circle stage with a 93 metre catwalk, so Adele can get close to the 75-80,000 fans in the audience. Behind her is a huge projection screen reported to have cost another £34M. Around the stadium is an ‘Adele World’ themed park. Photo of the stadium and theme park In the publicity for the show, Adele praised small venues which gave her a start early in her career, and she specifically mentioned

Hallelujah! The Holiday Train Crash in Kilburn

In 1934, Easter Monday fell on April 2nd. It dawned fine and bright, as several hundred passengers boarded the excursion train that departed Nottingham around 7.30am, bound for Marylebone in London.  The uneventful journey came to a dramatic and sudden end shortly after 10.00am. The train was brought to a halt at a signal while crossing a bridge over the Kilburn High Road. It was about to start off again, when it was rammed from behind by a light engine travelling at around 15mph. The rear carriage was telescoped for about half its length, and by absorbing most of the impact, only limited damage was caused to the remaining carriages, mainly broken glass that showered on the passengers.  The event at the Albert Hall Most of the passengers were members of the Elim Four Square Gospel Alliance, planning on attending the Alliance’s annual conference at the Albert Hall. Their home in Nottingham was a chapel in Halifax Place. Founded in 1915 by George Jeffreys as the Elim Pentecostal Church,

John Mayall and West Hampstead

Sadly, John Mayall a pioneer of British Blues, died on 22 July 2024 at his home in California and there have been numerous tributes in the media.  There is a double connection to West Hampstead. With his band The Bluesbreakers John played 33 times at Klooks Kleek, the jazz and blues club run by Dick Jordan and Geoff Williams on the first floor of the Railway Hotel in West Hampstead. He also recorded many albums at the Decca Studios in Broadhurst Gardens. The first was ‘Mayall Plays Mayall’ recorded at Klooks Kleek on 7 December 1964, when cables were run over to the next door studios. The band at this time was John Mayall (vocals, keyboards and harmonica), Roger Dean (guitar), John McVie (bass), Hughie Flint (drums) and Nigel Stanger on sax. John with his band playing at Klooks Kleek in May 1965. Photo by Paul Soper, used by kind permission. Probably the most famous album ‘Blues Breakers: John Mayall with Eric Clapton’, was made in Broadhurst Gardens in March 1966. The band was Mayall

The Beast of Cricklewood

The beast discovered ‘I was the first one to see it and I was very frightened because I couldn’t believe how big it was. I thought it was a leopard or something. It was the size of an Alsatian and about 4ft away from me’. On a Friday morning in May 2001, cleaner Carol Montague went to the home of Alan and Charlotte Newman in Hocroft Road (not the nearby Hocroft Avenue as generally reported), off the Hendon Way. It was her regular job, but it turned out to be far from an ordinary day, after she spotted the animal in their back garden. She immediately rang the police who didn’t take her seriously. But when she persisted, two policemen showed up and were startled to find what turned out to be a lynx on the Newman’s patio. Down the years in the UK, there have been and continue to be, many reports and photos, of what were described as large cats roaming the countryside. But few have ever been caught. The Hertfordshire area had some sightings in the 1990s, mostly in wooded areas. Then in 199

The Strange Grave in Paddington Cemetery

Recently, my friend Margery Gretton was walking in Paddington Old Cemetery and was intrigued by the unusual name of Ada Eliza Strange Bodycoat which she found on a grave.   The statue of an angel is on the main path from the gates in Willesden Lane, just before the chapels.  The side panels record Ada’s two children who are also buried here: Boyder Walter Charles, and Lady Gertrude Whaddia (in some accounts spelled as Wadia), who bought the grave for her mother. This is the complicated story behind the people in the grave. Ada’s early life and marriage Ada Eliza Hawkins was born in Marylebone in 1882, the daughter of a farrier and smith, who shoed horses. On 17 March 1901 in St Peter’s Church Paddington, she married William John Strange, a shoeing smith like her father. Their only child, Lucy Gertrude was born on 12 June 1901. When she started at Moberly School on the Harrow Road in 1910, the family were living nearby at 78 Chippenham Mews. Two years later, at the end of 1912, William

The Samuelson Film Companies – a Cricklewood success story

George Berthold Samuelson, known as ‘Bertie’ was born in Southport Lancashire in 1889. By 1910 he had started the Royal Film Agency and was one of the first film renters. In late December he had moved the successful business to 270 Corporation Street in Birmingham. With his acquired capital, he decided to make a patriotic film about Queen Victoria called ‘Sixty Years a Queen’ at Will Barker’s Ealing Studio in 1913. The film cost the huge sum of £12,000 to make, but it was extremely popular and made Bertie a profit of £40,000 (worth over £4M today).  With this success, Bertie decided to buy his own studio to make films. The Samuelson Film Manufacturing Company Ltd was set up on 30 May 1914 with £2,000 in £1 shares. He heard that Worton Hall, a 40-room house with nine acres of land in Isleworth, was for sale. Samuelson bought it in 1914 and the official opening of the studios was held on 1 July, where the guest of honour was the famous music hall star Vesta Tilley. Samuelson employed the