Sunday, 30 October 2011

The Gardens of Delargo Towers - October

Well then me dears;
Nights are drawing in, theres a slight chill to the evening, Summer is coming to an end
Here at Delargo Towers we are looking and feeling a little old and shabby but the Cosmos that has served us so well this year is still hanging on

The Nasturtiums have gone crazy but at least they are green and the strong colour of the flowers is quite welcome at this time of year. We will be more careful with them next year, though.





 Hollyhocks and Lupins for next year.
The window boxes are in urgent need of a good sort out.

 Campanula for next year
 The Black-Eyed Susan is doing well
 Yes we did actualy get a crop of toms from the poor little plant Alistair rescued from his office
 We just made the R H S Autumn show before it closed this year and aquired two new Streptocarpus, Ruby and Targa. They were covered in flower when we bought them ( from the display stand ) but dropped there flowers almost immediately and have looked very sickly ever since.


Its time to batten down the hatches and have a good clear up before the winter really sets in.

I am not looking forward to the dark cold and damp with just a seed catologue to keep me warm.
Hey Ho
We will see what November has in store,

ttfn



Sunday, 23 October 2011

My kind of Diva - Line Renaud

I thought a "My kind of Diva" post was well overdue, so to make amends here we go with the wonderful Line Renaud!


A true Mademoiselle from Armentières, Line Renaud began life as Jacqueline Enté in Pont-de-Nieppe on 2 July 1928. As far as I can tell, the only famous person ever to come from there.

Situated by the Belgian border, it is 42 km southeast of Dunkerque or Dunkirk. The only places of interest are Château de Nieppe (a rather dull looking country house not a castle) and the cemeteries of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

Not the most promising of beginnings for a Diva, but  from the midst of northern France Line Renaud went on to conquer Paris and bathe in the glittering lights of Las Vegas.


Never what you would call a great looker, and with what was thought of as a common, Northern, working class accent, she made it to the top with sheer talent and has stayed at the top right up till today.
Lets see her in action.


She made her national debut on Radio Luxembourg, singing on a Sunday morning programme.
A contract with Pathe Marconi was followed by her recording of "Ma Cabane au Canada", written by Loulou Gasté, which won le Grand Prix du Disque.


She also sang with Yves Montand and recorded with Dean Martin.
Whilst performing at Moulin Rouge she met Bob Hope and consequently appeared in five episodes of The Bob Hope Show.

Line Renaud performed at the Waldorf Astoria, the Coconut Grove and in a Las Vegas show.
She helped save the  Casino de Paris, when it was threatened with closing, by putting on a show called "Paris – Line" with Loulou Gasté, which ran for four years.

Line Renaud Plaisirs 1959

Line also found time to clock up 23 films (58 if you include TV movies) between 1946 and 2008.



In 1950, she married "Loulou" Gasté and stayed with him until his death in 1995. One of the great marriages of all time. She was 16 when she met  her song writer hero (b. Luis Gasté) -  he was 37.
"Loulou" become her mentor, changing her image and her name to Renaud - her mother's maiden name.


Here is the lucky man inbetween Line Renaud and Dalida:


and the truly wonderful birthday tribute to Aznavour follows next.
If this does not bring a lump to your throat then nothing ever could!



Still working and recording and filming, Line Renaud also found time in 1985, to create  "l'Association des Artistes Contre le Sida", and organised televised art events to raise funds for helping AIDS research in France. In 1989 she put on a one-off show which retraced her forty year career.

In 2009, she used her position as Vice-President of Sidaction to condemn the statements of Pope Benedict XVI, who claimed that condoms promote AIDS.


I will leave you with her singing a track from her last album Rue Washington published in 2010



ttfn

Thursday, 29 September 2011

The Gardens of Delargo Towers - September

A little late this month but here we are.


As you can see the cosmos is still doing sterling work


We wanted the nasturtiums to cover some of the concrete of the patio it has done that and then some. It almost engulfed the table at one point.


With it and the pots we have a cosy if full place to sit and enjoy the garden





 The petunias are over and the window boxes need a little T. L. C.
The geraniums are still looking good though.

And giving us a nice bit of colour to carry on the 'jewel garden' theme






The black eyed Susan is holding its own too.

Not much happening in the long border. I think we will have to work on late season colour for next year

 The first of the babies for next year

Campanular, Lupins and Hollyhock.

so with thoughts for next year we head into October and Autumn I leave you with the streptocarpus (not yet fully recovered)





t t f n



.

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Tony's singular adventures - Euston to Kennington

Hello me dears
I actually started this post more than a month ago but some how Euston ended up as a post on its own.
It was however particularly bizzare adventure. The day started with the plan to meet Alistair at Kew Gardens but he had to stay in awaiting some spotty youth to fix his internet connection. I was in limbo, not knowing how long it would be before he arrived.


Not knowing what to do (Kew no longer being an option) I headed for town.


Wanting to get above ground asap to be in phone contact, I ended up at Euston.


With the day ebbing away and still no sign of anyone even woggling Alistairs ariel or what ever it is they do now, I jumped on the 59 bus and headed south of the river.


Past Russell Square.

The agricultural fields now known as Bloomsbury came into ownership of the Russell family In 1669. The Russell family possess the peerage of Duke of Bedford.


In 1771 William Russell was found guilty of being party to the ‘Rye House’ plot to assassinate Charles II and was beheaded in Lincoln Inn Fields.

Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford (1765–1802) was a spendthrift gambler. He was not interested in his family home Bedford House or in Bloomsbury, he instead preferred living in the West End.. He decided to develop the estate, with Bedford House as the central feature, but later instructed his developer to demolish Bedford House.


It was Francis Russell's brother John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford, who eventually devoped the entire estate and was also responsible for the building of the Covent Garden Market.




I loved Bloomsbury even before I saw it, due to the song sung by Twiggy in Ken Russell's 'The Boyfriend'



Kingsway. Big, Wide, Grand, and Sterile


In 1905 a new route for traffic between Holborn and Fleet Street ploughed its way through what was called slums (I call them people's homes and history) to create Aldwych and Kingsway. There never was an old or new "Wych" nor "Wick" - the name was invented by commitee to give some semblance of historical continuitity. They choice Wych deliberately rather than Wick as they thought that would look to obviously made-up just to sound old.




A little further and on the left of what is now nothing more than an 'All Bar One' was the first recorded gay pub (or Molly House) in London. Unfortunately it is only due to the court records of the Old Bailey that we know of its existence and the fate of its customers:
Read 'Rictor Norton'


Now! The photo above is not mine. I did my best but the bus driver drove like a lunatic around onto Aldwich. Staying on my seat was a challenge let alone taking a picture of the BBC World Service HQ at Bush House through a dirty bus window. I thank who ever took this and if they are churlish enough to want me to remove it I will.





And so, we cross the river via the famous Waterloo Bridge.


You have to love the South Bank - there is always something odd and wonderful to see.


I jumped off the 59 at this point, but unfortunatly a bit further down from Waterloo Station than I would have preferred.


This however gave me time to embrace the 'Old Vic' and have a fag at the same time.


Back onto a rather crowded bus, and on to Walworth and East Street Market.


There has been street trading in the Walworth area since the 16th Century, when farmers rested their livestock on Walworth Common before continuing to the city. During the Industrial Revolution, stalls lined the whole of the Walworth Road, but the market has only been officially running since 1880.
East Street is also the birthplace of Charlie Chaplin and features in the title sequence to the television programme Only Fools and Horses.


Map showing site of Walworth Manor House, 1871.





This is the area I used to live when I moved to London and I love it. I call it 'my old Manor' which is funny as judging my the map above I did indeed live very close to the site of Walworth Manor House.



It also appears from this map that I lived on the site of the Surrey Zoological Gardens.



The street where I lived, Berryfield Road.


I can't remember the house number or the real name of this pub near the corner.


A lot of the shops have gone.


But at least they have made it colourful.



Braganza Street (which I think is called New Street on the map). Why it was named after a Portuguese noble family who ruled Portugal and its colonial Empire from 1640 to 1910, I have no idea. Unless it was to honour Catherine of Braganza who  introduced the custom of drinking tea to Britain; not only drinking tea but "High Tea" at 5:00 pm.


The above photo is of a strange little garden. It always intrigued me. It is in fact 'Walworth Garden Farm', which was founded in 1987 by local residents who created a farm on derelict land to provide education, training and resources in organic horticulture for the local community. How fab!


As we get closer to Kennington Park Road there is Georgian archetecture along with the Victorian and modern (a nasty Wimpey-type development I ignored).



The back of some of the wonderful and grand terraced houses on Kennington Park Road.



Past Kennington tube to our destination...



...Kennington Cross...


...The Dog House Pub, a pint of Black Sheep ale and an evening with Alistair.


ttfn