With the forthcoming release of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, old Deptfordian Gary Oldman is interviewed in this week's Radio Times. Besides his acting career, he discusses with interviewer Danny Leigh his "rough childhood in hard-up Deptford, where his father walked out when he was seven". Incidentally this ultimately led him to write and direct Nil by Mouth, demonstrating Deptford's ability to inspire creativity in unexpected ways... but returning to the interview, he is asked if he ever goes back:
"Occasionally. It doesn't change. London changes, but Deptford is... Deptford. The same men I was always scared of but fascinated by are all still there. In the pub."
Interesting use of the singular - there are very few pubs in SE8 nowadays! I wonder if he had a particular one in mind?
Bobby Seale of the Black Panthers in Brixton (1992) - as reported by
undercover police
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Bobby Seale was one of the founders of the Black Panther Party in the USA
and like many of its activists bore the brunt of repression from the
American s...