Peter Stringfellow

This article is about the nightclub owner. For the footballer, see Peter Stringfellow (footballer).
Peter Stringfellow
Born Peter James Stringfellow
(1940-10-17) 17 October 1940
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, UK
Residence
Nationality British
Alma mater Sheffield Central Technical College
Occupation Nightclub owner
Known for Nightclubs and Gentlemen's clubs
Spouse(s)
  • Norma Williams (1960–1965)
  • Coral Wright (1967–1989)
  • Bella Wright (2009—)
Children
  • Karen Stringfellow
  • Scott Stringfellow
  • Rosabella Stringfellow
  • Angelo Stringfellow
Parent(s) James William Stringfellow
Elsie Bowers
Relatives Geoffrey Stringfellow
Paul Stringfellow
Terry Stringfellow
Website

Peter James Stringfellow (born 17 October 1940 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England) is a British businessman and nightclub owner.[1]

Early life

Stringfellow was born in the City General Hospital, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, on 17 October 1940, to Elsie Bowers and James William Stringfellow, a steelworker who served in the Royal Scots Greys during the Second World War. He is the eldest of four, his three brothers are Geoffrey, Paul and Terry.[2]

The family lived in Andover Street, Pitsmoor, Sheffield until 1948 when they had moved to Marshall Street, Pitsmoor. Peter Stringfellow attended Pye Bank Church of England Primary School. He failed his 11 plus and so attended Burngreave Secondary School for one year. He then passed the exam for Sheffield Central Technical College and he left three years later at the age of 15 with a 4th grade Technical Diploma.[3]

Career

When Stringfellow was only 13 years old, he worked at the Wicker Cinema but his first job after leaving school was as an assistant tie salesman at Austen Reed for three weeks. This was followed by half a day as an apprentice car mechanic. He then spent three days as a trainee barber before finding work as a trainee projectionist at the Regal Cinema in Sheffield. Under pressure from his father, he left the cinema and went to join his father an apprentice turner. He stayed six weeks then enrolled as an apprentice in the Merchant Navy, at the age of 16, as a trainee waiter, and a kitchen hand galley boy. His sailing career lasted two years and took him to Philadelphia and New York where he celebrated his 17th Birthday. From there he visited various Caribbean Islands and finally Venezuela, returning to Tilbury Docks, England. He decided the sea life was not for him and he returned to Sheffield.

On his return to Sheffield, he worked briefly, at least one matinee show, as a curtain boy at the Lyceum Cinema. He finally settled as a van boy for Gillott's Bakery where he met his first wife, Norma Williams. After passing his driving test at 18, he had several jobs. He worked successively as a travelling photographer, in Sutherland’s potted meat factory, and at Nova Sewing Machines and Dobson’s Furnishings Company. While at Dobson's he was convicted of selling stolen carpets and sentenced to two weeks in Armley Prison, Leeds in June 1962 and six weeks in Ford Open Prison.[4][5]

After his brief incarceration, he was unable to find regular work and this led to the beginning of his career as a nightclub owner.

Nightclub management

In 1962, Stringfellow rented St. Aidan's Church Hall in Sheffield every Friday night, also known as the Black Cat Club. Several bands played in the club, such as the Pursuers, Dave Berry and the Cruisers, Johnny Tempest and the Cadillacs and from London, Screaming Lord Sutch, the Savages, Count Lindsay and Gene Vincent.[6] His fortunes changed when the Beatles played on 2 April 1963. The demand for concert tickets was so great that Stringfellow was forced to rent a larger venue, the Azena Ballroom in Sheffield. On that night he sent the Beatles a telegram congratulating them on their first album, Please Please Me.[6][7]

In 1963 Stringfellow began another club, the Blue Moon, at St. John's Church Hall in Sheffield. The opening act was the Marauders who had a record in the British top 30. More bands followed such as the Kinks. Other bands that played at the club and who later became famous were Freddie Starr and the Midnighters, the Searchers, Shane Fenton and the Fentones, Wayne Fontana, Long John Baldry and the Hoochie Coochie Men, Rod Stewart and the Soul Agents, Vance Arnold & the Avengers, Dean Marshall and the Deputies.[8] Also in the same year, Stringfellow's Theatre promotions at Sheffield City Hall were a big success. They featured acts such as the Rolling Stones, the Big Three, Fleetwood Mac and the Nice.

In 1964, Stringfellow opened another club called King Mojo Club in Sheffield. During its three and half years of business, many bands played at the club, including the Who, Pink Floyd, Long John Baldry, Rod Stewart, Elton John, the Merseybeats and the Hurd, the Spencer Davis Group, the Pretty Things, Manfred Mann, the Small Faces, Jimi Hendrix. Other American acts who played in the club, included the first Tamla/Motown acts to play in the UK, Ben E. King, Sonny Boy Williamson, Tina Turner and Little Stevie Wonder.[9][10][11]

Peter Stringfellow is one of 16 nightclub and bar professionals to be listed in the Nightclub Hall of Fame [12]

In 1968, he went into another business with Down Broadway. It was the first proper premises for clubbing. It was just below the Stylo's shoe shop in the centre of Sheffield.[13]On 4 November 1968 Jethro Tull was the first act to play at Down Broadway and John Peel was booked to play as the Star DJ. Super group Yes also played at the club. In 1969, Stringfellow acquired the first alcohol licence for another of his clubs called the Penthouse – Sheffield. The club only lasted for a year due to trouble with overcrowding and objections from the local police. This prompted him to sell it and move to Leeds.[9][10]

In 1970, he opened Cinderella's in Leeds.[2] This was Stringfellow's first super club, mixing recorded music and live bands.[10][14] In 1972, Stringfellow acquired a space next door to Cinderella to create another club called Rockafella's. This was the first and last of his super cabaret and super clubs. Comedy duo Mike & Bernie Winters and magician Paul Daniels performed at the club. The two clubs were combined in 1973 and given the name Cinderella Rockafella's, and Stringfellow dropped the cabaret and put in full-time DJs such as Chris Crossley and Peter Tyler. He and his brother, Paul Stringfellow, also served as DJs.

In 1976, Stringfellow and his then business partner and brother, Geoffrey Stringfellow, sold the Cinderella Rockafella's to Mecca and moved to Manchester, where they opened the Millionaire Club.[15][16] There were no live bands in the Millionaire Club. However, the Stringfellows hired named DJs including Peter Tyler and Brett Sinclair.

In 1980, he sold the Millionaire Club to Granada Ltd and he then moved with his whole family to London. There he opened Stringfellows Covent Garden.[17] It was an immediate success as a night club in London, where celebrities, international film stars, TV personalities, rock stars, models, paparazzi and national newspaper journalists partied for the next 15 years. In 1983, Stringfellow took over the old cabaret club, Talk of the Town, which had been closed down. He re-opened it with its original name Hippodrome and it became the "World's Greatest Disco".[18] The Hippodrome introduced its first gay night at the venue under his management.[19][20]

In 1986, he opened Stringfellow's – New York which was successfully frequented by New York celebrities, rock stars and other personalities. In 1989, he opened Stringfellow's – Miami, and this was followed by Stringfellow's – Los Angeles in 1990. He had huge financial losses due to the American economic recession in 1989.[11][21][22]

In 1996, Stringfellow's autobiography, King of Clubs, was published by Little Brown. It was serialised in the Baltimore Sun newspaper and became a best-seller.[21]

In 2005, political blogger Guido Fawkes launched an online campaign for Stringfellow to be knighted.

Adult clubbing

In 1990, Stringfellow introduced table dancing to his New York club with a licensing deal with Michael J. Peters. This became Stringfellow's Presents Pure Platinum.[16][17][21]

In 1996, Cabaret of Angels, a table-side dancing club was opened for three nights a week at Stringfellow's Covent Garden.[17]

In 2006, Stringfellow opened his second adult entertainment club called Angels in Wardour Street, Soho.[23] He was the first club owner to gain a fully nude licence from Westminster City Council. In 2009, he criticised the Policing and Crime Act 2009, saying the licensing changes with regards to lap dancing were "unnecessary” and he would be appealing to the European Court of Human Rights if his current licences were not renewed.[24][25] In 2012, he was granted the necessary SEV Licence for Stringfellow's Covent Garden and Angels Soho.[26] and has been able to successfully market Angels as providing rooms for the entertainment "in privacy"[27] of young women in lingerie.[28]

Television

Stringfellow first appeared on television as a warm-up act on Ready Steady Go! in 1964. He has contributed to numerous programmes, both radio and television, over the last 50 years. He appeared on the celebrity edition of Come Dine with Me, with the first broadcast on 17 September 2008.[29][30] He also appeared in season 15 episode 1 of Top Gear, which was broadcast on 27 June 2010, where he had to help Jeremy Clarkson when he was stuck in a rolled over Reliant Robin.[31]

He has declined offers to appear on I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!, Celebrity Big Brother and Strictly Come Dancing.[32]

More recently he has appeared in an advertising campaign for travel insurance company Avanti Travel Insurance. [33]

Personal life

Stringfellow, at age 68, married 27-year-old former Royal Ballet dancer, Bella Wright, in Barbados on Valentine’s Day 2009.[34][35] He was previously married to Norma Williams in 1960. They had a daughter, Karen who was born in the 1960s, now a successful restaurant owner in Florida. After they divorced, he married Coral Wright in 1967. They have one son together, Scott, a racing driver. They divorced in 1984.[36] He also had a 12-year relationship with Frizzby Fox ,which ended in 1996, and then with model and actress Helen Benoist, with whom he lived until 1998.[37] In early 2013, he and his wife announced she was pregnant with their first child together.[38] On 1 August 2013, it was announced that Stringfellow's wife had given birth to a daughter, Rosabella.[39] The couple's second child, a son was born in September 2015 and named Angelo.[40] He lives in London and in Mallorca, where he kept a boat for many years.

He has supported the Conservatives and UKIP.[41]

References

  1. Matt Killeya (7 November 2001). "An evening with Peter Stringfellow". Durham21. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Peter Stringfellow". BBC Online. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  3. Lafferty, Fiona (1996). King of Clubs: The Autobiography of Peter Stringfellow. Chapter 1, Page 11: Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0316879339.
  4. Kamilla Baiden (12 August 2011). "Peter Stringfellow: my greatest mistake". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  5. "Peter Stringfellow says prison was best error". Sheffield Star. 17 August 2011. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  6. 1 2 Lafferty, Fiona (1996). King of Clubs: The Autobiography of Peter Stringfellow. Chapter 4, Page 42: Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0316879339.
  7. "Live: Azena Ballroom, Sheffield". Beatles Bible. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  8. Mike Ritson and Stuart Russell. "The In Crowd: The Story of the Northern and Rare Soul Scene". Amazon.com. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  9. 1 2 "Profiles: Peter Stringfellow". BBC. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  10. 1 2 3 Anderson, Niel. "Dirty Stop Out's Guide to 1960's Sheffield". The Mod Generation. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  11. 1 2 "The stars Peter Stringfellow will never forget". Evening Standard. 1 February 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  12. "Peter Stringfellow - Official Nightclub Hall of Fame". Nightclubhalloffame.com. Retrieved 2014-06-29.
  13. Lafferty, Fiona (1996). King of Clubs: The Autobiography of Peter Stringfellow. Chapter 7, Page 92: Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0316879339.
  14. Matthew Richards (2002). "Naked ambition: Design a club the Peter Stringfellow way". Building Magazine. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  15. "Millionaire Club Manchester". Manchester District and Music Archive. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  16. 1 2 "Interview with Peter Stringfellow". Strip EU. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  17. 1 2 3 "Stringfellows Covent Garden". Stringfellows Covent Garden. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  18. "London Hippodrome". Shadow Plays. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  19. "London Hippodrome". Dreamland News. 4 July 1985. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  20. Since 1976 on a Monday and Thursday (in the basement of the London Astoria, Charing Cross Road) a gay night called BANG had been operating, which 15 years later became G-A-Y nightclub.
  21. 1 2 3 Bill Glauber (14 October 1999). "A not-so-stodgy Englishman". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  22. Amira Hashish (1 February 2011). "The stars Peter Stringfellow will never forget". Evening Standard. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  23. "Angels Club – Soho". Angels Club – Soho. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  24. "Getting tough on titillation – lap dancing clubs hit by new licensing legislation". Icqurimage Magazine. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  25. Andy Dangerfield (12 November 2010). "Too much sex in the city, say London's councils". BBC. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  26. "London strip scene gossip August 2012". Strip Magazine. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  27. "EXPERIENCE OUR VIP ROOMS".
  28. Archived 2 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  29. "Series 8 | Episode 16 | Celebrity Come Dine with Me – Peter Stringfellow". Channel 4. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  30. Lisa McGarry (17 September 2008). "CELEBRITY COME DINE WITH ME: With Peter Stringfellow, Lee Ryan, Michelle Heaton & Linda Barker". Unreality TV. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  31. "The one with Icelandic volcano". Top Gear. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  32. Neil Wilkes (17 September 2008). "Peter Stringfellow". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  33. "Why Peter Stringfellow is helping older people find holiday insurance". This is Money. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  34. "Love across the ages: Peter Stringfellow cavorts in the surf with the wife who is 41 years his junior". London: Daily Mail. 29 October 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  35. "Peter Stringfellow weds his ballet dancer wife in Barbados". Daily Mirror. 14 February 2009. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  36. Natalie Clarke (6 March 2009). "Why HAS this 26-year-old beauty married 68-year-old Peter Stringfellow? And what did her father do when he found out?". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  37. Helen Benoist Official Website page, 'About Me'.
  38. Dadds, Kimberly (7 February 2013). "A father again at 72: Peter Stringfellow announces news his 30-year-old wife Bella is pregnant". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  39. Dadds, Kimberly (1 August 2013). "Peter Stringfellow, 72, welcomes a daughter as wife Bella gives birth". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  40. Midgley, Dominic (26 March 2015). "Lapdance magnate Peter Stringfellow - the 74-year-old who is set to become a dad AGAIN". Express. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  41. "Peter Stringfellow backs Ukip in London council by-election". BBC News. 12 April 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
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