Joan Littlewood Pleasure Roll 51 - Gambling, shoe shining, street scenes
ProRes digital file Black & White Silent 1963 5:44
Summary: Betting shop and pinball.
Scenes from streets and betting shops, including slot machines, shoe-shining and extended shots from inside a London bookie.
Title number: 19966
LSA ID: LSA/26409
Description: After evening scenes in London streets, including shopping and a shoe shine, this film focuses on London’s gambling options. First we see an amusement arcade, with a shooting game, slot machines, roulette and pinball, before extended scenes from inside a betting shop, with several great portraits of gamblers. This is a rush from a 1963 filmed made by Joan Littlewood looking at what Londoners did for fun.
Credits: Joan Littlewood (Director); Walter Lassally (Camera operator)
Further information: Joan Littlewood was an English theatre director best remembered for her work in such productions as A Taste of Honey, Fings Ain’t Wot They Used t’Be and Oh, What a Lovely War! Her interests, however, went far beyond the world of theatre. In collaboration with the architect Cedric Price she came up with the idea of Fun Palaces. Their idea was to create a moveable construction that would become a space where people of all ages could come together to explore and learn about arts, science and culture, a “university of the streets”.
In order to promote this venture she made a film which was reportedly shown at the National Film Theatre in the early 1970s but has since disappeared without a trace. This short film is part of the rushes shot as part of that project in London and the South East. Shot in pubs and clubs, galleries and museums, air shows and stock car races, the 16mm films are a window on life in 1963, from mixed couples dancing in backstreet clubs, striptease acts in East End pubs, and life in the new tower blocks which were springing up out of the postwar ‘slum clearance’.
Although sadly the Fun Palaces did not come to fruition during her lifetime, in October 2014, the weekend before her centenary, hundreds of fun palaces appeared across the UK and beyond. During the weekend, over 150 venues and companies enlisted along with independent artists, scientists and community events organisers. Fun Palaces are now very much a community event created by and for local people. They are held in a variety of locations, ranging from libraries, shopping centres, schools, parks, village squares, community halls, swimming pools, etc.
In galleries: Joan Littlewood - The need for Fun Palaces
Locations: London; United Kingdom
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