Book description
The extraordinary decade of the 1960's was always slightly out of sync.
It began late - with a remarkable flourish in 1963 with The Beatles,
That Was the Week That Was, the Profumo affair and the Great Train
Robbery all competing in an atmosphere of giggling frivolity for
newspaper headlines - and ended in the early seventies in
disillusionment, growing unemployment and accelerating inflation. During
that period Ray Connolly was at the centre of the whirlpool of popular
arts and rock music, and his weekly journalistic profile of the famous
and infamous became an acknowledged notice-board for the style-makers of
the sixties. This book collects fifty of his most celebrated character
studies and for the most part the subjects are men and women from the
author's own age-group - Mick Jagger, Jean Shrimpton, Peter Fonda, David
Bailey and Germaine Greer - young people who saw the opportunity to make
waves during that era of extravagance, and whose images we saw reflected
everywhere. In compiling this book, Ray Connolly has been able to recall
the superstars of that time and also to discover what has happened to
them since those days of heady optimism. The extraordinary decade of
the 1960's was always slightly out of sync. It began late - with a
remarkable flourish in 1963 with The Beatles, That Was the Week That
Was, the Profumo affair and the Great Train Robbery all competing in an
atmosphere of giggling frivolity for newspaper headlines - and ended in
the early seventies in disillusionment, growing unemployment and
accelerating inflation. During that period Ray Connolly was at the
centre of the whirlpool of popular arts and rock music, and his weekly
journalistic profile of the famous and infamous became an acknowledged
notice-board for the style-makers of the sixties. This book collects
fifty of his most celebrated character studies and for the most part the
subjects are men and women from the author's own age-group - Mick
Jagger, Jean Shrimpton, Peter Fonda, David Bailey and Germaine Greer -
young people who saw the opportunity to make waves during that era of
extravagance, and whose images we saw reflected everywhere. In compiling
this book, Ray Connolly has been able to recall the superstars of that
time and also to discover what has happened to them since those days of
heady optimism.