Book description
 If the trade of the gossip columnist is trivial, then all life is
trivial' Â- Nigel Dempster No one is more responsible for Britain's
current obsession with celebrity culture than the late, great gossip
columnist Nigel Dempster (1941-2007). For a quarter of a century, as
the editor of the Daily Mail's Diary, he was the man perfectly placed
and qualified to record Â- and accelerate Â- the end of the age of
deference. Indeed, for many people Dempster's Diary was the Mail. His
page, with its scurrilous revelations about the great, the good, and
the not-so good, was the only one to read. Bursting on to the national
stage in the Seventies, in his kipper ties and too-tight suits,
Dempster was the people's cad - exposing the infidelities of Harold
Pinter and Lady Antonia Fraser or James Goldsmith and Annabel Birley,
paying tipsters like the bouffant Lord Lichfield with crates of
champagne. He was a consummate journalist, too, breaking such
then-huge stories as the collapse of Princess Margaret's marriage and
the resignation of Harold Wilson. But for all his convivial charm and
canny ability to infiltrate the smart set, Dempster led a strangely
isolated life. Marred by broken relationships and a dependence on
drink, its ending was both pitiful and inspiring. In this riveting
study of a man and his milieu, Tim Willis treats Dempster's bibulous
journey through old Fleet Street and Society as a tragi-comic romp.
And through it, he provides a portrait of a changing world.
A freelance writer and editor, Tim Willis has worked for most of
Britain's national newspapers and some of its glossier magazines. He is
also the author of Madcap (Short Books, 2002), a well-received biography
of Pink Floyd's 'crazy diamond' Syd Barrett. Tim lives in Pershore,
Worcestershire.