Just Finished Reading: An English Affair – Sex, Class and Power in the Age of Profumo by Richard Davenport-Hines (FP: 2013) [345pp]
When the Profumo Affair burst into the headlines in May 1963 it passed me by. As I’d just turned 3 years old at the time this is hardly surprising. No doubt my mother, seeing the headlines and maybe even reading further in the Daily Sketch stopped for a moment to ‘tut’ and maybe say something about “London people”. It was only much, much later that I was introduced to the scandal that was fully expected to bring down a government and tarnish ‘the establishment’ for years to come. Despite the fact that the ‘affair’, as I discovered in this often riveting book, was pretty much a storm in a tea cup (Earl Grey no doubt!) and a largely manufactured one at that, books have been written, documentaries made and movies produced laying out in great detail the seedy demise of respectable 50’s Britain and the start of the so-called ‘Swinging 60’s’. As nearly always with such historical ‘myths and legends’ the reality is somewhat different from that portrayed in the tabloid press at the time and in the subsequent sensationalist TV and movie adaptations.
Britain in the late 1950’s was still recovering from the
Second World War. Despite the Prime Minister’s famous (or infamous) quote about
the British people ‘never having it so good’ they clearly wanted more. Women
especially had restricted lives, in the workplace, in public and especially in
the bedroom. In an era before The Pill or easily obtainable abortions women
were expected to be chaste before marriage and (re)productive afterwards.
Motherhood was to be their primary role – or at least that was the expectation
both from the general public and the Establishment. Naturally women, especially
young women, would have none of that. Like youth everywhere they wanted fun and
they wanted to have good times as often as possible. As always there were
enough men, in both high and low places, who were more than willing to show
them a good time. One of those men, in the early 1960’s was Jack Profumo who
most definitely had an eye for pretty girls. Indeed he married one – film actress
Valerie Hobson – in 1954. Not that this stopped him looking further afield.
Enter Christine Keeler, an attractive 20 something brunette, who wasn’t
bothered at all by Jack’s married status. One thing led to another and, as
things do, they ended up in bed together. So much so sordid and little of
national importance. Until that is it came to light who else Miss Keeler was
sharing her favours with - Yevgeny Ivanov, the Soviet naval attaché. On its own
even this wouldn’t have raised very many issues or eyebrows except for one very
important factor: Jack Profumo was the Minister of War (back in the days when
we had a War Department rather than a Ministry of Defence) so Miss Keeler’s
sleeping arrangements had suddenly become a matter of National Security.
4 comments:
i missed this... i was living in Chihuahua at the time...
I doubt if it was on anyone's radar outside the UK (and possibly Russia!). A mountain out of a mole-hill even at the time I think. Almost a scandal for scandals sake. Interesting insights into the attitudes of the time though.
Is there a reason the Minister for Silly Walks is on the front cover?
A generic picture of the stereo-typical British civil servant [grin]
Welcome Back to the land of the living online. Feeling MUCH better I do hope!!
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