Books
Geoff Deane

From Mohair Suits to Kinky Boots

A very funny book packed with very funny stories, written by a very funny and often peculiar man Jonathan Ross. The Samuel Pepys of East London Maurice Gran. As the lead singer of Modern Romance he toured the world, as the screenwriter of Kinky Boots he conquered Hollywood, now comes Geoff Deane's latest act as a brilliant and witty ranconteur in this hilarious memoir. Geoff Deane has worked as a fly-pitcher selling out of a suitcase, and flogged suits on Brick Lane market in London's East End. He was the singer in a much-loved culty punk band the Leyton Buzzards, a floppy-haired pop star in Modern Romance, a songwriter, and record producer. He wrote a gay anthem for John Waters drag queen muse Divine, worked as journalist and restaurant critic for style magazines The Face and Arena, before becoming a successful writer and producer of TV comedy. And then he wrote a couple of films, one of which, Kinky Boots, became a Tony Award winning Broadway stage show. With a cast ranging from local oddballs to international celebrities, Geoff Deane's unique take on the world is only matched by his extraordinarily rich use of language, with a smattering of Cockney rhyming slang, Yiddish and Polari. A glossary is provided.
255 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2023
Publication year
2023
Publisher
Muswell Press
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Impressions

  • Эдилхан Айманshared an impression13 days ago
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Quotes

  • Эдилхан Айманhas quoted13 days ago
    Adam and Eve: believe

    Aris: from bottle and glass, arse. Shortened to bottle, rhyming with Aristotle, then shortened again to Aris

    Barnet: from Barnet Fair – hair

    Boat: from boat race – face

    Brassic/boracic: from boracic lint - skint

    Bristol: from Bristol City – titty/breast

    Brown bread: dead

    Bugle: nose

    Bunny: from rabbit and pork - talk

    Buntz: profit (Yiddish)

    Claret: blood

    Clobber: clothes

    Cream crackered: knackered, tired

    Crew: gang

    Deuce and ace: face

    Dog and bone: phone

    Drum: abode, home

    Farmer Giles: piles

    Four-by-two: Jew

    Full SP: from bookies’ starting prices - the whole situation

    Gaff: building or premises

    Gander: from Gander’s hook - look

    Gary Glitter: shitter/toilet

    Gooner: Gunner, Arsenal fan

    Gornisht: nothing (Yiddish)

    Gregory Peck: cheque, or neck

    Half-inch: to pinch, steal

    Hampsteads: from Hampstead Heath - teeth

    Hampton: from Hampton Wick – prick

    Handle: name
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