When I spoke to Wonder Woman, she had no clothes on …

Lynda Carter Wonder Woman x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Lynda Carter, in her ‘Wonder Woman’ prime, stepped naked and wet from the shower as I said ‘hello’ to begin our interview about life after three seasons as TV’s top female superhero.

Disappointingly for me, we were more than 2,000 miles apart; she at her ranch just north of Malibu in California, me in Toronto, Canada.  She chuckled as she explained why it had taken her so long to come to the phone. We were live on the radio but I dined out for a long time on my yarn about the time I interviewed Wonder Woman when she was in the nude and it’s a fond memory on the 50th anniversary of the launch of her series.

It was Saturday Oct. 16, 1982, and I was on my regular weekly spot on the topic of television on Radio CJCL in Toronto with popular broadcaster Tom Fulton. He was the pro and I was the TV ‘expert’ and since the radio station was owned by Telemedia, which also owned TV Guide Canada, where I worked, it was a good fit. Not least because I was able to get Hollywood stars live on the phone on a Saturday morning, most of them not in their birthday suit.

lynda carter hotlineCarter had moved on from ‘Wonder Woman’ after 60 episodes in 1979 and was busy making music specials and TV-movies about social issues such as ‘The Last Song’ (1980), about pollution, and  ‘Born to be Wild’ (1981), about illicit adoptions. Her latest at the time, though, was a straightforward thriller called ‘Hotline’ (right), which was to air the night we spoke. She played a troubled woman convinced she is being stalked by a deranged murder suspect.  I suggested that she’d done it for the fun of it.

‘That’s exactly right,’ she said. ‘It was very hard to do but it was a lot of fun because it was really the first chance I’ve had with something like this. It’s also the first time that I’ve ever

lynda carter rita hayworthhad a romantic interest on television in my entire career.’ On ‘Wonder Woman’, as  Diana Prince she performed her derring do with Col. Steve Trevor Jr., played by Lyle Waggoner. He didn’t count? She chuckled down the line and said: ‘Well, no. Not really.’

Her career has continued to flourish with TV-movies, including the title role in ‘Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess’ (1983, left) and TV series such as the private detective show ‘Partners in Crime’ (1984) with Loni Anderson (‘WKRP in Cincinnati’) and period drama “Hawkeye” (1994) with Lee Horsley. She played the U.S. President in the 2015 TV series ‘Supergirl’ and she remains a very popular singer on the concert circuit with gigs at major venues (below left). She would perform at Hollywood’s Catalina Jazz Club and the Apple Room, home of Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York, that November.

Some stars who become so closely associated with a TV series on the order of ‘Wonder Woman’ come to regret it later, but that’s not been true of Carter. She said, ‘It’s never been a problem with me. I’ve never felt like it was a problem. I think that actors generally can fall into stereotypes  no matter what series they’ve been on. People see you every week as one particular person lynda carter now x325and they sometimes have a hard time readjusting. But they haven’t done that so far. They’ve been tuning in to see pretty much everything I’ve done and I’m thrilled with that.’

Was she concerned that whenever Wonder Woman was mentioned in the media there would be a picture of her in costume?

‘It doesn’t bother me at all,’ she said. ‘It is something that I did and I certainly can’t control the way that people remember me. I think it will be with my name probably for the rest of my life and afterwards. It’ll be in reruns for a long time. It sold well overseas too, in more than 100 countries. There’s really no place I can go in the world that hasn’t seen it. It’s been very good for me, though, because I have a diversified career so it has provided me with an opportunity to be very well known around the world.’

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Recalling Michael Conrad, Hill Street’s articulate sergeant

By Ray Bennett

The only word for Michael Conrad, the American actor born on this day 100 years ago, who played veteran cop Sgt. Phil Esterhaus in the long-running U.S. crime series ‘Hill Street Blues’ in the early Eighties, was formidable.

It wasn’t just that he stood a robust six-feet-four but his countenance stirred apprehension. He told me, ‘I can put a look on my face that people back away from.’ Esterhaus was the loquacious officer who led the roll call at the start of each episode of the show and told his men, ‘Let’s be careful out there.’

He had a long list of film and television credits often playing heavies but in ‘Hill Street Blues, playing’ a bear of a man, he was articulate with a compassionate regard for his squad and catnip for women. Life imitated art while when he and I had lunch in Alice’s Restaurant at the Malibu Pier early in the show’s run.

A very attractive woman stopped at our table, lowered her voice and said, ‘Excuse me, but I just have to say that I love you’ and walked away. Conrad said, ‘It’s amazing how many women find me so attractive in my middle years.’ Of course, I reminded him, Esterhaus was portrayed as something of a sexual dynamo. ‘True,’ he said. ‘But I don’t take it too seriously. It’s only make believe, you know.’ He paused and smiled, ‘Even though I’m pretty good in the real world too. I’ve had considerable experience in this area. You’re talking to a man who is very knowledgeable about women and marriage. I’ve had many, many different and varied experiences. I still don’t know it all but I do know an awful lot.’

Conrad confessed that he was a very emotional man. ‘I live my life very carefully, husbanding my emotions because in life you can’t let them go and acting is the area that I have to release them,’ he said.  ‘I also I have a very violent nature, a monumental temper but it doesn’t come out very often.’ 

James B. Sikking, who played combat-ready SWAT commander Howard Hunter and had known Conrad for years, told me he had never seen him lose his temper. ‘’Oh, sure, I’ve seen him angry but only when a scene or something isn’t going right,’ he said. ‘He has horrendous words to deliver and that can be frustrating and cause anger. But Michael is really the quintessential professional actor.’ 

He wasn’t kidding. Every episode began with Esterhaus delivering an often convoluted and multisyllabic monologue. So diligent was he in mastering those lines that he retained them. At lunch, he showed me. ‘Tinia pedis or dermatophytosis, referred to in the vernacular as athlete’s foot, is a tough and resilient foe capable of waging relentless guerilla warfare,’ he declaimed. ‘Therefore, everybody is expected to do his part in the war effort. Specifically, frequent changes of socks and the daily application of detergent substances to the bipedal surfaces. Let’s show a little podiatric diligence and lick this thing, huh, fellas?’

The actor appeared on several TV western series and he said he was pleased with the non-western pictures he’d made including ‘They Shoot Horses, Don’t They’ with Jane Fonda, ’The Longest Yard’ with Burt Reynolds and his favourite, the allegorical war film ‘Castle Keep’ with Burt Lancaster and Peter Falk. It did not do very well and Conrad said, ‘It was ahead of its time. We captured a feeling of soldiers in timeless war, timeless foolishness, timeless misery. It was a fabulous picture.’ 

He had never tried to chart his career, he said, ‘I think it’s fooliish. I think there’s a tapestry, a strange design that all of us have and I think you’ve got to let it take you where it takes you.’ His greatest wish was to make a western: ‘I love the West. I’d rather do a western than eat. There’s always a fresh way to do something. I want to act out the love of the land, the love of being on horseback smoking a cigarette out by yourself at night, humming a little song. Little snatches of grandeur, of peace. Little things.’ 

It wasn’t to be. He went on to international fame with two Emmy Awards for outstanding supporting actor. But when I spoke to him on the phone from Toronto in the fall of 1983 he hinted that he was having health problems and he died of urethral cancer that November.

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That time on set with Mickey Rooney and Jackie Cooper


By Ray Bennett

In March 1981 I was at the CBS Studio Center on Radford Avenue in Studio City watching two legendary former child stars working together again. Mickey Rooney and Jackie Cooper had co-starred with Freddie Bartholomew in the 1936 comedy-drama ‘The Devil is a Sissy’.

Now, Rooney, who was born on this day in 1920, was starring in a tearjerker TV-movie titled ‘Leave ‘em Laughing’. He played a real-life clown named Jack Thum who with his wife Shirlee (played by Anne Jackson) cared for many abandoned children in a Chicago tenement even as he is diagnosed with terminal cancer. Jackie Cooper was the director.

Rooney had gone from a series of Andy Hardy pictures in the Thirties and Forties and ‘National Velvet’  opposite Elizabeth Taylor in 1944 to a long acting career on TV and in films such as ‘Baby Face Nelson’, ‘Operation Mad Ball’ and (notoriously) ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s.’ Cooper went from being one of the Little Rascals in the 1930s ‘Our Gang’ pictures to co-starring with Wallace Beery in ‘The Champ’ in 1931 to acting in many more TV shows and films including three Superman movies with Christopher Reeves playing newspaper editor Perry White. He had a distinguised career in the U.S. Navy during World War II and remained with the Naval Reserve attaining the rank of Captain. He also became a respected director on shows including ‘The Rockford Files’, ‘Magnum P.I.’, ‘M*A*S*H’ and ‘Cagney & Lacey’.

CBS Studio Center had been built in the silent era by producer-director Mack Sennett who made pictures starring the Keystone Cops, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and W.C. Fields. Later, it was owned by Republic Studios, which made dozens of westerns starring Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and John Wayne. The head of Republic was a man named Herbert J. Yates who tried to turn a former ice-skater from Czechoslovakia named Vera Hruba Ralston into a dramatic movie star.

Now, on a soundstage on the open facade of a tall Chicago tenement building, Rooney stood and waited in his clown outfit while the crew set up another shot and Cooper oversaw where the cameras should be placed. Rooney knew there was a reporter on the set and he spoke loudly enough over the general hubbub for everyone to hear as he regaled us all with uproarious and unprintable tales about Yates, Ralston and Wayne. As soon as the crew were ready, an AD called out ‘Stand by’. Cooper checked with his director of photography, veteran Howard Schwartz, as Rooney continued talking. The instant the director cried out ‘Action’, Rooney went straight into character as the clown dying of cancer. Once Cooper yelled ‘Cut!’ the actor resumed his salacious gossip.

Cooper made sure I could stay close to him while I was there and often looked around to say, ‘Where’s my guy? Where’s Ray’ if I’d wandered off. He also encouraged me to talk to DP  Schwartz and art director Ned Parsons. When shooting broke for lunch, I joined Mickey Rooney in his trailer. I’d seen the diminutive performer on talk shows so I knew how garrulous he could be but I was surprised when he uttered a series of clichés as if he’d just made them up. ‘You see, Ray,’ he said, gripping my knee, ‘nothing succeeds like success.’

After the day’s shooting was finished, I went with Rooney to Burbank where he was to be a guest on ‘The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson’. I left him on the phone in the limousine to make my way into the studio to sit in the audience. Carson said Rooney would be the first guest but after the comic finished his monologue and took his seat, Rooney was a no-show. Carson appeared puzzled and told his audience that it appeared the star had been delayed. Rooney made it to the couch just in time as the third guest and proceeded to have everyone in stitches. Only I knew why he was late. When I left him in the limo, he was on the phone to his bookie.

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How I helped keep Bill Murray subversive

Ghostbusters

By Ray Bennett

I had a bone to pick with Bill Murray, who turns 75 today. It was 1990 and all the rebellious early comedians on “Saturday Night Live” appeared to have lost their way. From radical satire they’d moved to mainstream comedy and sappy dramas. They were no longer subversive and they had let a generation down.

Murray said, “I feel the same thing about other people. There are people that have a responsibility to me that aren’t living up to it. If I ever see them in traffic, I’m gonna bump into them.”

He did not, however, disagree. I’d met him first at the Park Plaza in New York on a junket for “Ghostbusters’ in 1984. After a series of round-table interviews fellow Toronto writers Ron Base and Jerry Gladman joined me in the Oak Room for a drink. When a waiter arrived with a tray of Golden Cadillac cocktails, we explained that we had not ordered them and he pointed to a raised area adjacent to us where Murray was doing a one-on-one interview. “You need to drink two,” he said. We ordered the same for him “from the Canadians” and the surprising thing was that six years later he recalled the incident.

We were in a hotel room in the Bel Age Hotel in Beverly Hills for an extended interview and photo shoot in advance of the release of his film “Quick Change”. Murray admired the Erté prints on the walls: “I might just waltz a couple of these right out of here.”

He spoke at length about the film, a crime comedy he co-directed with Howard Franklin, and then I brought up my complaint. I cited the SNL alumni’s recent output: Chevy Chase in “Funny Farm”, Gilda Radner in “The Woman in Red”, Jane Curtin in TV’s “Kate & Allie”, Eddie Murphy in “Coming to America”, Dan Ackroyd in “Driving Miss Daisy” and Murray in “The Razor’s Edge”.

Murray said, “People wish that the ‘Saturday Night’ guys and girls did as well in movies as they did on TV but the two things are very different. You can’t compare TV to movies any more than theatre to TV. It’s not the same event. On TV, there’s just not that much that can go wrong. In movies, there are millions of things that can go wrong.”

Bill Murray in bank robbery comedy 'Quick Change' 1990

Bill Murray in bank robbery comedy ‘Quick Change’ 1990

On the TV show, they did 5-minute sketches: “If we did three good 5-minute sketches in the course of a 90-minute show, people said, ‘Hey, that’s pretty good.’ If you can get ’em in the first half-hour, anyway. But you only had to be good for five minutes at a time to do something memorable. In a movie, it’s an hour and a half. It’s a different ability, different awareness, a different story sense, everything.”

Murray also cited the writers: “We had good actors, no question about it, but the writers were really great and they collaborated all the time.”

Perhaps, I suggested, a comedian’s only responsibility is to make people laugh. Murray said, “I hear that but I don’t know. It’s sort of OK, sure, but I don’t really feel that I’m able to say that because, to me, without an audience, where are you? You’re really alone.”

He agreed that a performer should be true to himself: “But I do feel there is an obligation. I don’t think it’s fair, though, to say that it has to be in movies. All those people are great, everybody was great, and not everybody’s had the same success in the movies, but so what?”

Bill Murray in 'St. Vincent', which opens in the UK Dec. 5, 2014

Bill Murray in ‘St. Vincent’ in 2014

My point, I said, was that the movies were no longer counter-culture, they were mainstream. He said, “That’s true,” and he spoke passionately about the way politics had changed in the 1970s with hypocritical “sons of bitches” in Congress and good politicians who would not run against Ronald Reagan “because people wanted an actor; they wanted a jive-ass”.

Could you say that in a movie? He said, “I think you have to but in order to make a statement in film, you’ve got to be able to make film. If people say, ‘How come ‘SNL’ people haven’t chopped these people down to size?’, well they’re all pretty young, relatively. It’s just as baffling to go from the Nixon/Johnson thing into whatever the Woodstock generation was all about as to go from there to this Reagan/Bush business.”

Murray gave two reasons for his odd choice to make a dramatic film of W. Somerset Maugham’s “The Razor’s Edge” – the Indian locations and co-star Theresa Russell, for which it’s hard to blame him.

He made a case for “Scrooged”, his variation on the Dickens theme, that had come out in 1988: “Well, it’s a Christmas release movie so its box office potential was limited by definition. The movie opens the third week of November and Christmas has become so exhausting as an event – that’s why all the suicides occur because it’s so emotionally banging – so when it’s over people don’t want to know about it for another 12 months.”

The picture made money but Murray said he thinks it could have been different: “I think we didn’t all understand what we were about; we were in different minds, maybe. There’s some very good stuff in it and what I hear from people who saw it on cable this year, they say ‘Jeez, that wasn’t bad. That almost made it’, and I go, ‘Yeah?’ They say, ‘No, I mean, that was almost pretty good,’ and I say, ‘Well, thank you’, and they say, ‘No, I mean, no, I’m not kidding.’ ‘Scrooged’ had something to offer. It was a movie, as you say, that could have really had something to say about the state of the trickle-down world. That was the intention and to a degree it was effective.”

In 2005, I ran into Murray again in the lobby of the Hotel Residéal, where we put out The Hollywood Reporter Cannes film festival dailies. He was in the lobby with filmmaker Jim Jarmusch waiting to do interviews for their picture “Broken Flowers”, which won that year’s Grand Prix.

Over the decades since “Quick Change”, Murray has become one of the most delightfully subversive elements in all kinds of terrific films by great directors such as Jarmusch, Sofia Coppola, Roger Michell, George Clooney, and especially Wes Anderson.

He greeted me warmly and as we shook hands I offered him an apology for my accusation back in 1990 and thanked him for all his work since. It’s always hard to tell with actors but he smiled and said, “No, you were right.”

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When Topol stood me up to go off to war

Topol x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ star Chaim Topol cancelled my interview with him in June 1967 but he had a very good reason. He left his starring role of Tevye in the hit West End production to return to Israel to be there for what turned out to be the Six-Day War.

The Israeli actor, who was born on this day in 1935, had made tickets for the show at Her Majesty’s Theatre in London’s Haymarket almost impossible to find, but when his country faced peril, he didn’t hesitate.

Right in the middle of his record-breaking run in the biggest hit the West End had seen in years, he took off to join his countrymen. Only when an uneasy peace was obtained did he return to the role of Sholem Aleichem’s rascally Jewish milkman whose family is forced to emigrate from Tsarist Russia in 1905.

I had seen the actor’s satirical  Israeli film ‘Sallah’ (pictured above), which tells of a Sephardic Jew from Egypt who takes his family to newly established Israel and must plot and scheme to survive. One of the most popular films ever in Israel, it was nominated as Best Foreign Language Film in the 1965 Academy Awards. After seeing him in ‘Fiddler’, I was keen to interview him for the magazine ‘Where to Go in London’ where I was on staff.

When our interview finally took place, fresh from the the conflict he had seen in Israel, I was surprised to see that when he was not in character Topol looked not that much older than me. I was 22 at the time and he was 31.

He was filled with emotion about immigration, refugees and old traditions. ‘They are subjects close to the heart of anyone who is not ignoring the problems now in the world,’ he told me backstage at Her Majesty’s. ‘It’s like “Fiddler” – the problems faced by Tevye are not only Jewish problems – we suffered from them and we have had to find solutions. I hope we have. But they are world problems.”

Why, then, did he choose to treat those problems in the show in such a humorous way? ‘Because,” he said, ‘they are such sad things and to digest them you need a spoonful of humour. Anyhow, I don’t know another way.”

Topol had come to London with the show after he starred in ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ in Tel Aviv and he continued to play Tevye around the world for much of his life including a stint on Broadway in 1990. The show won a Tony Award as best revival and he was nominated as best actor in a musical.

He told me, though, that he had not intended to become an actor. ‘When I was called up for the Israeli Army, people found me amusing in my camp,’ he said. ‘The officers thought I could be funny in other camps so they put me in the army theatre. I didn’t want to go. I didn’t want to be an actor. But, eventually, it seemed they were right and when I thought they were right, I decided to learn all I could about acting. They gave me a private teacher and I studied hard.’

Canadian filmmaker Norman Jewison also saw Topol as Tevye in ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ in London in 1967. ‘I was,’ he told me years later, ‘more moved than I had ever been by any musical comedy form.’ Jewison had seen ‘Sallah’ too but still when he cast Topol in his film version it came as a surprise to many.

Produced by Harold Prince and directed and choreographed by Jerome Robbins with music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick and book by Joseph Stein, the show had run for 3,242 performances on Broadway. It won nine Tony Awards including Best Actor in a Musical prize for the widely acclaimed  Zero Mostel (left).

Jewison (pictured below) had made TV specials with musical stars including Andy Williams, Danny Kaye and Harry Belafonte. In 1962, he made  ‘The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe’ for NBC starring Julie Andrews, Richard Burton, Maurice Chevalier, Robert Goulet and Stanley Holloway and in 1963 he produced ‘The Judy Garland Show’ for CBS.

As his big screen career took off, Jewison made two very popular Doris Day comedies – ‘The Thrill of it All’ and ‘Send Me No Flowers’ – and two  hit Steve McQueen pictures – ‘The Cincinnati Kid’, a gritty drama, and ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’, a romantic thriller. He won Academy Award nominations as Best Director for his surprise hit comedy ‘The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming’ and the dramatic ‘In the Heat of the Night’, which won five Oscars including Best Picture and Best Actor for Rod Steiger.

When United Artists asked him to produce and direct ‘Fiddler on the Roof’, he accepted right away. The studio allowed him to make the call on casting. He told me had seen the Broadway and other productions before he saw Topol in London. For three months, Jewison kept an open mind on casting, he told me, before he decided that Topol was the man he wanted.

‘Topol gives to Tevye a dignity I thought was lacking in certain other interpretations,’ he said. ‘But I must say that choosing was very difficult because I happen to think that Zero Mostel  was a brilliantly creative actor and there were so many others, too. No one told me not to cast him because he wasn’t well known. I feel to this day that no one in the world could have played Tevye as well as Topol does.’

The film won three Academy Awards for cinematography and sound plus one for conductor,  music adaptor and orchestrator John Williams. The film was nominated for Best Picture, Jewison for Best Director and  Topol for Best Actor. All three awards went to ‘The French Connection’ , director William Friedkin and actor Gene Hackman. For what it’s worth, Topol was named best actor in a motion picture musical or comedy at the Golden Globes.

Aside from his long stage career, Tool made several screen appearances including ‘Flash Gordon’ directed by Mike Hodges, ‘For Your Eyes Only’ with Roger Moore as James Bond (pictured above) and Dan Curtis’s epic TV miniseries ‘The Winds of War’ and ‘War and Remembrance’ in which he played Auschwitz victim Berel Jastrow.

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Why Emma Samms took nude scenes on TV in stride

By Ray Bennett

Emma Samms, who turns 65 today, was one of the hottest young actresses on American television in 1985 when she segued from playing Holly Sutton on the daytime soap opera ‘General Hospital’ to replacing Pamela Sue Martin as Fallon Carrington on the prime-time soap ‘Dynasty’.

I spent several days with her for a story in People Magazine. Self-confident with a bright personality, coming from a filmmaking family in England, she was unfazed by the attention and the fact that, with her good looks, directors couldn’t wait to get her undressed for onscreen love scenes. Continue reading

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Jill St. John wanted to share recipes but not Robert Wagner

By Ray Bennett

Jill St. John, who turns 85 today, has brightened big and small screens in countless TV shows and movies including her big splash as the first American James Bond girl, Tiffany Case, in ‘Diamonds Are Forever’ opposite Sean Connery in 1971.

When I spoke to her on the phone in 1985 for a story for Canadian TV Guide, the Los Angeles-born actress was busier with a cooking segment on ABC-TV’s ‘Good Morning America’. That came about after she was a guest of chef Julia Child’s ‘Celebrity Cooks’ pieces on the show and the network was bombarded with requests to see her again. Continue reading

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When Steve Martin became my biggest fan


By Ray Bennett

Carl Reiner greeted me in his hotel room in Toronto and said, ‘Steve Martin is your No. 1 fan.’

Performers become fans of critics, of course, only when we write something they like. Their film ‘All of Me’ is an agreeably silly piece of nonsense in which the soul of a bitter old woman named Edwina, played by Lily Tomlin, intended for a beautiful young woman named Terry, played by Victoria Tennant (pictured with Martin) is transferred instead into the body of a young lawyer played by Martin. Edwina controls the right side of his body and he controls the left so that for him just to walk down the street is like a three-legged race on two feet. I thought his performance was hilarious and wrote that he was the funniest physical comedian since Charlie Chaplin. ‘He loved that,’ Reiner said. Continue reading

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Giggling over lunch with the great Cleo Laine

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – It was lunchtime at the Hotel Pontchartrain  in Detroit and things were getting a bit silly. Cleo Laine, who has died aged 97, was talking about Kurt Weill and the Berliner Ensemble when someone mentioned Monty Python and soon Continue reading

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Terror in London: From joy to agony in a single day

london-bombings x650

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – It’s no great surprise in London when your local Underground station is closed. It’s a creaky old system and there’s never enough money, so you shrug and start walking. But on Thursday morning, July 7 2005, Notting Hill Gate station was chained up and the guards were grim. “There’s been an explosion at Liverpool Street,” one said. “They think there might be more.”

There were. Four in all, killing 38.

On Wednesday, Trafalgar Square was giddy with people cheering and champagne corks popping as the news came through that the city had won the 2012 Olympic Games.

On Thursday, all you could hear were the sirens of police cars, ambulances and emergency vehicles. Most of London had gone to work as usual, even though it meant walking most of the way as first the Underground and then the buses stopped running. Continue reading

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