Showing posts with label Hotel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hotel. Show all posts
Monday, 18 February 2013
Shaftesbury House, Cambridge
Shaftesbury House, 4 Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge was a hotel in the 1920s. The former hotel is now called Lutheran Church House and occupied by the German Lutheran Church.
Lowry refers to a visit to the hotel during his time at the The Leys in a letter to Carol Brown dated 2nd June 1926 to see whether he could find somewhere for Carol Brown to stay on a proposed visit to Cambridge:
"So I rallyed round some - and eventually ran to earth a sort of Look-at-our-tennis-court-nice-bathroom place, with a thin manageress with positively no teeth at all: bearing the intriguing title of 'Shaftsbury House' in (what is not altogether unexpected) Shaftesbury Road - There are trees in Shaftesbury Road. Willow trees? I am not sure. Anyhow trees. And a man in white painting gates green.
Well at any rate, I popped into this place and saw the manageress and the tennis court and a bedroom and a full set of magazines.
And some washing spread over the tennis court to dry - which gave quite an expressionist effect." (Collected Letters Vol 1 Pg. 38)
Lowry's use of the term expressionist is worthy of note demonstrating his knowledge of modernist movement as early as 1926 when he was 15 years old.
Friday, 7 September 2012
Hotel Rheinischer Hof, Bonn
Lowry spent six weeks in Germany learning German in September/October 1928. Many of the German references in Lowry's work stem from this visit. Lowry told Clemens ten Holder in a letter dated 23/4/1951; ".....that was the only class I took with Herr Schmidhus, who mostly dealt with advanced students, but then that was almost the only thing I learned at all in Bonn, outside the bar of the Hotel Rheinischer Hof." (Collected Letters Vol 2 Pg. 373).
Lowry refers to the hotel in his novel Ultramarine when Dana and Popplereuter are talking during their drunken drift around Dairen; " 'Well I know.' Popplereuter took a long breath. 'I think you are very lucky and young. I must tell you that I am trying to forget. I got news here, my little girl, my little love, daughter of the house, of Hotel Rheinischer Hof. She has just got married. Oh. Hans is very unhappy, very, very, very unhappy.' " (Pg. 91). Later Lowry makes reference to the hotel in his filmscript for Fitzgerald's Tender Is The Night; "Koln slides down to RHEINISCHER HOF and Rheinischer Hof to WEINLUST, these two having been simply the signs across the front of bars inside which Dick can be seen drinking alone as if one were looking in from the sidewalk." (The Cinema of Malcolm Lowry: a scholarly edition of Lowry's "Tender is the Night" Edited by Miguel Mota and Paul Tiessen Pg. 207)
Thursday, 6 September 2012
Marine Hotel, Hastings, Barbados
The Marine was a 200 room hotel built in 1887 in Hastings, Barbados about 2 miles from Bridgetown. The hotel featured some very elaborately detailed cast iron balustrades, large wrap-around patios and a magnificent ballroom. Today, on the sites of both the Marine and Pomroy Hotels is the PomMarine Hotel, a teaching Hotel attached to the Barbados Community College.
Lowry refers to the hotel in his novel Ultramarine; " ' Talking about cows, all round the West Indies I been, Barbados, Bridgetown, that's hot stuff...All the grape trees coming down to the water's edge, you want to stay at the Colonial in the Milk Market there - nigger orchestra. The Marine's no good - that is, if you got money. I had. That was during the war. I tried the Marine, and the Balmoral. And then I went to the Colonial.....' " (Pg. 174).
There is no record whether Lowry visited the hotel on his 1929 trip to the Caribbean en route to the USA to visit Conrad Aiken.
Hotel Balmoral, Bridgetown, Barbados
Lowry refers to the hotel in his novel Ultramarine; " ' Talking about cows, all round the West Indies I been, Barbados, Bridgetown, that's hot stuff...All the grape trees coming down to the water's edge, you want to stay at the Colonial in the Milk Market there - nigger orchestra. The Marine's no good - that is, if you got money. I had. That was during the war. I tried the Marine, and the Balmoral. And then I went to the Colonial.....' " (Pg. 174).
The hotel was located on the opposite side of the Hastings Road, near St. Matthias Church in Hastings, Barbados. There is no record whether Lowry visited the hotel on his 1929 trip to the Caribbean en route to the USA to visit Conrad Aiken.
Monday, 6 August 2012
Oriental Hotel, Kobe
The Oriental Hotel originally opened in Kobe, Japan in 1870. The hotel was at the junction of Kyōmachi-suji Avenue and Nakamachi-dōri Street in the former Foreign Settlement (Concession) in Kobe.The above postcard shows the third generation building opened in 1907 and destroyed in 1945 in WW2. 1945.
Lowry refers to the hotel in his novel Ultramarine during Dana'a drift around the red light district of Dairen - while Dana is waiting for a film to start adverts appear on the screen; "The American Hatoba, the Oriental Hotel, and the Kyo-Bashi...Oh these infernal advertisments on the screen!" ( Pg.98) and again "......I thought, as we passed an hotel, the Oriental, blazing with light." (Pg. 100). It is not impossible that adverts for the Japanese mainland may have been advertised in Japanese occupied Manchuria. Or it might be Lowry simply transposing Kobe into Dairen.
The photographs below circa 1930 as the hotel would have been when Lowry visited Kobe.
Kobe, Japan
Kobe is the fifth-largest city in Japan and is the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, approximately 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. Kobe did not exist in its current form until its founding in 1889. Its name comes from "kanbe" an archaic title for supporters of the city's Ikuta Shrine. Hyōgo-ku or Ōwada Anchorage or Hyōgo Port is an area is the historical heart of the city. Shinkaichi in Hyogo-ku was once the commercial centre of Kobe, but was heavily damaged during World War II, and since Hyogo-ku has lost much of its former prominence.
Kobe Port was first opened to foreign trade in 1868. At that time it had no wharfs to serve large vessels so loading and offloading had to take place offshore. This situation persisted for a long time.
Lowry visited the port between 28th June and 1st July 1927 on his voyage to the Far East. He had obscure reference to the port in the 1927 poem 'The Glory of the Sea':
'Where's Chang tonight? he asked the Third;
'It's past the time he came off watch:
Half-hour ago eight bells I heard;
I've got a cake of Kobe trout,
Tinned, by crimes! I bed your Scotch-'
'Chang? Chang's dead: his heart came out.'
Lowry also refers to the old port of Kobe during Dana'a drift around the red light district of Dairen in his novel Ultramarine - while Dana is waiting for a film to start adverts appear on the screen; "The American Hatoba, the Oriental Hotel, and the Kyo-Bashi...Oh these infernal advertisments on the screen!" ( Pg.98). It is not impossible that adverts for the Japanese mainland may have been advertised in Japanese occupied Manchuria. Or it might be Lowry simply transposing Kobe into Dairen.
It is possible that Lowry experienced the incident with the Japanese prostitute in Kobe as described by Joseph Ward in a letter to the Liverpool Daily Post dated 14/4/1962. Ward says:
....he seemed a lost soul and his reproductive organ was certainly in the back row, it was a teeny-weeny object that disgusted a Japanese geisha girl to such an extent as to frustrate her into impolite abuse.
Stan Hugill describes Kobe in Sailortown as follows:
With some seamen Kobe was Number One, and although, perhaps, it did not have the variety of sailor entertainment offered in Yokohama, still had plenty of girls and bordels. Perhaps the reason why some seamen preferred Kobe to Yokohama was the fact that most girls here wore Western dress.
The main street, the Motomachi, was lined on both sides with small and large bars, cafes and dancehalls, the numbers of "garus" or girls found in them being legion. Down the alleyways, too, more dives were to be found, and as well as dives, Kobe was famous for its so-called Sex Stores.....
The bars and dives best known to seamen were the Honey Drop, Union Bar, Kimi Bar, Golden Bat, the Frisco, Fuji Bar, Hana Bar, Havana Bar, Academy Bar, Rose Bar, Young Bar, Yokohamate, and Boston Bar.
The native kuruwa, called Fukuwara or"Lucky Moor", was to be found in Hyogo the older port adjacent to Kobe - near to Theatre Street of Shinkaiichi. It was a replica of the one in Yokohama, but a bit livelier perhaps, since it was situated in a busy market and theatre district. The biggest houses were the Fukanariro and the Daikichiro. In these more modern times, however, what with the competition of the Western-dressed dance hostesses and the more Western-styled bars, these old fashioned native brothel areas were not patronised as much by seamen as they were olden times.
Even if one wanted to go to such a place and said tho the Japanese taxi-driver, "Yoshiwara", it was usual for the driver, who had probably driven hundreds of sailors to bars and brothels, and who believed than that the latter did himself, to take his customer to a Western-styled dive. The girls in this district charged 2.5 yen a "short time", 5 yen an hour, and 8 yen "all night", the yen at this time being worth 1s. 2d." (Pgs. 334-335).
Sunday, 15 July 2012
Three Crowns Hotel, Chagford, Devon
The Three Crowns Hotel, also Three Crowns Chagford, is a historical hotel in Chagford, Devon, England. The building dates to the 13th century and was several centuries was a manor house before becoming an inn. The hotel, noted for its 13th century granite facade has been reported to be haunted since 1643 by Sidney Godolphin, a poet who fought as a Cavalier during the English Civil War and is said to stride the corridors in full uniform.
Lowry got drunk at the hotel with James Travers and Bob Pocock sometime in September 1933. Lowry left the hotel with Pocock in his MG F Type Magna following Travers in his car back to his farm. Lowry crashed the car on the way back.
The Hotel was renovated in 2011/12. The photographs below show the interior before renovation which would have been similar to what the hotel looked like when Lowry got drunk there in 1933.
Saturday, 14 July 2012
Gorphwysfa Hotel, Pen-y-Pas, North Wales
The Gorphwysfa Hotel was a former coaching inn located at the head of Llanberis Pass. The inn became a popular climbing centre with its heyday in the early part of the 20th century. The hotel became the Pen-y-Pas Youth Hostel in 1971. The guestbook on display in the hostel has entries for 1913/14 from G M Trevelyan (eminent historian and first president of YHA), Aldous Huxley (the author) and George Mallory ( ill-fated Everest climber).
Lowry, Jan Gabrial and Tom Forman stayed at the hotel in early October 1933 arriving on the 1st. Forman knew about the hotel from a mountaineering trip the previous year. (Godron Bowker Pursued By Furies Pg. 166). Jan wrote in her diary; "...the Gorphwysfa Hotel at Pen-y-Pas (which by the way - in surroundings remote and stern - could have served as the setting for the House of Usher)" and later "Our accommodations are primitive and damned cold." (Jan Gabrial Inside The Volcano Pg. 27).
Lowry, Jan Gabrial and Forman walked up Snowden from here. Arthur Lowry visited Lowry at the hotel to discuss fiances sometime in mid-October 1932. (Jan Gabrial Inside The Volcano Pg. 28-29). Jan's states they stayed in Wales until Sunday, October 15th when Lowry went to home to Inglewood and Jan went to London.
Lowry later referred to the hotel in Under The Volcano after discovering a comment in the hotel's visitors' book; “Climbed the Parson’s Nose,” one had written, in the visitors’ book at the little Welsh rock-climbing hotel, “in twenty minutes. Found the rocks very easy.” ” Came down the Parson’s Nose,” some immortal wag had added a day later, “in twenty seconds. Found the rocks very hard.” (Pg. 185).
Portmeirion, North Wales
Portmeirion is a popular tourist village in Gwynedd, North Wales. It was designed and built by Sir Clough Williams-Ellis between 1925 and 1975 in the style of an Italian village. He incorporated fragments of demolished buildings, including works by a number of other architects. Portmeirion's architectural bricolage and deliberately fanciful nostalgia have been noted as an influence on the development of postmodernism in architecture in the late 20th century.
Lowry, Jan Gabrial and Tom Forman stayed at the hotel on a visit to North Wales between 29th - 30th September 1933 after flying from Heston to RAF Hooton Park; "Even before we left the airport Malc had started to drink in earnest and when the car arrived to take us to Portmeirion - nearly a four hour drive - he was alternately loquacious and ugly and maudlin and driveling. The hotel is lovely. Everything else is merde". (Jan Gabrial Inside The Volcano Pg.26).
The main building of the hotel was built around 1850 (extended by Clough Williams-Ellis in 1926 & 1930) was the original mansion of Aber Iâ.and first described by Richard Richards in 1861 as "one of the most picturesque of all the summer residences to be found on the sea-coast of Wales.” When Clough discovered it in 1925 he was faced with dereliction and an overgrown wilderness. "I obviously had to use the old house on the sea's edge for something and, if I wanted a village, it would have to have an economic basis and the obvious thing seemed to be tourism. It was at Easter 1926, after less than a year's preparation, that the original old house, little altered, opened somewhat tentatively as an unlicensed hotel."
Lowry and Jan Gabrial walked around the grounds of the village on Saturday 30th September; "M and I took a short walk, then I wrote letters." (Jan Gabrial Inside The Volcano Pg.27).
At some point in October 1933, Lowry and Jan Gabrial may have returned to the hotel, "However, when we settled for a time at Portmeirion Malc played a more positive role in discussing what I was writing."((Jan Gabrial Inside The Volcano Pg.28).
Sunday, 8 July 2012
Peninsular Hotel, Kowloon
Founded by members of the Kadoorie family The Peninsula was built with the idea that it would be "the finest hotel east of Suez." In December 1928 the hotel opened in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, located at junction of Nathan Road and Salisbury Road and directly opposite the quays where ocean liner passengers disembarked. Kowloon was also the last stop on the trans-Siberian rail link that brought travelers from Europe. As such, the Peninsula hotel was ideally situated to take advantage of the increasing number of wealthy visitors to the area. Read more on Wikipedia
Lowry refers to the hotel in his first novel Ultramarine;"Behind the ship the Peninsular Hotel at Kowloon loomed darkly.." (Pg. 77). We can assume that Lowry saw the hotel being built on his Far East voyage in 1927 though it was not complete to the following year.
Sunday, 17 June 2012
Hotel du Pont, Saint-Prest, France
Lowry stayed at the Hotel du Pont, Saint-Prest with Maurice Sachs and Henry Wibbels in May 1934. In an unpublished letter written from the hotel to Jan referenced by Gordon Bowker, Lowry wrote to her describing that the Hotel du Pont was the perfect place for them to live. However, he also stated things were not working out as on of his companions was romancing the gardener, the other pursuing an oboe player (Gordon Bowker Pursued By Furies Pg. 179). He also wrote to Sylvia Beach from the hotel apologising for not paying for a book.
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Hotel Parkheimen, Drammensvein, Oslo
While in Oslo, Lowry stayed at the Hotel Parkheimen on the Drammensvein. He wrote 2 letters from the hotel. The first one to Grieg dated 8th September 1931 outlining suggestions for Grieg's De unge døde (The Young Died) published in 1932. The second one undated to Conrad Aiken outlining his trip to Norway aboard S.S. Fagervik and details of his stay in Oslo. The photograph below shows the site in the millennium.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)