I Read the News Today, Oh Boy
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New York Times (newspaper), ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7
New York World-Telegram (newspaper), ref1, ref2
News of the World (newspaper), ref1
Ni Dhonnchadha, Brid, ref1, ref2
Niven, David, ref1
Nixon, Richard, ref1, ref2, ref3
North, Melissa, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11
Northcliffe, Lord, ref1
Nureyev, Rudolf, ref1
Ó Riada, Seán, ref1
O’Brien, Desmond, ref1
O’Brien, Flann, ref1
O’Connell, Daniel, ref1, ref2, ref3
O’Connor, Ulick, ref1, ref2
Ó Faoláin, Seán, ref1, ref2
Oldham, Andrew, ref1, ref2, ref3
Oliver, Alan, ref1
O’Rahilly, Ronan, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Ormsby-Gore, David see Harlech, Lord
Ormsby-Gore, Jane, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9
Ormsby-Gore, Julian, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Ormsby-Gore, Victoria, ref1, ref2, ref3
Ormsby-Gore family, ref1
ORTF, ref1
O’Sullivan, Sean, ref1
Page, Jimmy, ref1
Pallenberg, Anita, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19
Palmer, Major Sir Anthony Frederick, ref1
Palmer, Sir Mark, fifth Baronet, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19, ref20
Paris, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19
Paris Fashion Week, ref1
Paris Match (magazine), ref1, ref2, ref3
Parker, Charlie, ref1
Pathé News, ref1, ref2
Payne, Billy, ref1
Pearse, John, ref1, ref2
Peel, Emma, ref1
Penney, J. C., ref1
Pennycuick, Mr Justice, ref1, ref2
Picture Post magazine, ref1
Pilcher, Norman, ref1
Pitney, Gene, ref1
Platters, The, ref1
Plunkett, the Honourable Brinsley (Brinny), ref1, ref2
Plunkett, Doon, ref1, ref2
Plunkett, Neelia, ref1, ref2
Plunkett-Greene, Alexander, ref1
Pol, Talitha see Getty, Talitha
Polanski, Roman, ref1, ref2, ref3
Ponsonby, Lady Olwen Verena see Browne, Olwen Verena, Lady Oranmore and Browne
Pont Street, London, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Pope, Alexander, ref1
Port Regis school, ref1, ref2
Porter, Cole, ref1
Portugal, ref1
Potier, Gilbert, ref1, ref2
Potier, Suki, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Powell, Bud, ref1, ref2
Pretty Things, The, ref1, ref2
Prince, Viv, ref1
Procol Harum, ref1
Profumo, John, ref1
Proud, Godfrey, ref1
Provatorov, Waverly, ref1
Psycho (1960), ref1
Pugin, Augustus, ref1
Purser, John, ref1
Quant, Mary, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7
Rabane, Paco, ref1, ref2
Radio Éireann, ref1
Raft, George, ref1
Rainey, Michael, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18
Ramsey, Alf, ref1
Rat Pack, ref1
Rathdrum circuit, ref1
Redding, Otis, ref1
Redmond, Frances, ref1
Redpath, Rabea (Lucy Hill), ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10
Reed, Jimmy, ref1
Rees-Mogg, William, ref1, ref2
Ribes, Jacquline, Comtesse de, ref1, ref2, ref3
Richard, Cliff, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Richards, Keith, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16
Richards, Tara, ref1
Richardsons, ref1
Righteous Brothers, ref1
Riley, John, ref1
Rimet, Jules, ref1
Ritz, ref1, ref2, ref3
Rizzo, Willy, ref1
Robert Fraser Gallery, ref1, ref2
Rockefeller, Winthrop, ref1
rockers, ref1
Rogers, Graham, ref1, ref2
Rogers, Nicki see Browne, Nicki
Rolling Stone magazine, ref1, ref2, ref3
Rolling Stones, The, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19, ref20, ref21, ref22, ref23, ref24
Aftermath, ref1, ref2, ref3
Between the Buttons, ref1
‘Paint It Black’, ref1
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Rowe, Dick, ref1, ref2
Rowsome, Leo, ref1
King of the Pipers (album), ref1, ref2
Roxy Music, ref1
Royal Air Force (RAF), ref1
Rumbold, Camilla, ref1
Russborough House, ref1
Russell, Marie Clotilde (Chloe) (Tara’s maternal grandmother), ref1
St Stephen’s school, ref1, ref2, ref3
Saint Tropez, ref1
Saint-Laurent, Yves, ref1
Saint-Raphaël, ref1
Sainte-Maxime, French Riviera, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Sandoz Corporation, ref1
Sassoon, Vidal, ref1
Scaffold, The, ref1, ref2
Scotch of St James club, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Scott, Charmian, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Scott, Lord George Montagu Douglas, ref1
Scott, Jimmy, ref1
Sebastian, John, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Second World War, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10
Sellers, Peter, ref1, ref2, ref3
Shankar, Ravi, ref1, ref2
Shannon, Del, ref1
Shaw, George Bernard, ref1, ref2
Shrimpton, Chrissie, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7
Shrimpton, Jean, ref1, ref2
Sicily, ref1, ref2
Siegel, Bugsy, ref1
Sinclair, Andrew, ref1, ref2, ref3
Ska, ref1
Sketch (magazine), ref1, ref2
Smith, Freddie, ref1
Smith, Mike, ref1
Smith, Rosemary, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Solberg, Petter, ref1
Somerset Maugham, Elizabeth, ref1, ref2
Somerset Maugham, William, ref1, ref2
Sorbonne, ref1, ref2, ref3
Spain, ref1
Spanish Civil War, ref1, ref2
Springfield, Dusty, ref1, ref2
Stack, Monsignor Tom, ref1, ref2
Stamp, Terence, ref1, ref2
Stanislaus Klossowski de Rola, Prince (Baron de Watteville) (Stash), ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Stanislavski method, ref1
Starr, Ringo, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8
Stax Records, ref1
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Stevens, Constance see Browne, Constance Vera, Baroness Oranmore and Browne
Stewart, Jim, ref1
Stravinsky, Igor, ref1, ref2, ref3
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Sunday Dispatch (newspaper), ref1, ref2, ref3
Sunday Express (newspaper), ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Sunday Pictorial (newspaper), ref1, ref2
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Sybilla’s club, ref1
Taft, William, ref1
Targa
Florio route, ref1
Tatler (magazine), ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Taylor, D. J., ref1
Taylor, Dick, ref1
Taylor, Elizabeth, ref1, ref2
Taylor, Gore, ref1, ref2, ref3
Thatcher, Margaret, ref1
Time magazine, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
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Tobias, Oliver, ref1
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trepanation, ref1
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Tynan, Kenneth, ref1, ref2
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Valentinos, The, ref1
Valley Minstrels, ref1
Vaughan, David, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7
Venice, ref1, ref2
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Vogue magazine, ref1
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Wall Street Crash, ref1, ref2
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Waters, Muddy, ref1, ref2, ref3
Waugh, Evelyn, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Waymouth, Nigel, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Webb, Neale, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Webster, Noeleen, ref1
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Webster, Thomas, ref1, ref2
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Woolfe, Lady Veronica, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Woolland Brothers, ref1, ref2
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Yanovsky, Zal, ref1, ref2
Yeats, Jack B., ref1
Paul Howard is a multi-award-winning journalist, author, playwright and comedy writer. He is best known in his native Ireland as the creator of Ross O’Carroll-Kelly, a fictional rugby jock and the star of a series of books that have sold well over one million copies in Ireland. He is a former Irish Sports Journalist of the Year, an Irish Newspaper Columnist of the Year and a three-times Irish Book Award winner. He has written for stage and for television. He is a Beatles nut and lives in County Wicklow with his wife, Mary.
List of Illustrations
1. Castle Mac Garrett, two miles south of Claremorris, County Mayo, where Tara spent his early childhood.
2. Luggala, the ‘fairytale’ house at the bottom of a Wicklow valley, a wedding gift to Tara’s mother, Oonagh, from her father, Ernest Guinness, in 1936.
3. Tara’s mother, then Oonagh Kindersley, painted by the royal portrait artist Philip de László. The portrait was commissioned by her first husband, stockbroker Philip Kindersley, to celebrate her twenty-first birthday.
4. Tara’s father, Dominick, Lord Oranmore and Browne, at the Coronation of George VI at Westminster Abbey, 1936.
5 & 6. Oonagh was considered one of the most beautiful young women in England. She appeared regularly on the cover of The Tatler and The Bystander.
7. Oonagh with Gay and Tessa Kindersley, her son and daughter from her first marriage. Tessa was one of her three children to die young and in tragic circumstances.
8. Oonagh holding Tara at Castle Mac Garrett on the day of his christening in 1945. Dom is third from the left, his face partly obscured.
9. Garech Browne, holding Tara, the baby brother he adored.
10. Gay, Tessa, Tara and Garech at Castle Mac Garrett, County Mayo, 1945.
11. After the end of her second marriage, Oonagh retreated to Luggala, where her drawing room became a kind of literary salon in the 1950s. Brendan Behan and his wife Beatrice were among the regular guests.
12. Oonagh with Miguel Ferreras, the couturier with the shadowy Nazi past, whom she married in New York in February 1958, just weeks after they first met.
13. Oonagh and Tara in Ravello, Italy, with Oonagh’s friend, the movie director John Huston. At the time, he was making Beat the Devil, starring Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre and Gina Lollobrigida.
14. Tara in Venice in 1953, aged eight. ‘He looked like something from the Westminster Choir,’ said his friend Nicholas Gormanston.
15. Tara, aged thirteen, in the courtyard at Luggala, taken by Lucy Lambton from a guest-room window.
16. Twelve-year-old Tara in Venice, where his mother took a palazzo for a month every summer.
17. Tara and his friend Lucy Lambton in Paris. ‘Tara was different to other boys of his age,’ she said. ‘There was a magic about him.’
18. A portrait of Tara, drawn on Claridge’s notepaper, by his friend the future children’s portraitist Charmian Scott.
19. Oonagh and a teenage Tara at the opening of Maison Ferreras on the rue du Fauborg Saint-Honoré, Paris, 1961.
20. Tara in Maison Ferreras, Paris, in July 1961. He had started to dress all in black, influenced by his new mod friend, Glen Kidston.
21. Tara and his wife, Nicki, whom he married at eighteen while she was pregnant with the first of their two sons. The photograph was taken for Vogue by Michael Cooper, who also took the photograph for the cover of Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
22. Tara wins the Mercantile Trophy in his Lotus Elan in Rathdrum, County Wicklow, May 1964. It was the first and only time he ever raced.
23. Dandie Fashions, Tara’s clothes shop on the King’s Road, which opened shortly before Christmas, 1966.
24. Douglas Binder, David Vaughan and Dudley Edwards, members of a pop art collective who painted Tara’s AC Cobra. On the right is their assistant, Gary White.
25. Tara was immensely proud of his ‘acid’ car. In September 1966, it was exhibited in the trendy Fraser Gallery on Duke Street in London.
26. Brian Jones (left), Nicki Browne (second left) and Anita Pallenberg (second from right) and other guests take in the view on the way to Tara’s twenty-first-birthday party at Luggala, April 1966.
27. Brian, Anita and Nicki. ‘We had a lot of affinity together,’ said Anita, ‘but the main one was acid.’
28. Oonagh, Derek Hart of the BBC and Tara at the party in Luggala.
29. Tara with Amanda Lear, muse of Salvador Dali, in Paris. Their affair hastened the end of his marriage to Nicki.
30. Mick Jagger was among the guests entertained by The Lovin’ Spoonful at what would be Tara’s last birthday party.
31. Five aristocratic dandies photographed for Gentleman’s Quarterly in the summer of 1966. From left to right, Christopher Gibbs, Mark Palmer, Tara Browne, Nicholas Gormanston and Julian Ormsby-Gore.
32. Oonagh and Tara at the christening of Julian at St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, in 1965. Nicki was described as ‘indisposed’.
33. Tara with his friend Brian Jones and his son Dorian at Luggala, November 1966. Just weeks later, Tara was dead.
34. Suki Potier, Tara’s date, who survived the car crash that killed him. On the left is Brian Jones, whom she dated after Tara’s death. Suki was to die in an
other car accident sixteen years later.
35. The aftermath of the crash in Redcliffe Gardens, South Kensington, in the early hours of 18 December 1966.
36. Tara was buried close to the shore of Lough Tay, County Wicklow, under a stone containing the two dates bearing out the tragedy of a life cut short.
37. A view of Tara’s boyhood playground. With its dark water and white beach, visitors often comment on Lough Tay’s similarity to the porter that made the Guinness name famous.
1. Castle Mac Garrett, two miles south of Claremorris, County Mayo, where Tara spent his early childhood.
2. Luggala, the ‘fairytale’ house at the bottom of a Wicklow valley, a wedding gift to Tara’s mother, Oonagh, from her father, Ernest Guinness, in 1936.
3. Tara’s mother, then Oonagh Kindersley, painted by the royal portrait artist Philip de László. The portrait was commissioned by her first husband, stockbroker Philip Kindersley, to celebrate her twenty-first birthday.
4. Tara’s father, Dominick, Lord Oranmore and Browne, at the Coronation of George VI at Westminster Abbey, 1936.
5 & 6. Oonagh was considered one of the most beautiful young women in England. She appeared regularly on the cover of The Tatler and The Bystander.
7. Oonagh with Gay and Tessa Kindersley, her son and daughter from her first marriage. Tessa was one of her three children to die young and in tragic circumstances.
8. Oonagh holding Tara at Castle Mac Garrett on the day of his christening in 1945. Dom is third from the left, his face partly obscured.
9. Garech Browne, holding Tara, the baby brother he adored.
10. Gay, Tessa, Tara and Garech at Castle Mac Garrett, County Mayo, 1945.
11. After the end of her second marriage, Oonagh retreated to Luggala, where her drawing room became a kind of literary salon in the 1950s. Brendan Behan and his wife Beatrice were among the regular guests.
12. Oonagh with Miguel Ferreras, the couturier with the shadowy Nazi past, whom she married in New York in February 1958, just weeks after they first met.
13. Oonagh and Tara in Ravello, Italy, with Oonagh’s friend, the movie director John Huston. At the time, he was making Beat the Devil, starring Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre and Gina Lollobrigida.
14. Tara in Venice in 1953, aged eight. ‘He looked like something from the Westminster Choir,’ said his friend Nicholas Gormanston.