You need Flash Player 8 or higher to view video content with the ROO Flash Player.
Click here to download and install it.
We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
We can see two jaunty, absurd and unmistakable hairdos from the middle of the
road. Russell Brand is walking down Marylebone High Street towards Oxford
Street. On the other side, going up past the working clock outside Waitrose,
the PLU’s own supermarket, is Barbara Windsor’s ponytail, the colour of
bleached tow-rope.
That’s how it is there now. One Saturday I saw the Evening Standard’s
restaurant critic, Fay Maschler, and her novelist husband Reg (Fitzrovia),
Griff Rhys Jones (Fitzrovia), Kimberly Quinn (Mayfair) and Tyler Brûlé,
inventor of Wallpaper magazine (local), in the same half hour.
Sometimes it’s like the BBC canteen. Marylebone High Street is a magnet for
the media artigentsia, pulling people from nice neighbouring places who
don’t have such nice shops.
We’ve both — my agent, Anita Land, and I — got form with Marylebone and its
High Street. Anita remembers going to the exotically 1920s-muralled
Pâtisserie Sagne, all Viennesey coffee and cakes, as a treat after her first
trips to the dentist in Harley Street. And she remembers a mass of
showbusiness greats, friends of her father, Leslie Grade, and his two
brothers, who lived in a mews here, a smart flat there. People like Dennis
Selinger, Peter Sellers’s agent, or John Lennon on the corner of my square.
I remember the whole area as an accessible playground from Hampstead. And my
best friend at school lived there, in the Marble Arch Regency square I live
in now. Anita lives in the neighbouring one. I pitched up from South Ken in
1993; Anita arrived about five years later.
The High Street seemed completely local in the 1960s. I thought it was heaven,
better than Heath Street and Hampstead High Street. Sharper, more compact,
more urban. But as the 1960s became the 1970s and I left home for a
Bayswater bedsit and then Chelsea (you had to be there in ‘71), I forgot
about Marylebone and the High Street and it started its slow decline. By the
1980s it was distinctly dim, competed out by the New Islington and the New
Notting Hill (the emerging Clarendon Cross and Ledbury Road), full of old
ladies, charity shops, medical suppliers and not much else, except for the
unstoppable Pâtisserie Sagne. The world had moved west and people talked
about Marylebone as a series of big intersections, an anonymous central
somewhere, on the way to somewhere else. All deeply unfair, because
Marylebone always had been a real village with a long history, which then
became an important proud borough, with the big grids and the grand houses
of Portman Square laid down in the later 18th century.
Marylebone was intended as part of Great Nash London, a parade of orderly
stucco splendour from Buckingham Palace to Regent’s Park. This being London,
not Paris, it never quite happened. Marylebone festered as its inhabitants
grew older and weren’t replaced. It couldn’t be gentrified, since it had
never been prole or Pooter. And the grandees who owned the larger, better
chunks, bounded by Edgware Road, Oxford Street, Marylebone Road and Portland
Place to the north east, the Portman and De Walden families, seemed to have
lost the plot. But in the 1990s everything changed. Young metropolitans who
had been dredging outer North London for cheaper houses started to notice
what was under their noses: fantastically central, lots of good 18th and
19th-century housing stock, great transport connections and cheaper than
Notting Hill.
But what provoked the Marylebone miracle was the De Walden Estate, which was
created by 17th-century toffs, suddenly getting clever and proactive about
Marylebone High Street, seeing that it could be rethought as a distinctive
high street with special shops. The point about Marylebone High Street is
that it’s a proper local high street with all the essentials, the
supermarkets, banks, newsagents, and the rest, but with themes and knobs on.
The themes are foodiness and bookishness. There’s Daunt’s bookshop, with its
Edwardian galleried and stained-glass back room like a miniature of the
great Fifth Avenue bookstores. There’s the Oxfam bookshop that sells fancy
architectural monographs. And there’s deep foodie stuff: the Sunday farmers’
market in the Cramer Street car park, the Ginger Pig butcher next to the
Fromagerie cheese shop, the Conran deli next to The Conran Shop, and Paul
Rothe’s third-generation deli with its pyramid of jam jars in the windows.
Good thinking, of course, since bookiness and foodiness go together in the
other local villages that make up Marylebone High Street’s hinterland, from
Bayswater to Primrose Hill, taking in Hampstead and Little Venice, Fitzrovia
and St John’s Wood. The other cleverness — the knobs on — comes in the way
the De Walden Estate has avoided the clone tenants that have ruined British
high streets over the past 20 years.
They’ve sought out specialists, often with no more than one other branch —
Fromagerie from its cult outpost in Highbury, Skandium, the furniture shop
with its Alvar Aalto originals, from Wigmore Street. Gap came and went, but
agnès b stayed. Links of London replaced a not-quite-for-us euro menswear
place.
We like the lot, but for Anita the Pâtisserie Sagne — now officially the
Pâtisserie Valerie at Sagne — and Lewis & Lewis, the hardware
shop that still finds parts for superannuated small appliances, are crucial.
We’re both on for Daunt’s, where you get launch parties of the kind that
contain Sebastian Faulks and Beryl Bainbridge. We once saw Simon Sebag
Montefiore interview Andrew Roberts there — both Capel & Land
clients — and a few months later Andrew grilling Simon, lovely high-end
historians’ incest. We both like the little furniture shop Century. Anita
loves the light fittings and mid-century mirrors and Perspex obelisks from
Noho upstairs. I like Andrew Weaving’s serious Sixties and Seventies stuff
in the basement. And we’ d both sign any petition to keep the Hellenic
restaurant on its corner between the High Street and Thayer Street.
How the new breed of location based mobile services can find your nearest cashpoint, restaurant or wi-fi hotspot
Enjoy screenings of all the classic films you love, plus take advantage of two-for-one tickets
We explore leisure activities that are safe and suitable for all of the family
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Are you California dreaming? Explore the wonders of the Golden State. Also enter our fantastic competition
See the best entries in this year's competition
Your brain is capable of more than you might think...
An interactive preview of the brand new For Your Eyes Only exhibition
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Love Sudoku? Play our brand new interactive game: with added functionality and daily prizes

Are you irritable when you return from work? Drained of emotion? You could be suffering from boreout
Prepare for some shock and awe, petrol lovers. Despite the greens trying to wipe it out, the car is about to offer us the most exciting year ever
We've trawled the brochures and websites to find this summer’s best holidays for every taste and budget

From mortgages to savings, borrowing to consumer affairs, our collection of tools, services and guides will help you make your money go further

Essential reading whether you're buying, selling, improving or moving
2006
£189,500
NW England
2008/08
£169,950
NW England
2007/57
£35,000
South East England
Great car insurance deals online
Circa £82,000 per annum
Birmingham Women's Hospital
Birmingham
To £28k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool/Teeside
£
Up to £66,000 per annum
Hertfordshire County Council
South East
To £38k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool
2 Bathrooms, Balcony and Garden
Beautiful Gardens w/ stunning Thames Views
Dining, Shopping & Riverside Pk
Mortgages, bank acc & money transfers to help you buy abroad
Explore mystical Jordan
From £1030 for 7nts 4*
to USA's Most Cosmopolitan City; San Francisco!
As a person born in St Marylebone, I find it offensive and lazy of the people featured in the video footage to refer to the area as Marlebone.
Ray Cutler, Shepton Mallet, England