The cartoon drawn for Norman Balon's 90th, by Michael Heath
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My mind has drifted back to Soho in recent days. There
was a time, a dozen years or so ago, when I was a regular in the Coach and
Horses in Greek Street, or Norman’s as landlord Norman Balon hoped it would be
called but rarely was.
A new book ‘Soho in the Eighties’, by the excellent Daily
Telegraph journalist Christopher Howse, has triggered this wave of nostalgia; not
that I was present for the escapades he recounts, with the tragicomedic figures likes of
Jeffrey Bernard, Daniel Farson, and Francis Bacon dominating his work. Many of
the stories, though, are familiar and a few of the characters were known to me.
A central figure in Mr Howse’s enjoyable book is the aforementioned
Norman Balon. Now approaching 91, Norman styled himself as the ‘rudest landlord
in London’. Every Christmas, regulars would be handed a mug bearing the slogan
alongside a cartoon of Norman bellowing ‘You’re barred!’. I had four or five of
these once but they have all gone but for one which is hidden from view and all
are forbidden from using.
The surviving mug |
Norman could certainly be very rude. One quiet afternoon
in the early 2000s I was there with a drink, a couple of others were elsewhere
in the pub and Norman was leaning over the bar reading a newspaper. A family of
American tourists entered and a very-mannered lady possessing a grating, nails-on-blackboard
accent, asked ‘could we see the hot menu please?’
Without looking up from his paper, Norman growled: ‘We
don’t have a hot menu and we don’t serve fucking tourists, now fuck off’.
Clearly shocked, the American lady replied: ‘Well, that
wasn’t the reply we expected’, before swiftly scuttling from the bar.
The few people there simply swallowed their laughter in
their drinks and Norman looked up smiling, ‘I enjoyed that’.
Another time, I found Norman with his arm in a sling. I asked
what had happened and it emerged he’d been pushed to the ground after leaning
on the car of a fellow who had foolishly parked outside the pub in Greek
Street.
‘He told me to get off his car and I told him to “fuck
off cunt” and he pushed me and I fell to the ground,’ he cheerily recounted.
The police had turned up and asked Norman if he wanted to press charges. ‘No,’ he’d replied, ‘it was my own fucking fault.’
Despite his best efforts, however, Norman was not only a
good pub landlord but evidently was and remains a decent man with a warm heart.
It wouldn’t have looked so good on a mug though.
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