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Cafe Royal memorabilia to be sold | Cafe Royal memorabilia to be sold |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Furniture and memorabilia from the iconic London venue, the Cafe Royal, are to go up for auction next month. | Furniture and memorabilia from the iconic London venue, the Cafe Royal, are to go up for auction next month. |
Opened in 1865, the Regent Street nightspot has hosted celebrities from Oscar Wilde through to Elizabeth Taylor and Gordon Ramsay. | Opened in 1865, the Regent Street nightspot has hosted celebrities from Oscar Wilde through to Elizabeth Taylor and Gordon Ramsay. |
More than 120 lots will be sold after the Cafe Royal closes its doors for the last time on Monday. | More than 120 lots will be sold after the Cafe Royal closes its doors for the last time on Monday. |
They include the Cafe's original boxing ring which was used to host black tie dinners in its heyday. | They include the Cafe's original boxing ring which was used to host black tie dinners in its heyday. |
Lots at the Bonhams auction include a clear glass and gilt chandelier worth around £8,000, and a mahogany clock, estimated at £6,000. | Lots at the Bonhams auction include a clear glass and gilt chandelier worth around £8,000, and a mahogany clock, estimated at £6,000. |
The venue, which is making way for a five-star hotel, was opened by a Parisian wine merchant, Daniel Nicolas, who was on the run from a prison sentence in France. | |
Charlie Thomas, from the auction house, said: "Bidders will have the opportunity to acquire a small piece of this iconic London institution." | |
The hammer falls on the items on 20 January. | The hammer falls on the items on 20 January. |
Princes and playwrights | |
The Cafe Royal was a favourite haunt of Wilde, who on one evening there became so drunk on absinthe he started to hallucinate. | |
He wrote that he saw a waiter watering a field of tulips - in fact he was stacking chairs in the bar. | |
The Cafe was also the venue for Wilde's only friendly meeting with the Marquis of Queensberry, whose son, Lord Alfred Douglas, was his lover.Advertisement | |
The closure is part of a multi-million pound transformation of Regent Street | The closure is part of a multi-million pound transformation of Regent Street |
Shortly afterwards Wilde launched a libel case against the marquis which ruined the playwright and saw him convicted of gross indecency. | |
The Cafe has also played host to royalty. In the early 20th century, two future monarchs, Edward VIII, and his brother George VI, dined there. | |
At the time, the waiter's instruction book for their visit included the advice: "Prince of Wales, Duke of York lunch frequently. Always plain food. No fuss". | |
In more recent years, regulars have included Princess Diana, Sir Mick Jagger and Baroness Thatcher and, in 1996, chef Gordon Ramsay chose the venue for his wedding reception. | |
In 1894, it was the scene of an infamous - and unsolved - murder when the night porter, Marius Martin, was found shot dead. | |
Last year, Bonhams auctioned items from another London icon, the Savoy Hotel, which is being refurbished. |
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