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Jeffrey Bernard

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Name
  
Jeffrey Bernard

Role
  
Journalist

Parents
  
Oliver Percy Bernard


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Died
  
September 4, 1997, Soho, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Reach for the Ground: T, Low Life, Talking Horses, Tales from the Turf

Similar
  
Muriel Belcher, Oliver Percy Bernard, Daniel Farson

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Jeffrey Bernard (27 May 1932 – 4 September 1997) was a British journalist, best known for his weekly column "Low Life" in The Spectator magazine, and also notorious for a feckless and chaotic career and life of alcohol abuse.

Contents

Jeffrey Bernard Modern life is homogenised and not as much fun says John

He became associated with the louche and bohemian atmosphere that existed in London's Soho district and was later immortalised in the comical play Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell by Keith Waterhouse.

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Life

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Bernard was born in London, and was one of three sons of the English architect Oliver Percy Bernard and his opera singer wife Dora Hodges. His siblings were the poet Oliver Bernard, and the photographer Bruce Bernard. Though named Jerry by his parents, at an early age he adopted Jeffrey.

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He attended Pangbourne College for two years before his parents responded to the college's protest that he was "psychologically unsuitable for public school life". Oliver Percy Bernard was a second cousin once removed of the actor Stanley Holloway. Thus Jeffrey Bernard was a third cousin to Stanley Holloway, third cousin once removed to Stanley's son and fellow actor Julian Holloway, and third cousin twice removed to Stanley's granddaughter, the author Sophie Dahl.

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Even while at school, Bernard had begun to explore Soho and Fitzrovia with his brother Bruce. Seduced by the area's lurid glamour, he moved there at 16, supporting himself in a variety of jobs that were at odds with his middle-class background, including boxer, building labourer, kitchen assistant and coal miner, but still managed to build a circle that embraced Dylan Thomas, Francis Bacon, John Minton, Nina Hamnett, Daniel Farson and the lowlife of bohemian London.

Jeffrey Bernard Existential Ennui Just the One The Wives and Times of Jeffrey

In his youth Bernard was considered extremely good-looking and supplemented his earnings with gifts and loans from wealthy older women. Some acquaintances suggested he did the same with older men but Bernard always vehemently denied this. Elizabeth Smart suggested that he try journalism and he started to write about his interest in horseracing in Queen magazine.

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Bernard wrote a weekly column for the Sporting Life but was sacked in October 1971. This precipitated a disastrous period in his life. His third wife left with their 2-year-old daughter and he was hospitalised in a detox clinic where he was forced to attend Alcoholics Anonymous sessions. He afterwards always wrote scathingly about AA. After being told by a doctor that he would die very shortly if he continued drinking, he stopped and was "dry" for almost 2 years. During this period he worked as a barman. He was afterwards to describe this as the worst period of his life and resumed drinking on the grounds that life, if it required sobriety, wasn't worth having. He changed from whisky to vodka to lessen the effects of hangovers.

Bernard continued to submit writing to various papers. He became Racing Correspondent for satirical magazine Private Eye, and even had work accepted by ex-employer Sporting Life. He was given a column in The Spectator in 1975. His column, entitled "Low Life" was contrasted with the "High Life" column by wealthy socialite Taki Theodoracopulos, writing as "Taki". While Taki's column described a life of yachts, casinos, and grand hotels, Bernard's was described by Jonathan Meades as a "suicide note in weekly instalments" and principally chronicled his daily round of intoxication and dissipation in the Coach and Horses public house and its fateful consequences. This was mixed with anecdotes, many of which were repeated in the play "Jeffrey Bernard is unwell", and ponderings on life. His lifestyle had an inevitable effect on his health and reliability, and the magazine often had to post the notice "Jeffrey Bernard is unwell" in place of his column.

Though married four times (Anna Grice in 1952, Jackie Heard, Jill Wilsworth and Sue Gluck), he often remarked, only half in jest, that alcohol was the other woman. Over time his drinking affected his health more seriously; he was hospitalised for detoxification, he suffered from pancreatitis and then diabetes. His right leg was amputated, three years before his death. He died at his home in Soho at age 65 of renal failure after refusing further treatment by dialysis.

References

Jeffrey Bernard Wikipedia