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Joe Orton

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Gender Male
Death57 years ago
Date of birth January 1,1933
Zodiac sign Capricorn
Born Leicester
United Kingdom
Date of died August 9,1967
DiedIslington
London
United Kingdom
SiblingsMarilyn Orton
Douglas Orton
Leonie Orton
Job Author
Playwright
Movies/Shows Loot
Entertaining Mr Sloane
Awards Obie Award for Best Foreign Play
Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Revival
Parents William A. Orton
Plays Loot
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID405132

The Orton Diaries
The Complete Plays
The Erpingham Camp
Fred and Madge: The Visitors : Two Plays
Head to toe
Between Us Girls: A Novel
The Boy Hairdresser: And, Lord Cucumber : Two Novels
Crimes of Passion: The Ruffian on the Stair, The Erpingham Camp
Orton Complete Plays: Entertaining Mr Sloane; Loot; What the Butler; Ruffian; Erpingham Camp; Funeral Games; Good & . . .
Funeral Games: And, The Good and Faithful Servant
The Methuen Drama Book of Plays from the Sixties: Roots; Serjeant Musgrave's Dance; Loot; Early Morning; the Ruling Class
Contemporary British Plays
Roof
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Joe Orton Life story


John Kingsley Orton, known under the pen name of Joe Orton, was an English playwright, author and diarist. His public career, from 1964 until his death in 1967, was short but highly influential. During this brief period he shocked, outraged and amused audiences with his scandalous black comedies.

London's long-term lav affair: A history of public toilets in the capital

Feb 16,2020 10:15 am

London is home to many fine and famous firsts: The First one-way street; The First commercially made jigsaw puzzle; The First sale of a banana in Britain - and The First public flush toilets.

The provision of lavatories has always been about More Than simply somewhere to do one's business. For women in particular, to have access to a toilet outside of the home was something that had to be fought for - both in terms of public facilities and also in many workplaces.

But although they are essential in allowing human society to function, Some fall into ruin, others have been sold and turned into tiny or minute.

So, in praise of The Public pissoir, here are some of London's toilet-based tales you didn't know you'd been waiting for.

Dick Whittington's giant toilet

Public toilets, as you might expect, were fairly rudimentary before The End of the 19Th Century . Men - as ever - were able to find a discreet alleyway and relieve Themselves there. Women, on The Other hand, had to either find a dark corner or go to a communal longhouse.

In 1423, a 128-seat toilet hanging over the River Thames at The Mouth of the Walbrook was established by London's first mayor, Richard Whittington . (He is the Dick of talking cat pantomime Fame - although it seems he probably didn't have a cat, and almost certainly not one that could speak. )

This " house of easement" was divided into 64 seats for Men and the same for women, and is believed to be The First segregated-by-sex Public Toilet . Its location meant it was Washed Out by The Tide twice A Day .

Working-class women could be thus catered for, But for the more genteel ladies, a chamber pot in their curtained carriage was The Way to go. If This Was not possible, well-heeled women were restricted by their bladder capacity. They had to remain Within Reach of places they could relieve Themselves - either their own home or those of respectable friends or family.

Monkey closets and money-spinners

The Great Exhibition of 1851 was held at Crystal Palace , where plumber George Jennings installed flushing toilets he called " monkey closets" - a slang industry term inspired by The Shape of some of the plumbing. By The Time The Exhibition closed, More Than 800,000 visitors had used the facilities.

Jennings then persuaded the organisers to keep the toilets open. They were quite the earner, generating a penny-a-go revenue that amounted to a yearly income of about £1,000 (a six-figure sum Today ).

Since those heady days, The City 's public conveniences have been through A Number of highs and lows.

The urinary leash and the urinette

By The End of the 19Th Century , " public waiting rooms" were more widespread - But were overwhelmingly for Men . The so-called " urinary leash" continued to impede women's access to public spaces.

The Ladies Sanitary Association, organised shortly after The Creation of The First public flushing toilet, campaigned from the 1850s for " special erections placed in a well-frequented part of the parish" to provide " water closet accommodation for women".

Secretary of The Association , Rose Adams, described the " grievous suffering" of women " who naturally find it difficult to ask for public consideration in this matter".

Her urging was backed up by medical (and perhaps Even more influential than that, male) advice. Dr Stevenson, the medical officer of health for Paddington, asserted women had " the same physical necessities" as Men and The Call for female toilets was " no imaginary want created by sentimentalism".

By 1898 The Union of Women's Liberal and Radical Associations had formed. It demanded a Public Toilet in Camden, where there was already provision for Men . This met with opposition: from people who feared it would devalue nearby property; from Men who did not want The Ladies ' facility to be next to theirs; and from those who claimed it would be a traffic hazard.

It wasn't Until December 1905, after then-vestryman to St Pancras, the Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw , championed The Cause , and a report was published by the Highways, Sewers and Public Works Committee, that the borough agreed to a public ladies' convenience in Park Street .

Inequality continued - Even if women could find a Public Toilet , unlike Men using a communal urinal, they usually had to pay. The " water closet" necessary to accommodate A Woman and her needs took up much more room and required more maintenance than the simple system for Men .

One attempt to get around This Was the installation of " urinettes" which were similar to water closets But smaller and had curtains instead of doors. Like a urinal, they were automatically flushed and had limited privacy. They were soon removed, partly because of complaints they were being used in an " uncleanly manner". Presumably unlike the male version, which is well-known for being fragrantly pleasant.

Keeping women in their place (i. e. the home)

The upheavals of World War One saw the greater presence of lone female travellers, and women Taking Over jobs previously done by The Men who had gone to fight. With many fewer Men in the factories, women could of course make use of the already-installed toilets. After The War , women were expected to return to the domestic sphere and not " steal" a job from A Man .

Workplace discrimination on the basis of sex was outlawed in 1919, with the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act, which made it illegal to ban people from jobs based on their sex. But there was no law about providing toilets - and according to The Museum of London many professions used the fact of insufficient female facilities as an excuse for not hiring women.

The 1992 Workplace Regulations Act means that now, not ensuring that Men and women employees have separate toilet facilities is unlawful.

What are your rights? The lav that dare not speak its name

Public toilets have also had uses other than that for which was originally intended. Cottaging, which takes its name from the small brick and tiled toilets built from the Victorian period onwards, saw Men make use of a venue where they were sure to meet Other Men , and where a degree of personal exposure was common.

The Gents ' at South End Green near Hampstead Heath - a listed building - is a Victorian underground lavatory block that has been lavishly restored to its former glory.

Star-spotters might like to know it is The Place where George Michael was arrested for drugs offences in 2008 - and, according to Historic England , is the " only public convenience still in use that we know was used by [playwright] Joe Orton to cruise".

The Actor Sir John Gielgud was arrested in a gents' in Chelsea at a time when The Law stipulated that A Man could be arrested for merely the intent of committing an act of " gross indecency. " He was unlucky enough to encounter an undercover policeman lurking by a urinal.

In 1937, a book called For Your Convenience was published by the Limehouse Nights author Thomas Burke under the pseudonym Paul Pry. It was a barely veiled cottaging guide to London's public toilets and detailed the distinctive reputations each had developed.

" If you wanted a piece of rough you'd look round the cottages in Covent Garden , " he wrote. " If you wanted the theatrical trade, you would do some of the cottages round the back of Jermyn Street. If you were looking for a good class of trade, you would visit The Cottage at Waterloo Station . "

Full circle

An 1878 report in medical journal The Lancet highlighted the need for female conveniences, pointing out that " to obtain this much-needed accommodation, some ladies go to restaurants and order refreshments which they do not require, and others to milliners and confectioners' shops. It may be safely assumed that The Money thus spent, Even when it is only a few pence, cannot always be conveniently spared".

It's a situation familiar to many Today - having to buy a coffee in order to get The Code to use a customers-only toilet because there are no available public ones. And like in 1878, there is a growing movement of " toilet activists" determined to alleviate The Problem .

maintains an openly accessible database with many codes on it, while organisations such as The Campaign for better provision. The Royal Society for Public Health argues that public toilets should be considered " as essential as streetlights, roads and waste collection, and equally well enforced by legislation and regulations".



Source of news: bbc.com

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