Framed by brick walls bearing hundreds of letters in honour of the King of Rock, a green door opens onto the last home of Freddie Mercury, the remarkably talented frontman of Queen. In 1985, the singer moved to this quiet street in Kensington and sumptuously decorated the rooms of this home that would host raucous parties and where the studio annex would host recording sessions late into the night. When, with his health deteriorating, the rock star withdrew from the public eye, he would spend more and more time in the intimacy of this home. Assisted, until his death by his ex-lover and best friend, Mary Austin, Mercury died in this house on November 24, 1991. He was cremated and his ashes were placed in a secret location, known only to Mary Austin. Following the last wishes of her friend, the woman, along with her family, still lives in Garden Lodge, surrounded by the furnishings that Freddie Mercury picked out himself. The building was built in 1908 for painter Cecil Rae who lived in the house with his wife and, before Mercury, it had numerous high-profile owners, including Peter Wilson, president of the auction house Sotheby’s.
A famed landscape of the master of Pop Art seeks a home - if the sale meets expectations, it could be the hi-ghest price for a Hockney ever sold at auction.
Elizabeth Mallet, the Director of London’s First Daily
The first editor in history announced that she wanted to publish foreign news items without additional commentary, supposing that readers had “enough common sense to think for themselves”.
An evening that changed pop music history lives forever on Great Queen Street, commemorated by the prestigious PRS for Music plaque dedicated to the famous New Wave band.