Frith Street

Frith Street is in the Soho area of London. To the north is Soho Square and to the south is Shaftesbury Avenue. The street crosses Old Compton Street, Bateman Street and Romilly Street.

Frith Street
Frith Street facing south early on a July morning
TypeStreet
AreaSoho
LocationLondon
Coordinates51°30′51″N 0°07′55″W
North endSoho Square
South endShaftesbury Avenue
Construction
Completion1670s

Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club at 47 Frith Street.

History

Frith Street was laid out in the late 1670s and early 1680s and evidently named after Richard Frith, a wealthy builder.[1] In the 18th and early 19th centuries many artistic and literary people came to live in Soho, and several of them settled in this street. The painter John Alexander Gresse was here in 1784, the year of his death. John Horne Tooke, philologist and politician, lived here in about 1804; John Constable lived here in 1810–11; John Bell, the sculptor, in 1832–33; and William Hazlitt wrote his last essays while he was lodging at no. 6 Frith Street prior to his death there in 1830.[1] The lithographic artist Alfred Concanen had a studio at no. 12 for many years.[2]

Samuel Romilly, the legal reformer, was born at no. 18 in 1757, and the young Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart lodged at no. 20 with his father and sister in 1764–65. In 1816 the actor William Charles Macready was living at no. 64, and over a hundred years later, from 1924 to 1926 John Logie Baird lived at no. 22 where on 26 January 1926 he demonstrated television to members of the Royal Institution.[1]

In 1989 Frith Street Gallery was founded here, originally occupying two adjacent townhouses. Initially it was a forum for contemporary drawing, then it expanded into a wide range of artistic media. In 2007 the gallery moved to Golden Square, just a short distance from Frith Street.[3]

Today

Blue plaque marking Baird's first demonstration of television at 22 Frith Street

The coffee shop Bar Italia occupies no. 22 and there is a blue plaque over the door to commemorate Baird's TV experiments. Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club has been at no. 47 since 1965.

Frith Street is mentioned twice in the lyrics of the 2007 song "Glorious" by the Australian singer Natalie Imbruglia, in the first verse and at the end of the song.[4]

gollark: Generally people will probably read a quick summary or something at most.
gollark: I have seen that neat GPT-3 codegen video, but I find some of the GPT-3-related claims somewhat dubious since access to it seems very closed-off right now (ironic for "OpenAI").
gollark: You can just use sub/superscripts and Unicode arrows/other symbols, no?
gollark: I probably would just recommend Node.js or Python though, they're fairly easy to work with and have large ecosystems for web things.
gollark: Rust is neat and has decent web frameworks, but being a compiled strongly typed language is somewhat slower/more annoying to work with than Node/Python/whatever. And some of the stuff is still quite in flux.

See also

References

  1. Weinreb, Ben; Hibbert, Christopher (1993). The London Encyclopaedia (revised ed.). London: Papermac. pp. 303–304. ISBN 0-333-57688-8.
  2. Irons, Neville - 'Alfred Concanen, Master Lithographer' Irish Arts Review Vol. 4, No. 3 (Autumn 1987) pgs 37-41
  3. "Frith Street Gallery - GOLDEN SQUARE". Frith Street Gallery.
  4. "NATALIE IMBRUGLIA - GLORIOUS". Ultratop.
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