Waterloo Trivia (Waterloo Station: Part 7)

As Britain’s largest railway station it is not surprising that Waterloo has developed an interesting catalogue of trivia and curiosities over the years.

Here’s a selection…

Panorama of Waterloo station's concourse

Panorama of Waterloo station’s concourse (please click to enlarge)

Meet me under the clock…
Waterloo's main clock

Waterloo’s main clock

Manufactured by Gents of Leicester and hanging high over the main concourse, Waterloo’s huge four-sided clock has been a popular meeting point for Londoners (especially those on a romantic rendezvous) since the early 1920s.

Clock over the concourse

Hanging high… Waterloo’s main clock

Although not mentioned directly, it is perhaps safe to assume that The Kinks had the clock in mind when writing their 1967 hit, Waterloo Sunset… which includes the lyric, “Terry meets Julie, Waterloo station every Friday night.”

Please click below to listen to this quintessential London song…

Waterloo’s clock played an important part in the much loved BBC comedy, Only Fools and Horses.

'Only Fools and Horses', Christmas 1988

‘Only Fools and Horses’, Christmas 1988

In the feature length episode, Dates first broadcast on Christmas day 1988, it is beneath the Waterloo clock that esteemed Londoner, Del Boy first meets his future wife, Raquel (although Del was worried about the rendezvous point at first- “the last girl I met at Waterloo station got mugged on the escalator”!)

Please click below for the clip:

Waterloo News Cinema

For 36 years Waterloo Station boasted its very own cinema.

Waterloo News Cinema pictured in 1934 (image: Cinema Treasures)

Waterloo News Cinema pictured in 1934 (image: Cinema Treasures)

Opened in the summer of 1934, the cinema stood opposite platform 1 and was originally run by ‘Capitol and Provincial News Theatres’ who also operated a similar venue at Victoria.

As the company’s name suggests, the station based cinemas were devoted to screening news reels. Here, commuters eager to catch up on current events could pop in daily between 9am and 11pm to mull over the looped bulletins.

Waterloo Cinema auditorium, 1934 (image: Cinema Treasures)

Waterloo Cinema auditorium, 1934 (image: Cinema Treasures)

Cartoons were also included on the bill; these being the days when classic characters such as Mickey Mouse and Tom and Jerry ruled the silver screen!

Mickey Mouse... a regular sight at Waterloo during the 1930s and 40s

Mickey Mouse… a regular sight at Waterloo during the 1930s and 40s

By the 1960s news-reels were in demise thanks to the growth of television.

Consequently, Waterloo’s cinema was rebranded the ‘Classic Cinema Waterloo’ and switched to screening double bills of vintage Hollywood flicks.

A screenshot from cheap 1973 flick, 'Horror Hospital'- Waterloo's old cinema can be glimpsed in the background...

A screenshot from the 1973 budget movie, ‘Horror Hospital’- Waterloo’s old cinema can be seen in the background…

The cinema screened its final show (an Alfred Hitchcock double bill) on 14th March 1970 and then lay empty before being sadly demolished in 1988.

However, some of the picture house’s art-deco curves can still be spotted outside the station on the junction of Approach Road and Cab Road.

Remnants of the old cinema today (on the junction of Approach Road and Cab Road)

Remnants of the old cinema today (on the corner of Approach Road and Cab Road)

 

Footage of the cinema, as it appeared in the 1940s, can be viewed later in this post.

Waterloo Celebs

During its news reel days, Waterloo’s cinema would’ve screened plenty of topical reels that were filmed within the station itself- with stories of celebrities, newly arrived from the USA via boat-train, proving especially popular.

A good example is Charlie Chaplin’s return to London via Waterloo in 1952… please click below to view:

Plenty of other celebrities have been snapped at Waterloo too as the gallery below demonstrates…

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A robber reformed…

Between the 1970s and 1990s, Waterloo was the place to go if you wished to meet a somewhat shadier type of celeb…in this case, a chap called Ronald Christopher Edwards; aka Buster Edwards… one of the rogues involved in 1963’s infamous Great Train Robbery.

Buster Edwards (image: BBC)

Buster Edwards (image: BBC)

Born in Lambeth in 1931, Buster grew up close to Waterloo Station.

Unfortunately, he fell into a life of crime, his crooked career famously culminating in the robbery of the Glasgow to Euston Royal Mail train in August 1963.

Scene of the crime.... a Royal Mail carriage which was at the centre of the 1963 heist (image: Associated Press)

Scene of the crime….a Royal Mail carriage which was at the centre of the 1963 theft (image: Associated Press)

Following the heist, Buster fled to Mexico with his family but soon found himself homesick and strapped for cash.

He negotiated his return back to the UK but the plan didn’t work out as he’d hoped and the train robber found himself sent down for a 15 year stretch.

When Buster was granted early release in 1975 he decided to go straight- by establishing a flower stall outside Waterloo station, close to the junction of Waterloo Road and Mepham Street.

The site of Buster's former flower stall

The site of Buster’s former flower stall

In 1988 Edwards’ story was immortalised in the film, ‘Buster’ starring Phil Collins in the lead role and Julie Walters as his long suffering wife.

Buster Poster

 

The final scene of the film showing Buster as a reformed florist was shot on the Southbank, a short distance from Waterloo station (please click below to watch).

Despite the gentle nature of the film, the real life Buster Edwards was heading for tragedy as he grew older.

A severe alcoholic, he sunk into depression and, on the 28th November 1994, aged 63, Buster committed suicide by hanging himself from a  girder in a garage on Greet Street, a short distance from his Waterloo flower stall.

Buster Edwards with his Waterloo flower stall (image: ITV)

Buster Edwards with his Waterloo flower stall (image: ITV)

Waterloo on Film

Waterloo station has appeared on film many times. Here are a few examples…

London Terminus (1944)

Made towards the end of WWII, this 15 minute documentary follows a young couple as they head for Waterloo’s news cinema, where they settle down to catch a film about the workings of the station.

Rush Hour (1970)

A quirky short made by British Transport films to showcase Waterloo’s chaotic nature.

Harry’s Game (1982)

In the opening scene to this dark drama, IRA hit-man Billy Downes (played by Derek Thompson) – exits Waterloo station and heads for the tube as he embarks upon his mission to assassinate a Cabinet minister…

West End Girls (1985)

Part of the music video to the Pet Shop Boys’ classic synth hit, ‘West End Girls’ was filmed in and around Waterloo station.

The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)

In this typical Hollywood scene action, Jason Bourne (played by Matt Damon), helps whistle-blowing Guardian journalist, Simon Ross (Paddy Considine) evade the CIA’s prying eyes through Waterloo’s rush hour…

Jhoom Barabar Jhoom (2007)

In the opening sequence to romantic comedy, Jhoom Barabar Jhoom, legendary Indian actor, Amitabh Bachchan (referenced to western audiences in Slumdog Millionaire) brings the dazzle of Bollywood to Waterloo’s concourse!

The Last Days of Steam

Waterloo was one of the last major terminals to operate steam-hauled services, with the powerful coal driven engines chugging in and out of the station right up until 1967.

A steam engine at Waterloo, 1967

A steam engine at Waterloo, 1967

Footage of steam trains in and around Waterloo during their very last days can be viewed below; a sight which is rather surreal when modern office blocks such as the Millbank Tower can be glimpsed in the background…

 

9 responses

  1. I remember the newsreel theatre as my mother would take me there after appointments at the Royal Eye Hospital when I was a child…..but having had drops in my eyes for the examination what I saw was always distinctly blurred!

    I remember steam at Waterloo, too when I was commuting to London…and if I remember rightly the entrance shown in the section about Buster Edwards was across the road from the Union Jack Club…..a hotel for service and ex service personnel which i think no longer exists.

    1. Thanks for sharing, Helen those are superb memories. You’re right, Buster’s stall was where you mention. The Union Jack Club is still there- and remains very busy.

      Thanks again.

  2. The Union Jack club is still there and used by todays Service Personnel. I remember the cinema well, it was a comfortable place to while away some time when waiting to catch a train for Service people. In the fifties, on a Friday and Sunday the station would of been full of Service Personnel going on leave all in uniform. I think the cinema admitted Service Personnel free in uniform, the normal price was 6pence (2.5p) in todays money. Great times thanks for reminding me.

    1. Great memories, John. Thank you so much for sharing them here.

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