In 1957 he joined the Londoner's Diary at the
Evening Standard where four years later its new editor
Charles Wintour gave him a weekly page titled
Mainly for Men and later
McG. This featured trendsetters, designers, shopkeepers and free spirits who captured the essence of
Swinging London – in the words of his obituary in
The Times, "anyone who invented a new board game, or kept a tiger in a King's Road flat, or revived a hilarious old folk tradition... In pre-internet days he would try out new gizmos and test books on dieting or how to improve your memory. His writing covered everything from house-sitting and how to cook garden snails for guests to beekeeping and historic loos". In McGill's early years the
Standard’s Canadian-British proprietor
Lord Beaverbrook declared the paper "my joy" and McGill a favourite who was frequently summoned to his Riviera home. He was expected to bring despatches from head office at the
Daily Express in London and to provide the cabaret for house guests who might include
Somerset Maugham,
Aristotle Onassis,
Maria Callas or
Jack Kennedy. At dinner in Cap d'Ail on his first visit McGill found himself sitting next to
Nancy Cunard. Introducing him, Beaverbrook declared: “I hear you are the funny man. Say something funny.” What McGill enjoyed was meeting people who were not then famous, but enterprising: wavemakers such as pioneering restaurateur
Robert Carrier, Carnaby Street retailer
John Stephen, inventors of the rock musical
Tim Rice and
Andrew Lloyd Webber, the legendary "living lord" Maharaj Ji, and the not-yet pop star
Marc Bolan whom he had featured three years earlier in
Town magazine as the Stamford Hill
mod, Mark Feld. McGill was also encouraged by his editor,
Marius Pope, to dress up for stunts, to be photographed as, for example, a saucy niece or maiden aunt seeking advice on the sights of London. One of his major duties was to run annual competitions in which readers voted for London's "Girl of the Year" or the "Pub of the Year", and to discover a Wine Tasting Champion and an All-comers Boules Champion, for which he styled his own team Les Enfants Terriboules. On the judging teams McGill enrolled celebrities such as
Fenella Fielding,
Ronnie Wood,
Willie Rushton,
Denis Compton,
Jonathan Routh,
Nigella Lawson,
Carol Thatcher,
Alan Coren and Tim Rice. == Personal life ==