The Partisan attracted students, intellectuals, writers, musicians, actors and other theatrical types, all having left-wing sympathies. Among the clientele who were, or became, celebrities were: •
Doris Lessing, author •
Marghanita Laski, journalist •
Karel Reisz, film director •
Lindsay Anderson, theatre and film director •
Arnold Wesker, playwright, and the
Centre 42 activists •
Peggy Seeger, folk singer •
Raymond Williams, novelist and critic •
Derek Marlowe, novelist and screenwriter •
Quentin Crisp, "The Naked Civil Servant" •
John Hurt, actor who famously portrayed Crisp in a 1975
made-for television film •
John Malcolm, actor •
John Berger, art critic and author •
Richard Hoggart, author and sociologist •
Christopher Logue, poet and pacifist •
Rod Stewart, entertainer It was also visited by
Special Branch officers who monitored conversations there. The early
Aldermaston Marches (1958–60) were partly planned in the basement of the Partisan, and the membership of the
Committee of 100 was also drawn up at the coffee house. The coffee house was the subject of an edition of the BBC television current affairs series
Panorama, presented by
Christopher Chataway. In 2017 the
Four Corners Gallery in
Bethnal Green, London held an exhibition of memorabilia, documents and film of the cafe. ==References==