Films The market was the setting for the
1999 film
Notting Hill, with much of the filming taking place on the street. The blue door from the film "Notting Hill" was indeed sold at auction, at Christie's in 1999 for £5,750. The proceeds went to charity. A replica door was then installed, and it continues to be a tourist attraction. The 1950
Ealing Studios police thriller
The Blue Lamp, starring
Dirk Bogarde and
Jack Warner, as P.C. George Dixon, a character later revived in the long-running TV drama,
Dixon of Dock Green, featured location filming in the Paddington/Notting Hill/Portobello area. It features good shots of these locations in pre-
Westway days, and it includes a thrilling car chase along largely traffic-free roads, including Portobello Road. The market was featured in the
1971 musical film Bedknobs and Broomsticks in a scene involving a song (
"Portobello Road") and dance in and around the market staged on sets built at Disney's
Burbank Studios. The lyrics refer to the market and the people who live and work there. In 2006, the 20-minute documentary
Portobello: Attack of the Clones won London awards and was screened a number of times at the infamous Electric Cinema. The film showed how Portobello Road is threatened by high-street stores changing the street's independent spirit. It featured a large number of local stallholders and influencers, and it was made by local filmmakers Paul McCrudden and Alex Thomas for TAG Films.
Alice's Antiques shop at the southern end of Portobello Road is also famous as being the location of Gruber's Antiques in the
Paddington Bear movies.
Theatre The 1959 British musical
Make Me an Offer, with book by
Wolf Mankowitz based on his novel of the same title, and music and lyrics by
David Heneker and
Monty Norman, takes place on Portobello Road, and includes the song "Portobello Road", sung by the ensemble. Another song, "I Want a Lock-up", also refers to Portobello Road. The musical is available for licensing through
Samuel French, Inc. Literature 's 1927 lodgings in Portobello Road The Portobello Road features prominently in
Martin Amis's 1989 satirical novel
London Fields. In the short story "The Portobello Road",
Muriel Spark narrates the story of a murderer who, visited by the ghost of his victim,
Macbeth-style, tends to constantly go to the Portobello Road market to meet her. "The Portobello Road" was included in the 1958 collection
The Go-away Bird and Other Stories. The cult British children's book character
Paddington Bear, featured in the books written by
Michael Bond, enjoys visiting Portobello Market on a daily basis. His friend Mr. Gruber, with whom Paddington has his elevenses every day, owns an antique shop on the Portobello Road. In
Cathy Hopkins'
Mates, Dates and Portobello Princess, the fourth book of her young adult
Mates, Dates series, Nesta Williams who is from a middle-class North London family struggles to fit in as she starts dating rich Simon Peddington-Lee. In
2008,
Ruth Rendell published a novel set in the area, entitled
Portobello. It is the setting for
Paulo Coelho's 2007 novel,
The Witch of Portobello. In the 1970 novel
The Chinese Agent by
Michael Moorcock, a world-renowned jewel-thief more than meets his match when he attempts to swipe a brooch from a Portobello Road market stall, and is hunted down through the streets like a dog by the sharp-eyed market traders. Portobello Road is also mentioned in Indian Urdu writer
Shamsur Rahman Faruqi's 2006 novel
The Mirror of Beauty. In the short story "Different Skies" by
China Miéville, the protagonist buys an eerie coloured window pane in Portobello Road Market. This story is included in the 2005 collection
Looking for Jake.
Music In
1979, the
rock band
Dire Straits sang about the road in the song "Portobello Belle" on their second album
Communiqué. In the narrative introduction to their song ''
Have Some Madeira M'Dear, Michael Flanders of Flanders & Swann mentions a decanter he owns – "cut glass, from the Portobello Road" – in which he keeps Madeira. That decanter plus his Edwardian hat, are credited as the inspirations for the song (album: At the Drop of a Hat''). Donovan's song "Sunny South Kensington" containing the lyrics: "...in the Portobella I met a fella with a cane umbrella." The B-side of British
Singer-Songwriter Cat Stevens' 1966 single "
I Love My Dog" is titled "Portobello Road" and discusses a walk through the famous street and market. The track also appears on Cat Stevens' 1967 debut album
Matthew and Son. It is also referenced in the song "Blue Jeans" by
alternative rock band
Blur, from the
1993 album
Modern Life Is Rubbish, in which the opening lyrics are: "
Air cushioned soles, I bought them on the Portobello Road on a Saturday." In
Caetano Veloso's "Nine Out Of Ten" song from the 1972 album
Transa, he sings "walk down Portobello Road to the sound of reggae". The
Brazilian artist lived in London in the late 1960s and early 1970s during his exile.
David Gilmour's song "Sing" on his 2024
Luck & Strange album contains the lyric: "Found a lifetime ago, Down the Portobello Road, Lovers' snapshots of delight, Those rosy days of black and white.".
TV Steptoe and Son, a UK TV sitcom about Rag and Bone men, frequently refers to the road. In the
Only Fools and Horses episode "
Cash and Curry", conmen use a statue of Kubera they bought from Portobello Road to deceive
Del Boy and
Rodney Trotter. The episode's writer,
John Sullivan, had the idea after visiting the street. The street and its name also appeared regularly on the hit TV series
Minder.
BBC One's daytime antiques-based gameshow
Bargain Hunt regularly features contestants buying items at the market to sell later at auction. The 1977 to 1983
Italian television broadcast RAI was named
Portobello after Portobello Road. ==See also==