Books The Reform Club appears in
Anthony Trollope's 1867 novel
Phineas Finn. This eponymous main character becomes a member of the club and there acquaints Liberal members of the
House of Commons, who arrange to get him elected to an Irish parliamentary borough. The book is one of the political novels in the
Palliser series. The political events it describes are a fictionalized account of the build-up to the
Second Reform Act, passed in 1867, which effectively extended the franchise to the working classes. The club appears in
Jules Verne's
Around the World in Eighty Days, published in 1872, as a novel in 1873. The protagonist,
Phileas Fogg, is a member of the Reform Club. He sets out to circumnavigate the world on a bet from his fellow members, beginning and ending at the club. The Reform Club was used as a meeting place for
MI6 operatives in Part 3, Chapter 1, p. 83ff of
Graham Greene's spy novel
The Human Factor (1978, Avon Books, ). The Reform Club and its Victorian era celebrity chef
Alexis Soyer play pivotal roles in
MJ Carter's mystery novel ''The Devil's Feast'' (2016, Fig Tree, ). The club features in the fourth chapter of
Robert Galbraith’s seventh Cormoran Strike novel,
The Running Grave. The Filipino novel
Revolution: 80 Days (2022) also featured the Reform Club as the affiliation of its protagonist, the British gentleman Richard Haze.
Films and television Comedian and travel writer
Michael Palin began and ended his
televised 1989 journey around the world in 80 days at the Reform Club, following his fictional predecessor. Palin was not permitted to enter the building to complete his journey, as had been his intention, so his trip ended on the steps outside. Palin later explained that he had been refused entry not because he was not wearing a tie but because the club claimed it would 'disturb the members'. Victorian publisher
Norman Warne is depicted visiting the Reform Club in the 2006 film
Miss Potter. The club has been used as a location in a number of other films, including the fencing scene in the 2002
James Bond movie
Die Another Day,
The Quiller Memorandum (1966),
The Man Who Haunted Himself (1970), Lindsay Anderson's
O Lucky Man! (1973),
The Avengers (1998),
Nicholas Nickleby (2002),
1408 (2007),
Quantum of Solace (2008),
Sherlock Holmes (2009),
Paddington (2014), and
Christopher Nolan's
Tenet (2020). The club was used in
Chris Van Dusen's television series
Bridgerton as a filming location.
Photoshoot The Reform Club was the location of a photo shoot featuring
Paula Yates for the 1979 summer issue of
Penthouse.
Podcasts In
The Magnus Archives, the Reform Club was the possible location of Jurgen Leitner's library, and had secret underground tunnels. ==Notable members==