Blythe House has been used as a filming location for numerous films including
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. In the film
Trainspotting, the flat that Renton shows the young couple around when he gets the job as an estate agent and ultimately stashes Begbie and Sickboy in is 78A North End Road, opposite West Kensington tube station. The Nashville Rooms, now the
Famous Three Kings pub, hosted many rock and punk concerts in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Joy Division,
The Sex Pistols and
The Police all played there regularly. In
Hanif Kureishi's novel
The Buddha of Suburbia, the main character moves from the southern suburbs of London to West Kensington and lives by the Nashville. He witnesses one of the first presentations of a punk band, probably The Sex Pistols. The flat featured in the 1969 BBC series 'Take Three Girls' was at 17 Glazbury Road. The 2005
Woody Allen film
Match Point was shot on location at
Queen's Club and in the surrounding residential streets.
Heather Graham and
Mia Kirshner play upper-middle-class dilettantes from West Kensington in the 2008 movie Buy Borrow Steal. ==Notable people== •
Edward and
Georgiana Burne-Jones, he a Pre-Raphaelite painter, she a writer, resided at
the Grange, in what is now the Lytton Estate, West Kensington. •
John Melhuish Strudwick, Pre-Raphaelite painter, resided at Edith Villas during the 1880s and into the 1890s. •
Maude Goodman a.k.a. Matilda Scanes, artist, resided at Edith Villas until 1894, and then 7 Addison Crescent until her death in 1938. From 1938 to 1968 the Maude Goodman Studio operated musical recitals there with Dame Eva Turner as president. •
Nada Bashir, journalist and correspondent, moved to West Kensington in her teen years •
Edward Compton,
actor-manager lived and died at 54 Avonmore Road. •
William Crathern, composer, was organist of St Mary's, West Kensington (at that time known as
North End). •
Edward Elgar, composer, lived at 51 Avonmore Road, W14, 1890–1891. •
Peg Entwistle, Broadway actress whose 1932 suicide from atop the
Hollywood Sign forever tagged her as "The Hollywood Sign Girl", had her earliest childhood at 53 Comeragh Road. •
Estelle, rapper, was born and raised in West Kensington; her song "1980" was written about growing up in the area. •
Charles James Feret, Fulham historian, editor of the
Fulham Chronicle and author of
Fulham Old and New (1900), lived in Edith Road. •
Mahatma Gandhi, lived on 20 Barons Court Road (West Kensington) while studying law. •
Marcus Garvey,
Pan Africanist, founder of the
Black Star Line shipping company and the
Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, lived and died in West Kensington. •
Eugène Goossens, fils,
Belgian musician, his singer wife, Annie Cook and their children, Sir
Eugène Goossens, conductor,
harpists,
Sidonie Goossens and
Marie Goossens and brothers,
Adolphe and Léon, horn and oboe players respectively, lived at 70, Edith Road West. A
blue plaque commemorates them. • Sir
Robert Gunter was a
Yorkshire and
Chelsea-based member of the wealthy landowning confectioners, the Gunter family, who developed large swathes of West London. Street names like Gunterstone and Edith commemorate Gunter family members. •
Henry Rider Haggard, author, lived for several years in Gunterstone Road and wrote ''
King Solomon's Mines and She'' while there. •
Adelaide Hall Jazz singer and entertainer lived at 54A Fairholme Road until her death in 1993. •
Stephen Hester, chief executive, Royal Bank of Scotland •
James Hunt, Formula 1 champion, lived in Normand Mews, 1980–82. •
James MacLaren, architect, designed 22 and 22A Avonmore Road for sculptor HR Pinker. •
Stirling Moss, British former Formula One racing driver, was born in West Kensington in 1929 • Sir
William Palliser, Irish-born conservative politician who built several terraced streets in North End. • Sir
John Richard Robinson, journalist, manager and editor of the
Daily News lived and died at 4 Addison Crescent. •
Bertram Fletcher Robinson, journalist, writer and editor, lived at 4 Addison Crescent with his uncle Sir John Richard Robinson between 1901 and 1902. •
Mary Ann Sieghart writer, broadcaster and assistant editor of
The Times was born in the area. • Sir
John Tenniel (1820–1914), artist and cartoonist, lived at 52 FitzGeorge Avenue, West Kensington until his death on 25 February 1914. •
Antonia White was from Perham Road. •
William Worby Beaumont (1848-1929), engineer and inventor, lived at 76 Gunterstone Road. The local Beaumont Avenue is a memorial to him. •
William Butler Yeats lived in Edith Villas with his family in 1867. • Fred Catling (1873-1947), owner of the Avonmore Collection, the first major collection of world banknotes in the UK, lived at 39 Avonmore Road. ==Transport==