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Life

He’s not just rock ‘n’ roll — there is also property and Hollywood

Douglas Villiers reflects on a colourful life — the subject of a new book

July 8, 2013 13:43
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By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

4 min read

Sitting in a Hampstead cafe stirring his cup of tea, Douglas Villiers comes across as a relatively unassuming 76-year-old. White-haired, well-spoken and genial, he betrays not a trace of his Jewish immigrant lineage or of a life spent mixing with the wealthy, glamorous, and in some cases, infamous.

Involved in too many business ventures to count, Villiers describes himself as an entrepreneur in the newly-published memoir about his rollercoaster life, It's Only Rock 'n' Roll. His colourfully diverse career includes record-breaking property deals (he sold a house on The Bishops Avenue for what was then the largest sum ever paid for a London home), introducing the discotheque to the capital and being a photographer during the Yom Kippur War.

Married three times, and a father to five, he has enjoyed the flirtations of Princess Margaret, helped bring the young Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to the London stage and befriended Oliver Stone in Hollywood. Not bad for someone whose first job as a shop boy at Fortnum & Mason involved delivering calves foot jelly to Buckingham Palace for the ailing Queen Mary. When she died, "everybody gave me snide looks, joking that I'd given her her last meal", he chuckles.

Brought up in Golders Green - where his East End Jewish father and Welsh Baptist mother set up home after marrying at the Liberal synagogue in St John's Wood - and educated at Hasmonean, Villiers was always something of a chancer. But he was barely 16 when his father committed suicide, leaving him no choice but to "dive in at the deep end" in order to provide for his mother.