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The Jewish Chronicle

The Eastbourne supremacy

The town is fast becoming cool - and it has nothing to do with the climate

August 7, 2008 23:00

By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

5 min read

The town is fast becoming cool - and it has nothing to do with the climate


It's God's waiting room. People come here to die," grimaces the young heroine of Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging, a new film set in Eastbourne. Hero to heroine: "Really? I heard it was the new Brighton!"

Eastbourne Council could not be more pleased with the line if they had written it themselves, since for years they have been trying to change the view of the resort as the exclusive province of retirees and ageing holidaymakers.

That's an image that's not so easy to dispel in a town where old folk in mobility vehicles even pepper the location shots of this out-and-out teen flick. 

But there's also truth in the advertising Eastbourne has been putting out: the glittering palm-lined prom, yacht-lined marina and trendy alfresco restaurants are all there, and in the year of a strong euro, credit-crunched Brits appear to be pouring in - bookings e are up 66 per cent - to discover the charm of a resort last year named the sunniest place in Britain.