MJ Maccardini (trailerfullofpix)'s photos with the keyword: feddens

Gate Cinema

14 Oct 2009 284
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Notting HIll Gate. Nick and Leo often went to the cinema in NHG, but I'm not sure which of the two it was. See where this picture was taken. [?]

Rotten Row

14 Oct 2009 252
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Near the end of the book, Nick walks along Rotten Row in Hyde Park. The sweet chestnuts were just beginning to drop from the trees on the left when I was there. There was so much to think about, and the Park itself seemed pensive, the chestnuts standing in pools of their shed leaves, the great planes, slower to change, still towering tan and gold; but all he wanted to do was march along. A group of young women on horseback came trotting down Rotten Row, and he crossed behind them, over the damp, crusted sand. He didn't mind the north-easterly breeze. It was the time of year when the atmosphere streamed with unexpected hints and memories, and a paradoxical sense of renewal. See where this picture was taken. [?]

Ladbroke Square Gardens Gate

14 Oct 2009 215
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Sign says: "Private Garden Subscribers Only." The people who live in houses surrounding the garden are keyholders. See where this picture was taken. [?]

Coronet Cinema

14 Oct 2009 314
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Notting HIll Gate. Nick and Leo often went to the cinema in NHG, but I'm not sure which of the two (the Coronet or the Gate) it was. Also seen in the movie "Notting Hill." See where this picture was taken. [?]

Ladbroke Square Gardens W11

14 Oct 2009 338
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. I think the garden behind the Feddens house is actually Ladbroke Square Gardens. Nick describes the garden as being as big as Central Park. LSG is the largest private garden in London. See where this picture was taken. [?]

A Peak into the Garden

14 Oct 2009 206
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Looking into Kensington Park Gardens (private). The Fedden household are keyholders. The communal gardens were as much a part of Nick's romance of London as the house itself: big as the central park of some old European city, but private, and densely hedged on three sides with holly and shrubbery behind high Victorian railings. There were one or two places, in the surrounding streets, where someone who wasn't a keyholder could see through to a glade among the planes and tall horse chestnuts -- across which perhaps a couple would saunter or an old lady wait for her even slower dog. See where this picture was taken. [?]

White Facades

14 Oct 2009 232
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Kensington Park Gardens (the street). And Nick was in residence, and almost, he felt, in possession. He loved coming home to Kensington Park Gardens in the early evening, when the wide treeless street was raked by the sun, and the two white terraces stared at each other with the glazed tolerance of rich neighbours. See where this picture was taken. [?]

The Feddens Live Here

14 Oct 2009 218
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Kensington Park Gardens. In the miniseries, the Feddens live at #29 (just to the left out of this shot; there was a truck parked in front so the photo op wasn't good). The book doesn't give an exact house number. The filming for the miniseries was actually done in Tredegar Square in the East End rather than here in Kensington Park Gardens. See where this picture was taken. [?]

Kensington Park Gardens Sign W11

14 Oct 2009 245
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. This is the street where the Fedden family lives. See where this picture was taken. [?]

The Castle

14 Oct 2009 198
The Line of Beauty , by Alan Hollinghurst. Possibly the "Chepstow Castle" where Nick and Leo have their first date. Notting Hill. He fixed his thoughts for the hundredth time on the little back bar of the Chepstow Castle, which he had chosen for its shadowy semi-privacy -- a space incuriously glanced into by people being served in the public bar, but barely used on summer evenings when everyone stood outside on the pavement. See where this picture was taken. [?]