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Ian Board
Ian Board
from Wikipedia

The Colony Room Club was located at 41 Dean Street, at the far right

Ian David Archibald Board (16 December 1929 – 26 June 1994) was an English nightclub owner who ran The Colony Room Club in Dean Street in London's Soho district, from 1981 to 1994, having taken it over from Muriel Belcher who founded the private drinking club in 1948.[1]

Early life

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Board grew up in a poor family in Exeter, and his mother died when he was four years old.[1] He liked neither his father nor his stepmother, and as a teenager ran away to London.[1] On arrival, he went to Speakers' Corner and picked up a man, and lived with him for some weeks.[1] He later worked as a commis waiter in Soho's Greek Street.[1]

Career

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Board served behind the bar at the Colony Room Club for 46 years, initially as Belcher's barman, and after she died as its proprietor.[2]

He assiduously cultivated the custom of artists including Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, Michael Andrews, and Barry Flanagan.[1] One night, he ejected Bacon from the premises with the words, "Get out! Call yourself a painter. You can't fucking paint. Take your boring friends with you and don't bother coming back."[1]

Board was known for carrying on Belcher's tradition of obscene language, with tirades to drunken customers such as "Look at you, you great lump, just take a look at yourself. You're a sad and pathetic sight. For fuck's sake pull yourself together..."[1]

Board was gay, and the club under Belcher, herself a lesbian, had always been a safe space to be openly homosexual.[3] However, it was never exclusively so, and as Board said, "I don't mind those poofs, as long as they keep their distance."[3]

Aged 60, Board stopped drinking brandy for breakfast, but continued to drink vodka at home in the morning, and from noon to 11 pm would consume vodka and brandy at the club.[1]

Michael Wojas worked there as a barman and "Board's sidekick" for 13 years, and was bequeathed the club by Board at his 1994 death.[4]

Personal life

[edit]

Board died from cirrhosis,[5] on 26 June 1994.[1]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ian Board was an English nightclub proprietor known for his ownership and management of the Colony Room Club, an iconic private members' drinking establishment in London's Soho district. Having first joined the club as a barman under its founder Muriel Belcher in the late 1940s, he served behind the bar for over four decades before taking over as proprietor in 1979 following her death, and he continued to run it until his own death in 1994. Born Ian David Archibald Board on 16 December 1929 in Exeter, Devon, he became a central and colorful figure in Soho's bohemian scene, where the Colony Room served as a legendary gathering place for artists, writers, and other creative personalities. Board's tenure maintained the club's reputation for its eccentric, irreverent atmosphere, with his own sharp-tongued and unapologetic manner contributing to its distinctive character. He was frequently photographed and portrayed by notable artists, including in works held by the National Portrait Gallery, reflecting his status as a fixture of mid-to-late 20th-century London cultural life. His connections to the Soho milieu extended back to the post-war period, and he remained a well-known personality in the area throughout his life.

Early Life

Childhood in Devon

Ian Board was born on 16 December 1929 and grew up in a poor family in Exeter, Devon. His mother died before he was five years old. He cared neither for his father nor for his stepmother. Board retained something of his Devon accent throughout his life, including the regional habit of adding an "l" to the end of words ending in a vowel. As a teenager, he escaped to London.

Move to London

Ian Board escaped to London as a teenager, leaving behind his family in Exeter. Upon arriving in the city, he went straight to Speakers' Corner, where he picked up a man and lived with him for some weeks. Following this period, he became a commis waiter at a restaurant in Greek Street, Soho, beginning his working life in the area.

Career at the Colony Room Club

Barman under Muriel Belcher

Ian Board served as barman at the Colony Room Club under its founder Muriel Belcher, who established the private members' club in 1948 on Dean Street in Soho. He remained in this role throughout her leadership, contributing to the club's distinctive atmosphere and daily operations for decades. Board worked behind the bar at the Colony Room Club for a total of 46 years, initially under Belcher and continuing after her death in 1979. Following Belcher's death, he maintained certain traditions she had established, including hanging her handbag from the ceiling as a memorial and observing her birthday with drinks in her honor. In 1981, Board succeeded to the proprietorship of the club.

Proprietor (1981–1994)

Ian Board succeeded Muriel Belcher as proprietor of the Colony Room Club in 1981, taking operational control of the private members' bar in Soho's Dean Street. He ran the club for the next thirteen years until his death in June 1994, maintaining its reputation as a small, dimly lit venue heavily decorated with artworks and memorabilia from earlier decades. Board preserved several traditions from Belcher's era, such as keeping her capacious handbag suspended from the ceiling and buying rounds of drinks in her memory on her birthday. The club continued to draw prominent artists and figures from London's bohemian scene, though attendance from some longtime regulars became less frequent over time. His management style was marked by a confrontational demeanor toward patrons, continuing the establishment's tradition of unprovoked belligerence. Upon his death, Board bequeathed the club to his longtime barman and sidekick Michael Wojas, who had worked alongside him for thirteen years. Wojas's loyalty during Board's proprietorship was instrumental in sustaining the club's operations and, earlier, in helping fend off a 1991 threat from the landlord's plan to convert the premises to offices.

Management Style and Personality

Abusive Language and Demeanor

Ian Board continued Muriel Belcher's tradition of strong, obscene invective toward patrons at the Colony Room Club, where his management style was defined by extreme rudeness, intolerance of weakness or formality, and a readiness to unleash verbal tirades. He frequently berated patrons with lengthy outbursts, calling them "sad and pathetic" or ordering them to "pull yourself together," while he particularly detested formal jokes and aggressively silenced anyone who attempted to tell one. In his later years, Board cut a striking figure with a massively swollen, pitted nose—described as a "giant strawberry" from prolonged brandy consumption—often topped with a bright green floppy cap and paired with a tracksuit; he also relied on a stick to support himself after suffering leg and back injuries from falls. This abusive demeanor extended to the club's famous patrons as well.

Interactions with Notable Patrons

The Colony Room Club, under Ian Board's proprietorship from 1981 to 1994, continued to serve as a gathering place for prominent figures in the art world, including artists Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, Michael Andrews, and Barry Flanagan, although their attendance became less frequent over the years. One particularly notable incident involved Board ejecting Francis Bacon, then nearly 80 years old, from the premises one night, while shouting "Get out! Call yourself a painter. You can't fucking paint," before instructing him not to return; despite the outburst, Bacon did resume visiting the club. Board was also pleased by the patronage of singer Lisa Stansfield, who had taken to drinking at the Colony Room during her visits to London, and he made a point of visiting her in Rochdale.

Personal Life

Drinking Habits and Health

Ian Board was renowned for his extreme alcohol consumption, which dominated his daily routine for decades. He drank vodka in the morning at home, followed by vodka and brandy at the Colony Room Club from noon until 11 pm. In his 60th year, he gave up drinking brandy for breakfast but continued heavy drinking. His dietary habits reflected this lifestyle, as he would often go without food for days and then eat a cold tin of ravioli in the small hours of the morning. By his mid-fifties, his heavy brandy intake had caused his nose to swell dramatically, described as “a great red pitted ball, like a giant strawberry”. Board died in 1994 from complications related to his long-term heavy alcohol consumption.

Sexuality and Relationships

The Colony Room Club, under his proprietorship from 1981 until 1994, continued to function as a safe space for homosexual patrons, inheriting this role from its founder Muriel Belcher, a lesbian whose own sexuality had drawn many gay men to the venue since its opening in 1948. Although the club attracted a diverse clientele and was never exclusively gay, it maintained a reputation for tolerance toward homosexuality during an era when such openness was rare. Board's attitude toward gay patrons was encapsulated in his well-known remark: "I don't mind those poofs, as long as they keep their distance." This blunt statement, typical of the club's irreverent and often abrasive atmosphere, highlighted the complex social dynamics within the space he ran.

Death

Circumstances and Cause

Ian Board died on 26 June 1994 in London, England, at the age of 64. The cause of his death was cirrhosis, arising from decades of chronic heavy alcohol consumption that had long defined his lifestyle and drawn comment even in his lifetime. Upon his death, Board bequeathed the Colony Room Club to Michael Wojas, who had served as his barman and close associate for 13 years.

Legacy

Cultural Impact on Soho Scene

The Colony Room Club under Ian Board's proprietorship from 1981 to 1994 preserved one of the last remnants of traditional Soho bohemia, maintaining a space that echoed the 1950s in its small, dark, racing-green upstairs room heavily hung with pictures, photographs, and mirrors. Described as a backwater of a disappearing Soho, the club offered a rare egalitarian environment where men and women from widely diverse social backgrounds—including dukes and stagehands—could talk, drink, and laugh together without regard for class distinctions. This socially mixed atmosphere deliberately broke down barriers of class, race, sex, and sexuality that were upheld elsewhere, serving as a cultural stronghold of post-war bohemianism. Despite Board's notorious abusive demeanor, marked by obscene invective and enraged outbursts directed at strangers or those showing weakness, the club inspired widespread affection among patrons. This paradox highlighted the club's enduring appeal as a haven of empathy and informal camaraderie, even as Board's personal unattractiveness and fearsome reputation repelled some. Board's death in 1994 marked a further shrinkage of the older, socially mixed Soho world that the Colony Room had long represented, with reflections in obituaries underscoring the contraction of this bohemian enclave amid broader cultural shifts. While mainstream documentation of this impact remains limited, primarily appearing in obituary reflections and niche accounts, the club's role as a surviving fragment of Soho's traditional bohemia was widely acknowledged among those who knew it.

Media Appearances

Television Features as Self

Ian Board appeared as himself in two British television episodes. In 1985, he was credited as Self in one episode of the series Just Another Day. In 1991, Board featured as Self - The Colony Room Club in the Without Walls episode "Salvage of a Soho Photographer." These are his only credited on-screen appearances in television or film.
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