The posthumous allegations surrounding Ted Heath have again raised the eyebrows of suspicion at older men who have chosen not to marry. This is all very different from the way they were once regarded. Bachelors were viewed as more masculine than married men, not less so. Bachelors had rooms, landladies and lives filled with glamour and adventure. Fleming’s Bond was the perfect example, unfettered in his masculinity and steadfast in his refusal to allow marriage to impinge upon his buccaneering style. When Heath was Prime Minister in the 1970s, no one cared that he was an unmarried sailor, fond of orchids and conducting symphony orchestras. In the same era, no one cared that Cliff Richard, who could have had practically any woman he wanted, was seemingly untempted by any of them. Were we right or wrong not to care? Time will no doubt tell.
Whatever happened to the great british bachelor?

- Embrace it.14th Feb 2017
- RIP TPT.13th Feb 2017
- David Beckham...12th Feb 2017
- Life imitatin...9th Feb 2017
- No slum dog b...4th Feb 2017
- Bye just now....2nd Feb 2017
- And still the...29th Jan 2017
- The reason I ...28th Jan 2017
- Cultural Diff...25th Jan 2017
- Would Bowie h...23rd Jan 2017
- I don't remem...22nd Jan 2017
- I didn't real...19th Jan 2017
- The gig only ...17th Jan 2017
- Good God!15th Jan 2017
- Elton John's ...13th Jan 2017 prev next