Cultural references
[edit]
Draper's Mill
Literature[edit]
Margate features at the start and as a recurrent theme in Margate writer Iain Aitch's travelogue, A Fete Worse Than Death. The author was born in the town.
T. S. Eliot, who in 1921 recuperated after a mental breakdown in the town of Cliftonville, commented in his poem The Waste Land Part III - The Fire Sermon:
On Margate sands.
I can connect
Nothing with nothing.
Margate features as a destination in Graham Swift's novel Last Orders and its film adaptation. The character Jack Dodds had asked to have his remains scattered at Margate, and the book tells the tale of the drive to Margate and the memories evoked on the way.
The Victorian author William Thackeray used out-of-season Margate as the setting for his early unfinished novel A Shabby Genteel Story.
Margate features in the 2021 novel Dreamland by Rosa Rankin-Gee. The novel is set a little in the future from the present day in "the once refined but now rundown seaside town of Margate."
Music[edit]
"Margate" is the title of a UK single released by Chas & Dave in 1982.
"Margate Fhtagn" is a song by UK steampunk band the Men That Will Not Be Blamed for Nothing. The story related in the song combines the Victorian tradition of the seaside holiday with the works of H. P. Lovecraft, specifically the Cthulhu Mythos, to tell the tale of a Victorian family going on a seaside holiday to Margate, which gets interrupted by Cthulhu rising from the sea.
"Die Muschel von Margate" ("Seashells from Margate") is a song written by Kurt Weill and Felix Gasbarra from 1928. It featured in Konjunktur ("Oil Boom"), a play by Leo Lania in which three oil companies fight over the rights to oil production in a primitive Balkan country, and in the process exploit the people and destroy the environment.
It is thought that Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote The Lark Ascending whilst walking along the cliffs in Margate.
A photochrom print of Margate Harbour was used by the Icelandic-American band Low Roar as an album cover for ross., the band's fourth album released in 2019.
The song "High Rise" on Hawkwind's 1979 album PXR5 is reported to be inspired by Arlington House, Margate, where lyricist Robert Calvert grew up.
The Libertines recorded their 2024 album All Quiet on the Eastern Esplanade in The Albion Rooms in Cliftonville, the hotel, bar and recording studio that the band owns. The title of the album is a reference to the Eastern Esplanade in Cliftonville where The Albion Rooms are situated.
Film and television[edit]
In 1971, the BBC TV series Softly, Softly: Task Force episode "Sunday, Sweet Sunday", written by Alan Plater, was filmed in Margate. The episode has many shots of the town and seafront, including Dreamland.
A 1989 episode of Only Fools & Horses, "The Jolly Boys' Outing", was set primarily in Margate, featuring Margate railway station and Dreamland.
On 30 September 2006 Antony Gormley’s Waste Man was burned to the ground in front of an audience of thousands in the seaside town of Margate. The resulting film, Exodus, a modern retelling of the biblical story by Penny Woolcock, was broadcast on Channel 4 in 2007 before being produced as a DVD.
The town appeared on BBC TV's The Apprentice in May 2009.
The 2012 BBC television drama series True Love was set and filmed in Margate. The show had its first public screening at the Turner Contemporary.
The 2014 ITV sitcom Edge of Heaven was set at a 1980s-themed bed and breakfast on the Margate seaside.
Also in 2014, J. M. W. Turner's long-term relationship with Mrs. Sophia Booth of Margate was featured in the film Mr. Turner.
In series 4 of the British television crime drama Peaky Blinders (2017), the character Alfie Solomons (played by Tom Hardy) chooses to reside at Margate, where he's shot on the beach by Tommy Shelby.
In 2021, The Walpole Bay Hotel & Museum is featured in episode 3 of the ITV comedy drama The Larkins.
In 2022, Margate was featured as a location in the BBC Drama series Killing Eve. The seafront, and Dreamland also serve as filming locations for the film Empire of Light which was filmed in 2022, and the video for "A new bohemia" by the Pet Shop Boys.
In 2023, Margate was the set for hit series 'Dreamland' starring Lilly Allen.
In art[edit]
Margate - c.1806-7 William Turner - Tate Britain
Margate - 1808 William Turner - Petworth House
The New Moon - William Turner - Tate Britain
Margate Jetty - William Turner
People From Margate[edit]
Artist Florence Ada Kendrick
Trade unionist W. J. Brown