The Profumo Affair
John
Profumo, the British Secretary of State for war,
was a charming and respected Tory politician who was educated at
Harrow and Oxford. As well as being a rising star in Macmillan's
Conservative government, he was married to the movie actress Valerie
Hobson, and moved in sophisticated London circles.
Christine Keeler, a striking beautiful young woman,
had run away from home at the age of 16 and become a showgirl at
Murray's cabaret club in Soho, London, where she was employed "to walk
around naked". This was where she had befriended another showgirl,
Mandy Rice-Davies, and Stephen Ward, a fashionable London osteopath
who enjoyed sketching the rich and famous. Ward introduced Keeler into a world peopled with the
rich and famous: aristocratic, charming and powerful men, all eager to
meet her and take her out. Through him, she lived the high-life, but
her irresistible attraction for men would ultimately lead her down a
dangerous path.
Keeler and Ward often spent weekends at a cottage
belonging to one of Ward's friends, Lord Astor. It was at a party at
Lord Astor's Cliveden country residence in Berkshire in 1961 that
Keeler and Profumo first met. According to Keeler, they flirted around
the swimming pool and jokingly tried on suits of armor in the rooms
of the mansion, but the War minister was smitten and the couple
subsequently had a passionate affair.
Keeler often visited Profumo's home and his offices,
but their affair was brief and probably would never have come to light
were it not for a few complications in Keeler's love life - namely,
that she had also slept with Eugene Ivanov, a patriotic Russian who
was a naval attaché at the Soviet Embassy - he was also a spy . . .
When the story broke in 1962, Profumo initially tried
to deny the affair, but his efforts were futile. Once the whiff of
sex, spies and scandal was out, the media hounded him. And in March
1963, he made the crucial mistake of lying in the House of Commons
about it, telling the chamber "Miss Keeler and I were on friendly
terms. There was no impropriety whatsoever in my acquaintanceship with
Miss Keeler". However, 10 weeks later he appeared before MPs again to
say "with deep remorse" that he had misled the House because he wanted
to protect his wife and family, and would resign.
The relationship between John Profumo, and Christine
Keeler shocked the nation. The public queued up to scorn the morality
of the upper classes, as the newspapers dished the dirt on what was
undoubtedly the biggest political sleaze story of the decade. A
photograph of Keeler, naked across a chair has even become an iconic
image of the swinging sixties era. The scandal seemed to mark the end
of the straight-laced fifties and usher in a new era of sexual
liberation. And at the height of the Cold War, the fact Keeler had
also slept with Ivanov was political dynamite. It was enough to force
the resignation of Profumo, who was felt to have compromised British
security.
Ward
was charged with living on the immoral earnings of Keeler and
Rice-Davies (pictured at right) and of effectively running a brothel in his home. This
has since been strenuously denied by Keeler, who claims Ward used
women and sex not for cash, but to gain influence among his peers.
However, she did make a statement saying Profumo gave her money "for
her mother", and Rice-Davies admitted having sex for money in Ward's
flat. Ward was prosecuted but committed suicide on the very last day
of the trial, before the jury reached their verdict.
At Ward's trial, the prosecution alleged Mandy
Rice-Davies had received money from Lord Astor in return for sex. When
she was told Lord Astor had denied ever sleeping with her, she uttered
the immortal line: "He would, wouldn't he?"
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
John Profumo has kept a low profile since the sensational events
of the 1960s, mainly occupying himself with charity work. He was named
Commander of the British Empire in 1975 for his charitable work. After
the scandal broke, the Naval attaché Ivanov was called back to Moscow
and never heard from again.
Keeler lives quietly in North London, and says she
still feels "bewildered" by what happened. Rice-Davies is a
grandmother and lives in America. |