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March 15, 2020

Originaltitel: Night court Strafgericht ist eine Komödie aus dem Jahr .

Originaltitel: Night court

Harrys wundersames Strafgericht ist eine Komödie aus dem Jahr .

Harry's miraculous criminal court is a comedy from the year.

Night Court

Harrys wundersames Strafgericht ist eine Comedy Sitcom, in der es äußerst bunt zur Sache geht. Der Staatsanwalt ist ein sexbesessener Kerl, der wirklich jede Gelegenheit benutzt, um Frauen nachzustellen.


Während der nicht ganz helle aber recht große und sehr starke Gerichtsdiener „Bull“ im Auftrag von Richter Harry, der immer für einen Spaß zu haben ist, für Ordung sorgt.


    Harry's wondrous criminal court is a comedy sitcom that is extremely colorful. The prosecutor is a sex-obsessed guy who really takes every opportunity to stalk women. While the not very bright but quite large and very strong bailiff "Bull" on behalf of Judge Harry, who is always fun, keeps things tidy.


    Complete plot and information about Harry's miraculous criminal court

    Surprise at the Manhattan Criminal Court - nobody expected such a judge. Harold "Harry" T. Stone is very young, silly and playful. And as he reports, he was at the bottom of the list for appointing new judges. But since the Super Bowl was being played, it was the only one that could be reached by phone.

    The Manhattan Criminal Court, which Judge Stone presides over, usually meets at night and deals primarily with minor cases such as minor assault or prostitution. Life and death are seldom and if, then for other reasons.

    Richter Stone's sessions are generally rather unconventional, which is partly met with fierce criticism from colleagues who view this type of behavior as harmful. As a big fan of magic of all kinds, it can happen that Judge Stone pulls a pigeon out of his hat. However, that does not change his competence, and his employees go through the fire for him.

    There is also the deputy district attorney Dan Fielding. An arrogant snob who only has money in mind and, above all, women, whom he pursues on every suitable and inappropriate occasion, usually with success. Nevertheless, he is not only competent, but deep down - even if he would never admit it himself - a good person.

    The mandatory defense was initially performed by Liz Williams, but was soon replaced by Billie Young. But she also only stayed a year until Christine Sullivan finally came. She is an uptight person who has many problems with the male sex. Christine often raises her moral index finger and is thus the contraption of the "depraved" Dan Fielding. She is fully responsible for her clients.

    Good soul of the company Court, which tries to bring order into chaos and also to keep an overview, is the chewy, sometimes somewhat grumpy court secretary Mac Robinson. He is a Vietnam veteran and married to a Vietnamese woman. He met Quon Lee as a young soldier in Vietnam. She later followed him to the United States because she had fallen in love. Of course it's Harry who trusts them.

    The court officials are the backbone of the court. The huge Bull Shannon is always on board, who at first glance seems stupid or even naive. But there is a lot more to him than you can imagine at first, and he has a particularly big heart. There were two quick changes in the position of the bailiff, which caused the first two women - Selma Hacker, a notorious smoker and Florence Kleiner, a scratchy creature - to die quickly because of their advanced age. With Roz Russell, a bailiff was hired who appears repellent and scratchy to the outside, but at least up to a certain point only built it up as a facade.

    Frequent guests are the somewhat overzealous caretaker Art, Harry's late found father Buddy, who spent most of his life in mental hospitals, and the singer Mel Tormé, of whom Harry is a huge fan. Dan Fielding also employs the homeless Phil as a kind of assistant and takes him out wherever possible. Phil, however, sees Dan as a benefactor.

 

Komplette Handlung und Informationen zu Harrys wundersames Strafgericht

Überraschung am Strafgericht von Manhattan – mit einem solchen Richter hat niemand gerechnet. Harold „Harry“ T. Stone ist sehr jung, albern und verspielt. Und wie er berichtet, stand er auf der Liste zur Ernennung neuer Richter ganz unten. Da aber gerade der Super Bowl gespielt wurde, war er der Einzige, den man telefonisch erreichen konnte.

Das Strafgericht von Manhattan, dem Richter Stone vorsitzt, tagt für gewöhnlich nachts und beschäftigt sich in erster Linie mit Bagatellfällen, wie leichter Körperverletzung oder Prostitution. Um Leben und Tod geht es selten und wenn, dann aus anderen Gründen.

Richter Stones Sitzungen laufen im Allgemeinen eher unkonventionell ab, was zum Teil auf heftige Kritik der Kollegen trifft, die diese Art Verhalten als schädlich ansehen. Als großer Fan von Zaubereien aller Art kann es nämlich schon einmal geschehen, dass Richter Stone eine Taube aus dem Hut zaubert. Das ändert jedoch nichts an seiner Kompetenz, und seine Mitarbeiter gehen für ihn auch durchs Feuer.

Da ist auch der stellvertretender Bezirksstaatsanwalt Dan Fielding. Ein arroganter Snob, der nur Geld und vor allem Frauen im Kopf hat, denen er bei jeder passenden und unpassenden Gelegenheit nachstellt, meist mit Erfolg. Dennoch ist er nicht nur kompetent, sondern tief im Inneren – auch wenn er es selbst nie zugeben würde – ein guter Mensch.

Die Pflichtverteidigung wurde zunächst von Liz Williams wahrgenommen, die aber schon nach kurzer Zeit von Billie Young abgelöst wurde. Doch auch sie blieb nur ein Jahr bis schließlich Christine Sullivan kam. Sie ist eine verklemmte Person, die mit dem männlichen Geschlecht viele Probleme hat. Christine hebt des Öfteren den moralischen Zeigefinger und ist so der Contrapart des „verkommenen“ Dan Fielding. Für ihre Mandanten steht sie mit ihrem ganzen Können ein.

Gute Seele des Unternehmens Gericht, das versucht, Ordnung ins Chaos zu bringen und zudem die Übersicht zu behalten, ist der kautzige, manchmal etwas brummelige Gerichtssekretär Mac Robinson. Er ist Vietnamveteran und mit einer Vietnamesin verheiratet. Er lernte Quon Lee als junger Soldat in Vietnam kennen. Später folgte sie ihm in die USA, weil sie sich verliebt hatte. Natürlich ist es Harry, der die beiden traut.

Rückgrat des Gerichtes sind die Gerichtsdiener. Immer an Bord ist der hünenhafte Bull Shannon, der auf den ersten Blick dumm oder gar naiv erscheint. Doch steckt in ihm weitaus mehr, als man im ersten Moment erahnt, und er hat ein besonders großes Herz. Auf der Position der Gerichtsdienerin gab es zwei schnelle Wechsel, das die ersten beiden Frauen – Selma Hacker, eine notorische Raucherin und Florence Kleiner, ein kratzbürstiges Wesen – wegen ihres fortgeschrittenen Alters recht schnell verstarben. Mit Roz Russell wurde eine Gerichtsdienerin verpflichtet, die nach außen abweisend und kratzbürstig erscheint, dieses aber zumindest bis zu einem gewissen Punkt nur als Fassade aufgebaut hat.

Häufige Gäste sind der etwas übereifrige Hausmeister Art, Harrys spät gefundener Vater Buddy, der den größten Teil seines Lebens in Nervenheilanstalten verbracht hat und der Sänger Mel Tormé, von dem Harry ein Riesenfan ist. Zudem beschäftigt Dan Fielding den Obdachlosen Phil als eine Art Hilfskraft und nimmt ihn aus, wo es nur geht. Phil jedoch sieht in Dan einen Wohltäter.

March 14, 2020

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Inmate Troy Age 38 Gender Male Race White Height 6' 1" Weight 190.0 lbs LOUISIANA





Booking Date 2/27/2020 4:27 PM Release Date Scheduled  Prisoner Type Awaiting Arraignment Classification Medium Housing Facility Ascension Parish Jail Total Bond Amount $85,000.00 Total Bail Amount $0.00 Booking Origin Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office


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Number Charge Description Offense Date Docket Number Sentence Date Disposition Disposition Date Sentence Length Crime Class Arresting Agency Attempt/Commit Bond


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18 Criminal Trespass/ All Other Offenses 1/17/2020 12:00 AM Misdemeanor Commtted-Misd 2020-00001372

17 Simple Burglary (All Others) 1/17/2020 12:00 AM Commited-Felony 2020-00001371

16 Theft $1k but less than $5k (Felony) 1/17/2020 12:00 AM Felony Commited-Felony 2020-00001370

15 Theft less than $1,000 3/1/2020 1:23 AM Misdemeanor Commtted-Misd 2020-00001264

14 Theft less than $1,000 2/27/2020 6:55 PM Misdemeanor Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commtted-Misd 2020-00001250

13 Theft $1k but less than $5k (Felony) 2/27/2020 6:53 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001262

12 Illegal transmission of monetary funds 2/27/2020 6:52 PM Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001263

11 Illegal transmission of monetary funds 2/27/2020 6:48 PM Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office, Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001261

10 Theft less than $1,000 2/27/2020 6:48 PM Misdemeanor Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commtted-Misd 2020-00001255

9 Forgery 2/27/2020 6:45 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001260

8 Forgery 2/27/2020 5:02 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001259

7 Theft less than $1,000 2/27/2020 4:49 PM Misdemeanor Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commtted-Misd 2020-00001254

6 Identity Theft (Felony) 2/27/2020 4:49 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001252

5 Forgery 2/27/2020 4:45 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001258

4 Forgery 2/27/2020 4:45 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001257

3 Theft less than $1,000 2/27/2020 4:39 PM Misdemeanor Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office, Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commtted-Misd 2020-00001253

2 Theft less than $1,000 2/27/2020 4:39 PM Misdemeanor Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office, Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commtted-Misd 2020-00001251

1 Theft of a Firearm 2/27/2020 4:39 PM Felony Ascension Parish Sheriff's Office Commited-Felony 2020-00001256

March 13, 2020

Jimmy Page Frederic Leighton Castle Pre-Raphaelites

https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/add0ff6aadd4708133906efc89cae7caae7dad00/0_1562_10328_6198/master/10328.jpg?width=465&quality=45&auto=format&fit=max&dpr=2&s=df83a034fc950c02614342fc77294260
Inside story: Page in the drawing room where William Burges, who designed the house, entertained his arty friends in the 1870s. Photograph: Alex Telfer/The Observer






Jimmy Page CastleHeaven


Annapolis Barbie

London house some say I remain fascinated -- red-brick handsome castellated, titular,  borstal, inside view candy-colored hue Himalayan rubies, blueing phasic true against pale eyed child eyes blew candle out; underinflated innocent flaws predestine sartorial regency--eschew profligate royalty; 

Liz Taylor apologia words, deeds, inclusion in amber, citrine, equine fat, last known address, mosquito pest fly who flew, bit hand to feet, fish bloat, float placebo effect psychosomatic placer, a face to face her uneven odds, lit light inserted slight adult teenage girl twirl and uncurl curls, unfurled fast, faster, last sips half-trice brain intact, soft palette wright,  it Peridot, louche, sallow, slugged, sulfur rood ... leer to Lear.


  Jimmy Page




“Well, I’m glad then,” giving a shake.

Tower House doors, half-beveled, glassy anteroom, lobby, transitive Ages of Man.

Astuter induction et cerebra “hive” William Burges .


Meticulous promising rials 5-santimat Moroccan coin expert middle aged work sight architect alliterate Leighton, Rossetti, Burns-Jones et al, myopic describe laughing lo Tower House.


Three years.


53 in red bed Mermaid Room under-painted frieze, waves of fish, gilt star mirror, ceiling skypiece, overrules hand-piked, Burgess-tended gray ended, old 1933 hemisphere printed wardrobe.


With Jimmy Page (deterministically monochromatic) bordello, framed by double-height entrancement, combat scene depicting war tween Theseus Minotaur take.

Tprincipal room in Tower emphases (Time, Love, Literature) and storyteller. Evermore abstained-glass windows, ablate arsing, frescoes, friezes, surface that can be embellished or adorned in utmost complexity finest of materials it will be.


The chimney pieces imposing and carved  figure library depict Principles of Speech in  Pierre de Caen Tower of London  stone.

The hall theme is Time, with giant, life-size frescoes , depicting Sun and Moon  stained-glass windows, symbolizing the seasons.


The ceiling's constellations are of the time Burges moved in.


A stone gallery above links the upstairs bedrooms and overlooks the entrance hall.


Page says he first viewed the house in 1972 in dim evening light, and it “captured [his] heart.”

The drawing room and library, where Burges entertained his pre-Raphaelite friends are off the entrance hall.


Page bought the house from actor Richard Harris (John Betjeman owned it previously), and upon his first viewing, Harris’ Camelot throne sat in regal desuetude, unrequited by the library, whose once sides lined walls held a thespian's classical library from which to gain inspiration, now regained the original inspiration whose painted scenes by Burges distinguished and ennobled these same bookcases, whose display and order, displayed and ordered for him to hold the world's most enigmatic, quixotic collection, archive, trove of Crowleyana and Occult Rare Tomes, Manuscripts, Ephemera, Magick, spellcasting recipes, mingled amid a matching conflagration of  impotent prophets whose  fakers fall from grace did no favor, nor gain none, from Blavatsky to  charlatans whose impotence was only redeemed by being included with Page’s books, until they no longer excite him because their is no longer anyone like him to excite. 


On the ceiling are the founders of law and philosophy. The windows depict arts and sciences.


The drawing room theme is Love, a medieval Cupid flys on the ceiling.

“Is your house always this tidy?” I ask.


“I always try to keep it  tidy,” says Jimmy, “but at the moment I think it’s pretty untidy.”



It was Grade I-listed in 1949, its interiors are important and fragile.


Page describes periodicy, such as the walls in the hall need scaffolding and sugar-soaping by specialists.


Everything is meticulous, after, I think, the National Trust, nothing rivals Jimmy Page.

I am  interested to see the kitchen  in a house like this, but Page won’t, because “It’s out of bounds, it’s untidy.”


I beg, unseemly; he doesn’t budge.

The spiral stairs are in the tower.


On the first floor next to Burges’ room: the Butterfly Room, ablaze gold reds densely gather deep red, nigrosine dots and tracing leopard tearlines, outline fully stimulating net wielding lepidopterists after Monarchs and professor's assistants unenveloped and unencumbered by their need to  net and pin, the deep friezes fill out the blanks with their reliefs of fauna.



The second floor, less elaborate, houses two nurseries (although Burges never had children).


The day nursery – with a theme of Jack and the Beanstalk – has the terrifying emergent giant from chimney.


The night nursery benign, but with grotesque monkeys.

We descend stairs to dining room dominated by circular zodiac table, commissioned by Harris.


Page, excitedly points at table where a reflectioned design in enameled iron its job done meritoriously, but Page loves the table, his last book completed in spacious accomodation.

Has Page always been attracted to complicated houses?


He ponders and then tells me to hang on while he finds a picture of the first house he bought. “I found it in the Exchange and Mart,” he says.


It was a boathouse in Pangbourne, Berkshire, bought in 1966, when Page was 22.


He knew “instinctively” it was the house for him.


“I did a lot of sanding. I was putting up stud walls.”


He shows me a picture, of him standing in  house, next to a  jardinière purchased on tour with the Yardbirds,


“I was a bit of a collector [even back then]. I bought it in a flea market and it came back in the plane with me.

That’s the room we recorded Whole Lotta Love," in.”

The thought of him with a jardinière on a plane… That’s unexpected, I say. “I know!” he laughs. “That’s why I showed it to you.”

Page had to sell the boathouse to buy this house. “It’s like guitars – in those days you had to trade in to go to the next one.” He was 28 when he bought the Tower House (he’s now 74) and he’s been looking after it ever since. It seems very young to take on a Grade I-listed house.


Did he understand what was involved?


“I knew what a Grade I-listed building was and what a privilege it was to live in something like this, yes.”

Tower House is sandwiched between two houses undergoing extensive building work (when we go into the garden later, the noise is deafening).


Perhaps the most contentious of the two relates to the house belonging to the singer Robbie Williams. Williams wants to put in a basement complex which will come perilously close to Tower House. Page has appealed and the council has currently deferred a decision pending a tightening up of monitoring and supervision of works. At the moment, no one seems able to guarantee the building work next door won’t damage Tower House’s unique and irreplaceable interiors, which is of serious concern to Page.

That there is any debate that Tower House should be protected, is perplexing. The only other residential town house Burges built is Park House in Cardiff. It is also listed and has been described by CADW (Wales’s historic environment protector) as “perhaps the most important 19th-century house in Wales.”


When a piece of Burges furniture recently came up for sale (there are very few) it was considered so imperative it didn’t go out of the country that the government placed a temporary export ban on it.


The Higgins Bedford museum bought it. And yet, Tower House is full of Burges.


In 2014, three English Heritage engineers, an EH inspector and a conservation officer visited Tower House and described its interiors as of “high heritage value… and highly vulnerable” and that there was no demonstration that the proposed works would “have no adverse impact”.

So protective is Page of the interiors and their sensitivity to vibrations, he only ever plays acoustic guitar in the house, doesn’t have parties there and has no television. Just before I go,


Page says, a little sotto voce:


“I’m sorry I couldn’t show you the kitchen. But…” he continues, leaning forward, “it’s got a La Cornue in it.” I am thinking which artist that is, and then I realize it’s a French range cooker. I see it as a small concession.

Later I talk to Matthew Williams, curator at Cardiff Castle and a world expert on Burges.


How important is Tower House?


“Oh very. Burges placed as much value on interiors as exteriors.


Tower House is extraordinary… those amazing mosaic floors which any vibration could impact on. It’s one of the great hidden interiors of London.


This house is coming from Burges’s own soul, his own heart. It’s pure, undiluted Burges.


Someone [talking about the building works] needs to wake up and realize the importance of this building.

  1. The summons arrives.
  2. I am to make my way to the splendid house in west London where the 19th-century artist Frederic Leighton lived.
  3. Jimmy Page will be there.
  4. The Led Zeppelin guitarist had so enjoyed being asked about his fascination for Victorian art and design on a previous encounter that he’d suggested we might meet to discuss the subject further.
  5. I assumed that nothing would come of it.
  6. Oh ye of little faith!  Leighton House, the venue for our meeting, is a red-brick palazzo in Kensington.
  7. Built for the immensely wealthy Leighton as a home and studio in the 1860s — he called it a “private palace of art” — it is now a museum.
  8. A stuffed peacock greets visitors in the turquoise-tiled hallway, the avian equivalent of Page in his strutting, preening prime.
  9. Through a pair of Doric columns a passage leads to a spectacular gold-domed room with Syrian tiles, an Arabic inscription from the Koran and a Moorish fountain in the centre, inspired by Leighton’s travels in the Near East.
  10. “It’s absolutely glorious.
  11. Anyone who comes here can’t help being amazed by the whole scale of it, the beauty of it,” marvels Page as we inspect Leighton’s Arab Hall.
  12. In contrast to the sumptuous decor, Page is dressed in black, with long white hair tied in a ponytail.
  13. But an aura of exoticism surrounds him too.
  14. At 71, he is among the most celebrated of all guitarists, a player who elevated the instrument to intoxicating heights of artistry in the 1970s.
  15. Under his leadership, Led Zeppelin became the definitive rock band, a perfect balance of musicianship and decadence.
  16. The band’s exploits — immense three-hour stadium concerts, lurid tales of groupies and black magic, Caligulan goings-on aboard private aircraft — have become the stuff of legend, as mythic as the statues of Pan or painted scenes from antiquity in Leighton House.
  17. Page knows the museum well, having lived around the corner since 1972.
  18. His interest in 19th-century art goes back even further, to when he was a teenager in Epsom, a market town in Surrey, where he grew up in a solidly middle-class household, the son of a personnel manager.
  19. As we stand in the Arab Hall, the fountain plashing in the background, I produce a photograph of Page with his first electric guitar in 1958.
  20. It shows a serious-looking 14-year-old practising in a suburban living room.
  21. “That wasn’t my house,” Page says, peering at the photo, “but everyone’s houses looked similar in those days.
  22. An electric fire, brass plaques on the wall.” His tone is not nostalgic.
  23. Listening to Lonnie Donegan and Elvis Presley introduced him to the sounds of skiffle and rock ’n’ roll, escape routes from humdrum Epsom.
  24. Meanwhile, illustrations in books and trips to the Tate Gallery fired his enthusiasm for the luxuriant art of 100 years earlier.
  25. “I got just caught up in that whole romantic notion of the Pre-Raphaelites, the mission they were on [to revolutionise art].
  26. He points to an 1880s mosaic frieze above our heads depicting a complex iconography of storks, eagles, snakes wrapped around trees and peacocks (an eastern symbol of dignity and beauty).
  27. Page identifies it as by Walter Crane, an artist associated with the Art Crafts movement of the late 19th century, another of his obsessions.
  28. “The whole concept of it is really beautiful.
  29. Seeing the hand of man working, I really like that, the craftsmanship,” he says, referring to the movement’s ethos of artisanal production.
  30. He briefly went to art school himself, after a bout of illness interrupted his fledgling career as a session musician.
  31. “I was pretty amateurish really,” he says of his studies.
  32. Arts & Crafts and the Pre-Raphaelites were groupings formed in reaction to Victorian Britain’s transformation into an industrial society.
  33. There’s an echo here: Page formed Led Zeppelin in 1968 as a reaction to the world of mechanised musical production in which he worked as a highly successful session guitarist, churning out guitar parts for countless hits from Tom Jones’s “It’s Not Unusual” to Petula Clark’s “Downtown”.
  34. “Because I had so many different styles of guitar I could play I was pretty useful.
  35. I wasn’t a one-trick pony.
  36. I could play acoustic, finger-style, I could make things up,” he remembers.
  37. “If they’d say, ‘We want something like a Stax riff,’ I’d be able to say, ‘Yes, I can do that straight away.’ Once I came out of it I had the chance to really experiment with the guitar.
  38. So I could see that [session work] almost — even though I’m self-taught — as formal training; a degree of formal training.
  39. Of course I may be totally wrong in how I see things .
  40. .
  41. .
  42. He pauses, and reconsiders how much fallibility to ascribe to himself.
  43. “Actually I won’t say that.
  44. I’ll say I may not be quite right about the way I see things,” he says.
  45. His tone is affable but guarded.
  46. Page recruited the other members of Led Zeppelin — vocalist Robert Plant, fellow session guitarist John Paul Jones and drummer John Bonham — in 1968, after a two-year stint as guitarist with R&B band The Yardbirds.
  47. At the time he was living on a converted Victorian boathouse at Pangbourne on the upper reaches of the Thames.
  48. “I used to scour second-hand shops because Arts& Crafts furniture was always being turfed out.
  49. I must have furnished half my house from that source,” he remembers.
  50. Led Zeppelin at the 1969 Bath Festival.
  51. As we promenade through the ground-floor rooms of Leighton House, we pause before one of Leighton’s paintings, “Orpheus and Eurydice”, painted in 1864.
  52. Leighton had links to the Pre-Raphaelites but was not a member of the group.
  53. “Some of [his paintings] are beautifully executed in the Victorian style, aren’t they?” Page says.
  54. He enthuses about the painter’s masterpiece, “Flaming June”, currently on show at the Frick Collection in New York.
  55. Attempts to probe Page’s own art collection are gently repelled.
  56. In 2012 he loaned large tapestries by William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones to Tate Britain for an exhibition.
  57. “At the time I was at art school, Pre-Raphaelites were selling for a few hundred pounds, that’s all,” he says.
  58. “But I couldn’t afford that.
  59. They were always out of my reach.” He laughs.
  60. These days Page is estimated to be worth £100m.
  61. When Frederic Leighton moved into his mansion in 1865, the surrounding area was semi-rural.
  62. Following his example, other artists built studio-houses nearby, creating an artistic colony.
  63. Many of the buildings survive today.
  64. As we look out over the large lawn at the back of Leighton House, Page points out one that belonged to the film director Michael Powell until 1971.
  65. Scenes from Powell’s sinister 1960 masterpiece Peeping Tom were shot there.
  66. Page’s own house is invisible from Leighton’s garden.
  67. He gestures in its direction, diagonally across from the lawn.
  68. It is called the Tower House, for the magnificent gothic-revival turret that dominates it.
  69. It was designed in the 1870s by the Victorian architect and designer William Burges, who sought artistic refuge from industrialisation in a fantasy vision of the Middle Ages.
  70. “Basically [Burges] was living there and it was his showroom as well,” says Page.
  71. “So each room has a different theme with different styles of decoration.
  72. One room may have gesso panels, another may have pictorial tiles et cetera.
  73. The finest craftsmen and sculptors were hired to create, in Burges’s words, a “model residence of the 13th century”.
  74. The guest bedroom was decorated in gold and crystal and had emu eggs hanging from the ceiling, while Burges’s bedroom was painted with murals of mermaids and sea monsters.
  75. A contemporary visitor called it “strange and barbarously splendid”.
  76. Page, who bought the house from the actor Richard Harris, is a zealous custodian.
  77. He has been in dispute with his neighbour, the pop star Robbie Williams, over the latter’s plans to develop his own property, including an abandoned scheme to dig out a huge basement.
  78. “English Heritage are pretty protective towards [the Tower House],” Page says.
  79. “I haven’t wanted to change anything in the house and nor would I.
But the fact is that the interior is pretty fragile.
It can’t take the shaking of developing a four- or five-bedroom house underground.
Burges’s phantasmagoric designs were thought to have been inspired by a hearty appetite for laudanum.
“I don’t know,” Page says.
“Burges aficionados were quite upset that was said.
A druggy wardrobe? My eager attempts to find out more are thwarted.
“Well, let’s not talk about it.” He laughs.
I later discover that Page has not always been so secretive about his Burges wardrobe.
In 2002, he allowed it to be shown at a National Trust country house in Devon, where its narcotic decorations — painted opium poppies, scarlet hares — were on view for all to see.
Page’s teasing opacity on the subject of drugs is typical.
He rarely discusses his own use of them, which culminated in a heroin habit that took hold in the latter years of Led Zeppelin, before the band split up in the wake of John Bonham’s death following a drunken binge in 1980.
He is also elusive when I raise the subject of occultism, a topic that fascinated the Victorians — and with which Page has long been associated.
“Really?” he says mildly.
Despite being the former owner of an occult bookshop called Equinox and the Scottish manor house that belonged to the notorious magus Aleister Crowley, he looks bemused at the notion that anyone might take him to be a serious student of the paranormal.
I venture to ask whether the 19th-century tradition of spiritualism is attractive to him.
“Yes, I think it would be,” he replies.
“But I can’t time-travel so you can only .
.
” His voice trails away.
Adjoining Leighton’s handsome studio upstairs is a room currently hosting an exhibition of works by the contemporary Lebanese artist Raed Yassin.
Among these is a portrait of the celebrated Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum, who died in 1975.
Page is a fan.
“This is the classic Egyptian orchestration, with the oud and the violin et cetera,” he says.
“I’ve heard lots of live records; the music will stop and she’ll come in and sing just one line — and the audience erupts and she’ll sing the line again.
Led Zeppelin’s music drew on blues and folk but also Middle Eastern, Indian and north African influences.
The epic ascending riff in “Kashmir” was inspired by Page’s interest in the sitar and eastern modal tunings.
Like the best of the Victorian art that Page admires, their songs were a remarkable blend of exoticism, eroticism and spirituality.
Walking past a sign reading “Ars longa, vita brevis” (“art is long, life is short”), we enter Leighton’s studio, a large light-filled room with paintings lining the walls.
“I think the ambience in here is really good,” says Page.
Historic buildings played an important role in Led Zeppelin’s history, such as the former poorhouse Headley Grange in Hampshire, where they recorded several albums.

“If I was going to play an acoustic guitar I’d prefer to do so in a room like this, where you could hear the dynamics of the guitar filling the room, rather than a studio that was really damped down with no reflective surfaces,” he says.
Page is perhaps the most complete guitarist in rock’s pantheon, a boldly expressive and technically accomplished player in whom vigor is allied with intense thoughtfulness.
“It’s like in here, you can see Leighton’s character coming through in everything he did, you can recognise a Leighton.
In the same way you can recognise a guitarist,” Page says.
He once described solos such as the majestic one in “Stairway to Heaven” as a “meditation” on the song in which they appear.
“When a song had built up from a track and Robert had his lyrical content and the overdubs were complete, then yes, I’d like to do the solo as a summing up, if you like, of my input on that song,” he explains.
“So that what I hope is for people to go, that solo is perfect” — he clicks his finger — “or that guitar work is perfect within the context of the lyrics and what is being portrayed dynamically by the rest of the band.
We pause for a moment in front of the painting that Leighton was working on when he died in 1896 — “Clytie”, a portrait of a classical nymph mourning the departure of her lover, the sun god Apollo.
It is unfinished.
The question of whether Led Zeppelin is finished has dogged Page since the band’s one-off reunion concert at London’s O2 Arena in 2007.
He has spent the intervening years remastering their albums for the digital age, re-releasing each with additional material.
It has been a marathon task.
“I just wanted to make sure I could locate everything in existence,” Page says of the band’s many recordings.
His project now concludes with the reissuing of Led Zeppelin’s last three albums, Presence (1976), In Through the Out Door (1979) and Coda (1982).
“That’s the whole catalogue with the companion discs out, completed, and I can breathe a sigh of relief,” he says.
It is a tantalizing prospect — Page back at work in the recording studio, his equivalent of Frederic Leighton’s workplace.
“Well, it’ll probably be rather smaller than this,” he says with a smile.
“Not quite so grand.
Remastered editions of ‘Presence’, ‘In Through the Out Door’ and ‘Coda’ are out now on Atlantic/Swan Song.
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