After various careers - as a tap dance teacher, a commercial artist and a nude model - Quentin Crisp found fame following the TV dramatisation of his autobiography, The Naked Civil Servant, in the 1970s. Asked what he thought of the TV adaptation, Crisp replied: "It's a lot better than real life, because it's so much shorter."
Once considered heinous, Crisp was now regarded heroic. But despite becoming a figure of public affection, Crisp hated England and yearned to live in America. At the age of 72, Crisp finally moved to the city of his dreams, New York - where "the freaks pass unnoticed". But whether a freak, an English eccentric, a wit or a writer, it was impossible not to notice Quentin Crisp.
Although championed by the gay community, Quentin Crisp disliked being perceived as a pioneering poof and considered homosexuality an illness: "Had surgery existed in my youth I would have had the op and opened a knitting shop in Carlisle."
Nevertheless, Quentin Crisp played his part with eloquence and elegance, by simply being himself. And by refusing to be anything else, he was more than many of us could ever hope to be. Quentin Crisp died in 1999, aged 90.
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