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Joe Gilmore
Barman and cocktail inventor (1922–2015) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Joseph "Joe" Gilmore (19 May 1922 – 18 December 2015)[1] was a renowned bartender and famous mixologist during the 20th century. He was Head Barman at The Savoy Hotel's American Bar from 1954 to 1976 and is recognised as the creator of numerous cocktails to mark special events and important guests, a longstanding tradition at the American Bar. Gilmore's most famous creations include Moonwalk, Link-Up, The Corpse Reviver, Lorraine, and Missouri Mule.
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Early life
Joseph Patrick Gilmore was born on 19 May 1922 in Belfast, Northern Ireland to John Gilmore, a tobacconist, and Margaret O'Connor, a teaching assistant, originally from Wicklow, Ireland.
He was the third of nine children.
In 1938, aged 16, Gilmore moved to London looking for work and "adventure".[2] He began working as a wallpaper packer at the Arthur Sanderson & Son's factory in Perivale, London, later taking up work as a kitchen hand.[3]
Gilmore began his early bartender training at La Coquille, a French restaurant on St Martin's Lane, Covent Garden, among other places.[3] While working at The Olde Bell he met and served Welsh millionaire steel-baron Kenneth Davies and the aviator Amy Johnston. The couple reportedly asked Gilmore for a dry martini, which he attempted unsuccessfully. Despite his attempt being enjoyed by the couple, Davies and Johnston politely demonstrated how to make one. Gilmore cited this interaction as the spark that fuelled his passion of cocktail mixology.[3] After this first encounter, Davies and Gilmore became life long friends.[3]
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Career
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Gilmore first began working at The Savoy as a commis waiter at The American Bar of the Savoy Hotel.[4] By 1940, aged 18, he was promoted to trainee barman and began his apprenticeship with Harry Craddock, earning £3.10s a week.[5][6]
In 1954, Gilmore took over as head bartender. Over the following two decades Gilmore created new cocktails, especially to honour special occasions and important guests, including Princess Diana, Prince William, Anne, The Princess Royal, The Queen Mother, Sir Winston Churchill, and American Presidents Harry S. Truman and Richard Nixon.
In addition to serving five generations of royals at private receptions and parties, Gilmore frequently served Errol Flynn, Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Grace Kelly, George Bernard Shaw, Ernest Hemingway, Noël Coward, Agatha Christie, Alice Faye, Ingrid Bergman, Julie Andrews, Laurence Olivier, Joan Crawford, Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra and Winston Churchill.[7][8]
In 1969, he created one of his most famous cocktails, the "Moonwalk", to commemorate the Apollo 11 Moon landing. The cocktail is a combination of grapefruit juice, orange liqueur and rose water, topped with champagne. This was the first drink astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin had upon returning to Earth.[9]
Frank Sinatra was a frequent guest to the American Bar whenever he was in London and insisted only Gilmore was to serve him. It is widely believed the line from Sinatra’s One For My Baby "set’em up Joe" is in reference to Gilmore.[10]
Gilmore retired from the Savoy in 1976.[2]
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Cocktails created
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This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2023) |
The Blenheim
Created for Sir Winston Churchill’s ninetieth birthday. It is also known as the Four Score and Ten.
Churchill
Created for Sir Winston Churchill on one of his many visits to The Savoy.
Common market
Created to mark Britain’s entry into the European Economic Community in 1973, using drinks from all the member states.
Four score (1955)
Created for Sir Winston Churchill’s eightieth birthday.
Golden doublet
Created in 1973 to commemorate the wedding of Princess Anne to Captain Mark Phillips. Doublet was the name of the Princess’s horse on which she participated in the European Championships in 1973.
Kensington Court special
Created for Sir David Davies.
Link up
Created in 1975 to mark the American and Russians link up in Space, the Apollo–Soyuz project. The link up cocktail was sent to the U.S. and U.S.S.R. for the astronauts to enjoy when they returned from their mission. When told this by NASA as they linked up in Space, they responded, "Tell Joe we want it up here."
Lorraine
Created to mark President Charles de Gaulle’s State visit to Britain after the Second World War.
Missouri mule
The Missouri mule cocktail was created for President Harry S Truman. The cocktail commemorates Truman's home state of Missouri and the donkey mascot of the Democratic Party (a mule is a hybrid of a donkey and a horse).
Moonwalk
Created in 1969 to mark the first human Moon landing. The cocktail was the first drink the American astronauts had when they returned to Earth.[11] A letter of thanks was later sent from Neil Armstrong to Joe Gilmore. [citation needed]
My Fair Lady
Created to mark Julie Andrews’ first night in the musical My Fair Lady.
Nixon
Created in 1969 to mark American President Richard Nixon's visit to Britain.[12] The cocktail was mixed at the American bar and then sent over to Claridge's where Nixon was staying.
Powerscourt
Created for Sarah, Duchess of York’s[clarification needed]
The Ed Shelly
Created for Edward Shelly at his request.
Royal arrival
Created in 1960 to mark the birth of Prince Andrew.
Savoy affair
Created by Joe Gilmore at the Atlantic Hotel, Hamburg, Germany.
Savoy royale
Created for The Queen Mother on one of her private visits to The Savoy.
Savoy corpse reviver
The Corpse Revivers are a series of hangover cures invented during prohibition. This recipe is a variation invented by Gilmore in 1954.
Wolfram
Created in 1990 to commemorate the election of John Wolff Director of Rudolf Wolff as Chairman of the London Metal Exchange. "Wolfram" is another name for the element tungsten.
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Personal life
Gilmore married Marie Jeanne Zambelli in 1943. They had three sons.
During The Blitz, Gilmore helped protect The Savoy by working as a fire warden from its roof.
Gilmore never returned to Ireland, but "... never forgot his Irish roots or family background and never lost his soft Belfast accent."[13] He remained a Roman Catholic throughout his life, and died on 18 December 2015, aged 93.[14]
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See also
References
Further reading
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