Sid James, Sir Laurence Olivier and the late Duke of Edinburgh all drove London taxis around the British capital for the sake of anonymity.
Nubar Gulbenkian, the Turkish-born Armenian oil magnate, is probably still the most famous Austin FX4 exponent, although keeping a low profile was not part of the remit for this eccentric Harrow- and Cambridge-educated Anglophile; and it appears unlikely that he ever took the wheel himself.
Born in 1896, Nubar Sarkis Gulbenkian inherited part of his fortune from his miserly father Calouste, whom Nubar famously sued for $10million when he once refused to pay for his son’s $4.50 chicken lunch out of petty cash.
Inside the Austin’s retrimmed cabin, which now has air-con fitted
When Calouste died in 1955, most of his legacy went into a Portugal-based foundation, but the younger Gulbenkian had inherited all of his father’s business acumen and accumulated an independent fortune that easily funded his lavish lifestyle.
Like Lady Docker or the journalist Gilbert Harding, this socialite, gourmet and committed womanizer appears utterly irrelevant to 21st-century sensibilities.