Everything about Stephen Ward totally explained
Stephen Thomas Ward (
19 October 1912 –
August 3,
1963) was one of the central figures in the
1963 Profumo affair, a
British public scandal which profoundly affected the ruling
Conservative Party government. Ward invited the married British cabinet minister and MP
John Profumo to a party and introduced him to a
showgirl named
Christine Keeler. Profumo's subsequent sexual relationship with Keeler and his false statements to the House of Commons regarding its nature led to Profumo's resignation.
Following the Profumo scandal, Ward was charged with living off the profits of
prostitution ("
immoral earnings"). Ward committed
suicide by overdosing on sleeping tablets on the last day of the trial.
Life
Osteopath and portrait painter
Ward was the son of Arthur Evelyn Ward,
Canon of
Rochester Cathedral. He was educated at
Highgate School in London and qualified to practice as an
osteopath in
Missouri. In
1949 he married Patricia Mary Baines, who he later divorced. Ward used his social skills and his job as an osteopath to meet a number of rich and powerful members of society. He stated that "I know a lot of very important people and am often received in some of the most famous homes in the country. Sir
Winston Churchill and many leading
politicians have been among my
patients". As a portrait artist, he'd members of the
Royal Family and politicians sit for him, including
Prince Philip, The
Duke and
Duchess of Kent and
Lord Snowdon.
During the late 1940s, Ward frequented the notorious Thursday Club,with a group of hard-drinking friends from top London society, including Prince Philip, the Marquis of Milford Haven and photographers Antony Beauchamp and Baron Nahum.Ref: Ruth Ellis My Sister's Secret Life.
Associations with young women
Ward was attracted to pretty young women from lower-income backgrounds. At his trial on the charges of living on the avails of immodest activities, he stated that he liked "pretty girls," and he claimed that he was "...sensitive to their needs and the stresses of modern living." Ward introduced these attractive young women to the rich and famous, aristocratic, charming and powerful men from the British establishment of the
1950s and early
60s.
One of Ward's protégés, a
showgirl named
Christine Keeler moved into Ward’s Wimpole Mews flat, and had a
platonic relationship with Ward. Ward also lived with a young woman named
Mandy Rice-Davies, to whom Ward at one time proposed marriage. In July
1961, Ward held a pool party at
Cliveden, the
Buckinghamshire mansion owned by
Viscount Astor. At the party, Ward introduced Keeler to
John Profumo, the British
Secretary of State for War.
Profumo began having sexual relations with Keeler, unaware that she was also having sexual relations with
Yevgeny Ivanov, a
naval attaché at the embassy of the
Soviet Union. Since Ward was cooperating with
MI5 to entrap Ivanov, Profumo's affair quickly become known about in establishment circles. Rumours about the Profumo's relationship with Keeler became public in
1962.
~~In
RUTH ELLIS MY SISTER'S SECRET LIFE Muriel Jakubait and ghost writer Monica Weller reveal startling new evidence that Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in the UK in 1955, was being run by Stephen Ward, a decade before his name became public in the Profumo affair.http://copperknob.wordpress.com
Profumo scandal
Profumo was forced to resign and the
Conservative government lost the next election to
Harold Wilson’s
Labour Party. In the fallout of the
Profumo scandal Ward was arrested in June 1963 in
Watford and taken to
Marylebone Lane police station. He was charged: ‘That he, being a man, did on diverse dates between January 1961 and
8 June 1963, knowingly live wholly or in part on the earning of
prostitution... contrary to... the Sexual Offences Act 1956.’ Other charges followed, and he was put on trial. MI5 denied that Ward had informed them of the affair soon after it began.
Ward committed
suicide by overdosing on sleeping tablets on the last day of the trial. He was in a
coma when the jury reached their verdict. Shortly after his death, a pornographer named Freddie Reid mounted an exhibition of Ward's pictures, which was alleged to include compromising pictures of well-known individuals. However, Reid held a private viewing and sold many of the pictures before they were made public. In her
2001 autobiography, Keeler claimed, without supporting evidence, that the MI5 chief
Roger Hollis was a Soviet spy and that Ward ran a spy ring which included Hollis and Sir
Anthony Blunt.
Cultural references
Ward was played by
John Hurt in
Scandal. He also appears in Anthony Frewin's
1997 novel
London Blues. His life was the subject for a music theatre piece "That Man Stephen Ward" (2006-7) by the British composer Thomas Hyde.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Stephen Ward'.
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