- Stanley Green
Stanley Owen Green (1915–1993), known as Protein Man, became a well-known figure in central
London , England, during the latter half of the 20th century.Every day for 25 years, from 1968 until his death, Green paraded up and down
Oxford Street in the central shopping district, carrying a placard that famously recommended "Less Passion from Less Protein: Less Fish Meat Bird Cheese Egg; Peas Beans; Nuts and Sitting"."Green also sold passers-by copies of his self-published 14-page pamphlet about the dangers of protein and lust for 12 pence. Entitled "Eight Passion Proteins With Care", the front cover observed that, "This booklet would benefit more, if it were read occasionally."Ackroyd, Peter. "London, The Biography". Vintage, 2001. p. 198 and image between pp. 664 and 665.] McNally Joe. [http://www.flaneur.org.uk/html/green/green.html "Another Green World"] , "flaneur.co.uk", retrieved December 18, 2007.]
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His mission
Green lived in Haydock Green,
Northolt , cycling convert|15|mi|km into Oxford Street every day until he was 65, after which he used the free public transport he was eligible for.A former civil servant, he believed that the sex drive was dangerously heightened by the intake of too much protein. His own diet consisted of
porridge , home-made bread, andbarley water mixed withpowdered milk .Brewers' "Rogues, Villians & Eccentrics".] Green often lectured queues of people waiting outside cinemas, warning young women that they would not be able to pretend on their wedding nights that they werevirgin s, and recommending a low-protein diet to make the deception unnecessary. It was this kind of activity that led to several arrests for causing a nuisance, and on occasion the need to wear green overalls to protect himself from spit, directed at him — he believed — because people mistook him for a religious proselytizer.His tenacity earned him a place in popular culture. A character based on Green appears during a
Walkers crisps advertisement featuringGary Lineker , he was given a walk-on part inBen Elton 's novel, "Gridlock", and "The Sunday Times" interviewed him for its "A Life in a Day" column. When he died, he attracted an obituary in the "Daily Telegraph", theMuseum of London took possession of his placards and pamphlets, [ [http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/archive/exhibits/changing_faces/lives/lives2.htm "Londoners"] , Museum of London.] and he made it into the "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography".Peter Ackroyd writes of Green in "London, The Biography" that he was "commonly ignored by the great tide of people who washed around him, and thus became a poignant symbol of the city's incuriosity and forgetfulness." [Ackroyd, Peter. "London, The Biography". Vintage, 2001. Caption of an image of Stanley Green between pp. 664 and 665.]Notes
External links
*Green, Stanley. [http://www.flaneur.org.uk/html/green/green2.html "Eight Passion Proteins With Care"] , courtesy of Joe McNally at "flaneur.co.uk".
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/simon-crubellier/sets/72157603511735632/ The pamphlet in full on Flickr] .
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