
Famous pub loved by Oasis brothers announces sudden closure after 25 years as ‘disappointed' brewers issue statement
A FAMOUS pub loved by Noel and Liam Gallagher is set to close this week.
The Shaston Arms, in London's Soho, will be shutting its doors on June 15 for the final time.
3
3
The iconic boozer is literally a stone's throw from one of London's premier shopping shopping destinations, Carnaby Street.
Liam and Noel both drank there - though apparently not at the same time.
Other famous patrons included film stars Ewan McGregor and Jude Law, the later of whom was apparently fond of the pub's bangers and mash.
The 90s boyband Blue even signed their first ever contract in the establishment.
With its gold-on-red lettering outside and its dark wooden panelling and plush red leather banquette seating, you could be forgiven for thinking the Shaston Arms was a Victorian relic.
However, the pub actually only opened in 1999, since which it has been managed by landlady Sally Graham.
Prior to that the location hosted a pair of shops.
The name 'Shaston' was taken from the novelist Thomas Hardy, who invented the name for his imaginary version of Shaftesbury in Dorset.
To celebrate the pub's 25th anniversary last year, the public house changed its name to The Lady Shaston in homage to landlady Sally.
One wag earlier this year posted on Facebook after visiting: "The Shaston Arms is now The Lady Shaston. My pronouns are still tipsy/drunk."
Noel Gallagher looks stony-faced as he makes lonely Tube journey to Oasis rehearsals – but Liam's entrance is chaotic
The pub was run by Dorset-based brewers Hall & Woodhouse.
In a statement posted to Instagram announcing the closure, they said: "We are disappointed that after 25 wonderful years, we are sadly saying goodbye to The Shaston Arms in Carnaby.
"Our wish was to renew the lease on the building, but we understand that the landlord wishes to pursue a restaurant offer on Ganton Street.
"Therefore, the Shaston Arms will sadly close on Sunday 15th June 2025.
"We know that the Shaton will be missed by the local community and thank our guests and team for their loyalty, support, and laughter over the past two and a half decades."
2025 has been a difficult year for London's historic pubs, with some of the capital's most famous taphouses closing.
Ye Olde Swiss Cottage, on Finchley Rd in north west London, was shut down at the start of February, much to the displeasure of loyal customers.
As staff poured their last pints behind the bar, one fan told the BBC: "You choose a pub with a different atmosphere - a lot of them are becoming like clones now."
3
"It's one of those institutions you've always seen when you come into London," added another.
Another east London hotspot, The Gun, in Homerton, also closed its doors in March after 160 years of pouring pints.
However, the brewer behind The Shaston Arms does stillhave a number of other pubs in London, including the Ship and Shovell by Embankment, which is split across two buildings facing each other that are joined by an underground cellar.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
33 minutes ago
- Times
‘Glastonbury festival is like Wimbledon — even my dad watches it'
The Glastonbury festival has become as big as Wimbledon and the World Cup on TV, the head of the BBC's coverage has Rothery, who is the BBC's head of popular music for television, said the festival will be getting more coverage on BBC1 than ever this year, as all generations show increased interest in watching extended coverage of the musical acts at Worthy iPlayer viewers will be able to stream continuous coverage of the five main stages at the festival from midday until past midnight on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. 'It's a beast,' Rothery said of the festival. 'The interest in Glastonbury has extended over time, with people wanting more [coverage] leading into the festival and more after it. 'It's almost becoming a Glastonbury season now, more akin to a sporting event like Wimbledon or a World Cup. 'Linear TV is still the main go-to for our broad audience. The numbers continue to be really strong, which I think is partly to do with Glastonbury becoming our sort of Wimbledon of music.' Rothery said he puts the increasing interest down to an evolution in the festival's appeal. 'It's gone from the 1990s, when it was a brilliant festival but had a very specific demographic, to now being a very broad church, reflective of everybody,' he said. 'It's multigenerational. Even my dad watches it and he wasn't aware of it ten years ago.' This year BBC1 is scheduling more coverage of Glastonbury than ever before, Rothery said. 'We are also pushing longer sections of sets and even full sets on linear TV, whereas we used to be more highlights and bitesize bits of sets.'That is a big shift. There is a confidence that we can put a full set out and it will sustain a good audience.' Rothery said in recent years they had been getting 'millions' watching the live streams of the five main stages on each day of the festival. He said ways of reaching a younger demographic — which all broadcasters are chasing as they compete against the likes of YouTube and TikTok — have changed now that younger people consume music differently through sites such as Spotify, where the whole history of popular music sits in one place. 'In the old days, to reach a young audience we would normally want to put a young pop star on a stage to reach that demographic,' he said. 'That has totally changed. My 15-year-old daughter is a massive Billy Joel fan and loves The Clash. Audiences don't know or care how long these songs have been around, they are just great songs. 'Elton John [in 2023] gave us a massive young audience share and one of the youngest of the festival.' Deploying a drone shot at Glastonbury to show the audience the full scale of the record crowd for Elton's closing headline slot, the final show of his touring career, was a highlight for Rothery. Asked what makes a great Glastonbury festival TV moment, he said: 'Some of it is pre-planned, like having the surprise sets that the festival organises, to create those moments of excitement and intrigue, and sometimes it might just be great timing of an act being on. 'I have vivid memories of LCD Soundsystem playing All My Friends and seeing the sun setting, that was a special moment that only Glastonbury can do. 'Jay Z doing Wonderwall was a huge moment, or when Dave [the grime artist] got the guy out of the audience to do a rap, the audience had no expectation of that. 'Sometimes it's the audience's appreciation of the artist. When Dolly Parton did the legends slot, her reaction to seeing the audience know every word to Jolene, in cowboy hats, took her by such surprise and made it really special. 'When Brian Wilson did it, there were surfboards in the audience. It's the lengths Glastonbury people go to show their appreciation. 'It's a magic combo of things that cannot always be pre-planned.'


Daily Mail
37 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Prince Harry plots family truce to heal feud with King Charlies and Prince William
The Duke of Sussex is to extend an olive branch to the wider royal family, including with dad King Charles and brother Prince William by inviting them to his 2027 multi-sport event the Invictus Games. In the strongest indication yet that Prince Harry is keen for a reconciliation, it is understood that an emailed invite will be sent out later this month, followed by a formal request. Sources said the timing of the invitation was designed to give the senior royals the best possible chance of attending, given that Charles is known to draw up his schedule up to three years in advance. The extraordinary move, which could see Harry photographed with the royal family for the first time since late Queen Elizabeth's funeral in September 2022, has raised eyebrows among some commentators. Ingrid Seward said: 'The King might attend to show support for the Armed Forces and congratulate Harry on the most significant success in his life. 'The only reason the King is wary of associating with his son is that he no longer trusts him not to repeat their private conversations as he has done in the past. This goes for all the working members of the family.' Fellow royal commentator Katie Nicholl said: 'The King absolutely wants a relationship with his youngest son and with his grandchildren. 'He has an incredible capacity for forgiveness and he wants to be magnanimous in all of this and therefore there's certainly a possibility that the King might consider attending Invictus.' Despite the royals' previous strong support for Invictus, the invitation - should anyone choose to accept it - is likely to cause some headaches for royal aides as it involves a major scheduling conflict. The Games are set to open in the UK at Birmingham's NEC on July 12, 2027, and would conclude on Queen Camilla's 80th birthday on July 17, for which there would likely already be celebrations planned. It also remains to be seen whether Harry would risk bringing Meghan and their children Archie and Lilibet to the UK for the event, having previously insisted he could not do so unless his family was offered 'full police protection'. A source said: 'Harry has agreed that Invictus should extend an invitation to his family. Invictus hopes the royal family will come along to support the wounded veterans taking part. Harry is hopeful his father will set aside their differences to attend the Invictus Games and support veterans. 'The royals have always been hugely supportive of Invictus and proud of what Harry has achieved in that arena. This is one olive branch from him that might be reciprocated.' The Invictus invitations are thought to represent the first time Harry has publicly reached out in a bid to gather his family together. Harry made it clear in a BBC interview last month that he would welcome a rapprochement with his father and the wider family, despite acknowledging the hurt caused by his brutally honest memoir Spare. The Duke said: 'There's no point in continuing to fight any more. Life is precious. Forgiveness is 100 per cent a possibility because I would like to get my father and brother back.' The invitees and the wording of the invitations are said to have been approved by Harry, with the emails being sent to private secretaries at Buckingham Palace. A spokesman for Invictus said: 'No formal invitations have been issued as preparations are in the early stages.'


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Glastonbury festival begins and Squid Game ends: What's coming up this week
Did you get tickets to Glastonbury festival this year? Not to worry if not, you can watch from the comfort of your own home on BBC that's not all the next seven days have in store Game is coming to an end with season three, Brad Pitt is speeding into UK cinemas with his new film F1 and gaming auteur Hideo Kojima is releasing the sequel to Death on for what's coming up this week... More than 90 hours of music from Glastonbury By Mark Savage, music correspondent The UK's biggest festival opens its doors on Wednesday, with fans gathering at the Pyramid Stage to see headline sets from The 1975, Olivia Rodrigo and Neil you weren't one of the lucky 175,000 people who got a ticket, though, you can follow all the action at home. The BBC is there all week, with live coverage across TV, radio and iPlayer - covering all the main stages, with more than 90 hours of whet your appetite, there's already a Glastonbury Hits Channel on iPlayer, streaming classic tracks from previous years – with highlights including Oasis, Little Simz, The Who and Lady if you're heading down to Worthy Farm, and can't be bothered fighting for a position at the main stages, I'd recommend a visit to the Avalon field – which might just have this year's best can relive your 2000s indie disco dreams with Hard-Fi, The Fratellis and Ash; check out some of 2025's best new indie artists, courtesy of Orla Gartland and Rachael Chinouriri; and celebrate the memory of Amy Winehouse, with an hour-long set from her former band. Netflix brings Squid Game to an end After taking the world by storm, Squid Game is coming to an end on launching in 2021, its first season racked up more than 265 million views making it Netflix's most-watched show ever. The second season isn't far behind, with about 192.6 million watches, landing it at number three on the story follows Seong Gi-hun who competes in deadly children's games for a chance to win a cash prize that could erase his enormous and director Hwang Dong-hyuk, who lost teeth from the stress of making the show, called the ending "bittersweet". Initially imagining the series stretching across five seasons, Dong-hyuk found a natural ending point during writing. He explained: "I'm relieved because I finally get out of the Squid Game world, but at the same time I have to say goodbye to all the good memories... So it is kind of sad in that way."Lead star Lee Jung-jae added: "It hasn't sunk in with me yet... When I get to see how the fans respond to it maybe I can be ready to say goodbye to Squid Game and Seong Gi-hun." Hideo Kojima delivers star-studded gaming sequel By Tom Richardson, Newsbeat reporter Depending on who you speak to, Hideo Kojima is either a visionary prophet or a self-indulgent, wannabe movie-maker. But there's no doubting he's one of the most influential video game designers of all time – and he's got a new one out this Death Stranding 2, out on PlayStation 5 from Thursday, picks up the story of protagonist Sam Porter Bridges, a delivery man who lugs precariously balanced cargo across a post-apocalyptic only got four paragraphs here, so won't attempt to recap the – ahem – complex plot (Kojima's storylines and love of long cinematic sequences are the biggest source of "self-indulgence" accusations), but early signs point to a deeper, more varied experience in the moment-to-moment although people criticise them, Kojima's previous scripts have anticipated real-world events such as the rise of online misinformation and the Covid-19 pandemic with eerie accuracy. So maybe you shouldn't skip the cutscenes, acted by an all-star cast including Norman Reedus, Léa Seydoux and Elle Fanning. Brad Pitt races into cinemas Brad Pitt is not cutting corners when it comes to bringing F1 to the big and his co-star Damson Idris were spotted speeding real cars around Silverstone while filming during the 2023 and 2024 Grand Prix. Pitt plays burnt-out racer Sonny Hayes who is pulled out of retirement to help fictional team Gun: Maverick director Joseph Kosinski is behind the camera, he's been keen to make sure the film feels authentic to fans of the sport. There's a thumping Hans Zimmer score, stunning shots of international race courses and realistic high-speed crashes that will make the whole cinema you're an F1 fan there are a lot of Easter eggs to be hunting for- the film is stuffed with cameos including drivers such as Lewis Hamilton and commentators David Croft and Martin film is in cinemas from Wednesday. Other highlights this week Jordan Gray's Transaction starts on ITV2 and ITVX on TuesdayIronheart, a new Marvel series, starts on Disney+ on WednesdayAmol Rajan Goes to the Ganges, airs on BBC One and iPlayer on WednesdayThe Bear, series 4, all 10 episodes arrive on Disney+ on ThursdayLorde's album Virgin drops on FridayM3GAN 2.0 is released in cinemas on Friday24 Hours in Police Custody starts Sunday on Channel 4