For many commentators he brought erotica into the mainstream, hosting a ground-breaking live striptease in 1958, before going on to make a vast fortune by buying and developing property in Soho and west London.
He was also described as a British version of Playboy founder Hugh Heffner in the US.
Bienvenue Chez les Ch'tis (Welcome to the Land of the Ch'tis), a French comedy mocking national stereotypes about the country's north, usually depicted as a bleak, depressed land of beer-swilling brutes, looks set to be the movie of the year in France after smashing box office records.
Released last Wednesday, it has already overtaken France's most costly film ever, Asterix at the Olympic Games, which came out in January.
Films and novels about the area, which is a stark contrast to the glamour of Paris or the sunny mountains and coast of the Riviera, often feature coal mining, unemployment, rain or heavy drinking.
This grim social realist tradition can be traced back to the 19th-century writer Emile Zola and his bleak mining novel Germinal.
But Bienvenue Chez les Ch'tis, written and directed by comedian Danny Boon, a Ch'ti himself who also stars in the movie, satirizes the prejudices about the area to reveal the warmth and big hearts of its people.



