Unseen photos show iconic poet Dylan Thomas in fit of rage

Paul Pigott
BBC News
Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore Dylan Thomas in a black and white photo standing beside the same window, except he has the legs of a chair in his hands and is twisting them with this arms. Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore
Thomas in a fury twisting the legs of a chair

Dylan Thomas implored his readers to "rage, rage against the dying of the light".

And newly uncovered photos, lost in a drawer for decades, show the Welsh poet heeding his own words as he wrecked an employer's office after finding out they had no pay for him.

Thomas had a job making wartime documentaries for Strand Film Company in London in 1942 when a photographer captured him waiting to collect a cheque.

When no money was forthcoming, he can then be seen breaking up the furniture like a spoiled rock star in the series of never-before published photos.

Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore Dylan Thomas in a black and white photo, sitting on chair beside and open window wearing a Trilby hat and tweed jacket with his legs crossed, a book in his  lap and looking up with a slight smileJeff Towns Dylans Bookstore
Dylan Thomas looking happy as he waits to collected a cheque at a Strand Film Company, but things very soon changed

A quick-thinking Strand receptionist told the photographer to document Thomas's outburst then tucked the evidence away, said Jeff Towns, a Dylan Thomas expert and author.

He bought the photos and got the back story from the receptionist's daughter, telling Cerys Matthews on BBC Radio 6 Music he believed Thomas's violent tantrum was the result of him being desperate for money.

Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore Dylan Thomas in a black and white photo standing beside the same window but is crouching with the chair legs still in one hand. A table beside him has audio recording equipment from the era and film cans stacked up. Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore
Thomas with his fist clenched

"There's one picture of him looking immaculate [with a] big smile," he said.

"No cheque and he's pulling the desk apart like a rock and roller throwing a TV out the window."

The photos and story appear in Towns' new book, the Wilder Shores of Dylan Thomas.

"I got this letter out the blue from a woman who said her mother had worked at Strand Films and straight away I knew how important it was," he said, explaining how it was the only time Thomas had "a proper job with a salary".

Thomas definitely worked at Strand he said, because one of his friends, Julian MacLaren-Ross, wrote about it a book.

"He writes about what they got up to at the [Strand] office, so everything rang true," he said.

Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore Dylan Thomas in a black and white photo his head down and cigarette in the of this mouth. He is hunched over a bit and still still twisting something unseen with his arms. Jeff Towns Dylans Bookstore
Thomas has a cigarette in his mouth in the photographs

"Plus I know that [Thomas] was forever living from hand to mouth," he said of the Swansea-born writer, who had a wife and two children to support at the time.

"So the guy was desperate for money and obviously when he went in he thought he was going to trouser a few quid to get through the next few days.

"Even just to get to the pub that night.

"When it wasn't there, he flipped."

Jeff Towns looking at the camera with a walls of books on the shelf behind him and black and white portrait of Dylan Thomas
Thomas expert Jeff Towns says the poet "was a pacifist in his own way"

Originally from east London, Towns has been antiquarian book dealer for more than 50 years and currently runs Dylans Bookstore in Swansea.

He has written several books about the Welsh bard and holds an important collection of his letters, photos and memorabilia.

The outburst in Strand Films was unusual, he argued.

"He got into trouble when he was drunk, but he was a pacifist in his own way."

Jeff Towns at a wooden table looking at black and white photographs of Dylan Thomas at Strand Films.
Towns said Thomas was not known for having a temper

Towns said Thomas, who was only 5ft 6in (1.68m), always said he was above average height "for Wales".

"He knew he was small, but if a big soldier came in and started being jingoistic he would challenge them and get thrown out on his backside," he said.

"He didn't fly off the handle a lot - there are a couple of times when things went a bit wrong - but by and large he was passive and talked his way out of problems."

The poet's fans were his worst enemies in some ways, he said.

"In America his favourite whisky was a bourbon called Old Grandad.

"People would turn up at his hotel room with a bottle and want him to drink it in front of them.

"When people were feeding him lots of whisky he could get irascible.

"I think he liked to be the centre of attention, in a pub he would tell great stories and people would buy him drinks, but I don't think he was known for a temper in any way.

"[His wife] Caitlin had the temper and she would give him a right hiding."