Become a Member
Life

Peston trades on family's business history

Before his new BBC series, Robert Peston talks about relatives who helped inspire an interest in retail

August 29, 2013 11:30
A nation of shop-keepers? Robert Peston assesses the changes since 1945

By

Sandy Rashty,

Sandy Rashty

2 min read

I’ve just called my mum and found out a very interesting story,” relates BBC business editor Robert Peston, who is fronting a three-part BBC2 documentary on Britain’s retail industry — Robert Peston Goes Shopping — which begins next week.

The brief conversation between mother and son sheds light on the Peston family’s own connection to British retail. His Eastern European ancestors worked in the shmutter trade after moving to London’s East End in the 19th century.

Peston’s maternal great-great uncle Willy Kalb and his grandmother, Stoke Newington-born Rose Cohen, co-established the K&C Modes ladies’ fashion shop in The Cut in Waterloo. Grandma Rose had trained from the age of 13 with the family of Beatles manager Brian Epstein as a buyer for their retail business and helped them to develop a successful chain of fashion stores in the capital. His uncle Willy also established Kays in Stoke Newington, where his grandma — who married “an accomplished tailor” — had first worked as a manageress. “She was the brains and he was the capital behind the business,” Peston explains.

“Jewish people came from all over London to buy their suits from the shop. My uncle Willy was a dapper little man and the most successful member of the family — he had a flat in Kensington. I was close to him.”