Twenty years ago, Julia Roberts stood in front of Hugh Grant in a little-known travel book shop, asking him to love her. It is one of the most famous rom-com scenes in history. Since then, people have flocked to The Notting Hill Bookshop in London to take a selfie, buy a book and in some rare cases, propose marriage.
“We have at least two proposals a month, but there are more than we even know of,” says the bookshop’s manager, Olga Lewkowska. “Sometimes people write ahead and ask, but a lot just turn up to celebrate their anniversary years later. One guy made an album for his fiancée and hid it in our travel section for her to find. It took her half an hour to find it, they got engaged, and then they went to visit all the other locations from the film around London.”
And that is not an isolated incident. Every day, hordes of tourists turn up to take photos outside the famous blue façade: “Oh my god, we get thousands of visitors because of the movie. I’m not exaggerating. Good heavens, on a Saturday, I’d say about 1000 people come to take a photo or visit. Then there are all the people outside who never manage to get in because we’re too busy.”
