Roy Shaw

Actor

Popular As Royston Henry Shaw (Mean Machine, Pretty Boy)

Birthday March 11, 1936

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Stepney, London, United Kingdom

DEATH DATE 2012-7-14, United Kingdom (76 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#47378 Most Popular

1936

Royston Henry Shaw (11 March 1936 ā€“ 14 July 2012), also known as Roy "Pretty Boy" Shaw, Roy "Mean Machine" Shaw and Roy West, was a property investor, author and businessman from the East End of London who was formerly a criminal and Category A prisoner.

1960

He was acquainted with the Kray twins since at least the very early 1960s; Shaw attended the funeral of Reggie Kray in 2000, and was quoted as having said: "We grew up in the same era. They were into protection rackets and I was into blags. I never got in their way and they never got in mine. Ronnie was more of a friend than Reggie, but I've come along today because he was one of the 'chaps'. Today is like the end of an era. The Krays were legends."

As an adult Shaw mainly lived in Bethnal Green.

1963

Shaw was sentenced to 18 years' imprisonment for an armed robbery in 1963, one of England's largest armoured truck robberies.

Shaw reportedly fought his way out of two different holding cells at HM Prison Maidstone, assaulting several prison guards.

Shaw, who claimed he "simply hates the system", and that the "system could never beat him", was moved between different prisons and spent time at Broadmoor Hospital.

1970

During the 1970sā€“1980s, Shaw was active in the criminal underworld of London and was associated with the Kray twins.

Shaw is best remembered today for his career as a fighter on the unlicensed boxing scene, becoming an arch-rival of Lenny McLean.

Shaw was born in Stepney, London, to a working-class family and from an early age was involved in illegal activities.

Shaw was something of a minor celebrity in the tabloids in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

1974

By 1974, Shaw had already spent around 18 years in more than 22 different prisons.

Shaw claims to have had ten fights in his twenties using the alias "Roy West".

However information on these has proven difficult to trace.

His early boxing career was cut short when he was incarcerated.

1978

On his release from prison, Shaw started fighting unlicensed (i.e. not sanctioned by the British Boxing Board of Control) boxing matches in 1978, aged 42, and gained many infamous victories, including one over Donnie "The Bull" Adams.

Shaw also beat former world heavyweight contender Ron Stander, who had also previously fought Joe Frazier for the heavyweight title.

Stander however broke a rib before the fight with Roy Shaw.

Shaw would later say in his book that he kept hitting Stander with punches which had no effect on Stander ā€“ until he found his broken rib.

In Shaw's words if Stander had not broken his rib he would have 'mullered me'.

Shaw was best known for his infamous trilogy with arch-rival Lenny "The Guv'nor" McLean.

Shaw beat McLean in their first fight, but lost in two other matches to McLean.

Shaw claimed in his autobiography that they only fought twice, but later he admitted on his website that there were indeed three fights with McLean of which he lost two and won one.

However, McLean was by far the bigger man and also much younger than Shaw.

Shaw was well into his forties when he and McLean fought and was giving away stones in weight.

Shaw stated on his website that the two unlicensed boxers he most admired were Cliff Field and Johnny Waldron, both of whom also defeated McLean.

1998

Shaw has been mentioned or discussed in numerous books, most notably in arch-rival Lenny McLean's 1998 autobiography The Guv'Nor.

and Hard Bastards by Kate Kray.

1999

According to Shaw's autobiography, Pretty Boy (1999), "uncontrollable prisoners, were deliberately drugged up with the aim of turning them into permanent 'cabbages'".

At Broadmoor, Shaw underwent experimental electroconvulsive therapy in an attempt to control his temper.

His doctor claimed that Shaw had at first come across as a large and intimidating yet soft-spoken gentleman, but when faced with treatment he didn't want, Shaw became "the most powerful and dangerous man I have ever tried to treat".

The doctor reported the treatments as having been a complete failure, and only served to make Shaw even more aggressive and unpredictable.

Shaw routinely stabbed police informers and even slashed the throat of a former best friend while incarcerated owing to his strong belief in a "code of honour" among criminals that must not be broken.

During his time in Broadmoor, Shaw again encountered Ronnie Kray.

He also spent time with such people as Ronnie Biggs and Charles Bronson at other prisons.

2003

Shaw co-wrote a book with Kate Kray, the widow of Ronnie Kray, entitled Roy Shaw: Unleashed (2003).

2006

Shaw was the subject of a 2006 documentary DVD entitled Roy Shaw: Brute Force.

It was directed by Liam Galvin and contained original footage of Shaw's unlicensed boxing matches, and also interviews with Shaw himself and other former criminal underworld figures and boxers he was associated with.

It was followed up with a second DVD Roy Shaw's Fight School.

2009

Shaw has also sometimes appeared in the press over the years, such as his attending of Ronnie Kray's funeral, or his 2009 court case (see 2009 court case section below).

2010

In 2010, he appeared in Galvin's movie Killer Bitch which featured a host of criminals.