In series one, journalist and presenter Kate Hutchinson meets artist and musician Cosey Fanni Tutti, the countess and LSD campaigner Amanda Feilding, 2-Tone pioneer Pauline Black, British bohemian icon Molly Parkin, novelist and playwright Bonnie Greer and rock'n'roll supergroupie Pamela Des Barres
Molly Parkin, 87, is a painter, erotic novelist and a former fashion editor who epitomises bohemian London. She discusses her illuminating sex life, her Soho wild days and how to get off in your eighties.
Bonnie casts her critical idea over how to make work about race, ageism, navigating the art and opinions of problematic personalities and why Madonna was a sell-out.
The Last Bohemians meets groundbreaking LSD campaigner Amanda Feilding at her house in the English countryside to hear about hanging out with the beat poets, why psychedelics are the future, her love affair with her pet bird Birdie and that time she drilled a hole in her head.
The music trailblazer invites you into her immaculate home in the Midlands to give her thoughts on female empowerment, race relations, 2-Tone's legacy and the fight to make her voice heard.
The industrial music pioneer and uncompromising artist discusses her formative years, subversion, sex and class, the Throbbing Gristle reunion, the aftermath of her book, and what powers her experimental music and ideas
The definitive rock'n'roll groupie look backs at her controversial wild past and 1970s Hollywood
The Last Bohemians returns for series two with eight maverick women and fearless firebrands in arts and culture: folk legend Judy Collins, iconic British designer Zandra Rhodes, soul survivor PP Arnold, anarchic punk artist Gee Vaucher, witch queen Maxine Sanders, experimental film-maker Vivienne Dick, 80s club kid Sue Tilley and literary maven Margaret Busby.
The frank, funny and fearless folk legend looks back at her career, from Greenwich Village's 1960s folk scene to now, at 80, as she continues to tour worldwide, and discusses everything from acid trips gone awry to what she really thinks of Bob Dylan.
The anarcho-punk originator gives a tour of the open-house she runs in Essex, England, with Penny Rimbaud and considers her bohemian lifestyle and her confrontational art, which is in demand now more than ever