The Oldie magazine - September 2021 issue 404

Page 9

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

Anything Goes for me and my chums The joy of returning to the theatre with Christopher Biggins and Bonnie Langford

In my neck of the woods, it’s back to normal. How’s it with you? On the bus and the London Underground, I am still wearing a mask, but other than that, everything is much as it was before the pandemic struck – except that my office-worker friends really don’t want to return to their offices for more than two days a week and I am suddenly conscious of how very expensive it is to eat out. I am going to the theatre again and loving it. With my chums Christopher Biggins and Bonnie Langford, I went to a packed-to-the-rafters Barbican and we had the night of our lives at a beyondbelief brilliant revival of Cole Porter’s musical Anything Goes. It is running until the end of October; even if you have to come down from Aberdeen or fly in from Antrim, go, go, go. It’s that good. It will make you feel glad to be alive. I have even started going to parties again. The sparkiest so far has been the Australian High Commissioner’s summer drinks. The only disappointment of the evening was to find that the Australian cultural attaché was not in the least like Sir Les Patterson. There was no dribbling or spitting, which was probably a good thing because we had to come in from the garden to shelter from the rain and were huddled together, unmasked. Our Prime Minister’s father was a fellow guest and told me a story I’d not heard before about how his boy Boris got his name. It’s actually the PM’s second name (his first is Alexander). He has it because shortly before his birth, in New York in the summer of 1964, a chap called Boris showed young Stanley Johnson (then 23 and studying economics at Columbia University) and his then wife (Charlotte, 22) an unexpected kindness. Something to do with helping them get a seat on a Greyhound bus. Charlotte was about to give birth and Stanley told Boris that, by way of thanks,

their baby when it arrived would be named in his honour. Stanley is a man of his word. Stanley also told me that if the baby had been a girl, she would have been called Doris. Coming and going at the party, some people were bumping elbows and a few were offering socially-distanced namastes, but most were back to shaking hands. I gave the actor Simon Callow a proper luvvies’ hug and he rewarded me with a proper luvvies’ story – about the great and joyously eccentric Sir Ralph Richardson and, again, amazingly, it wasn’t one I had heard before. Sir Ralph, then in his late seventies, was appearing at the National Theatre and, during a break in rehearsals, was sitting at a table alone in the backstage canteen. A young actor approached the great man and asked if he could get him a cup of coffee. ‘No, thank you,’ replied Sir Ralph. ‘No coffee – but I’ll take a cup of hemlock if they’ve got one.’ During lockdown, almost everyone I know has been writing a childhood memoir, and many of them are being published this autumn.

‘It’s not me! He’s the one who’s obsessed with breasts!’

I have read an early copy of one of them that I can recommend without qualification: it’s called Will She Do? and tells the story of a girl from a council estate in Tottenham in the 1930s whose father was employed as a gas-meter reader and whose mother was a seamstress and barmaid. The girl is now Dame Eileen Atkins, 87, and it turns out that she is as subtle, honest and brilliant as a writer as she is as an actress. In case no one else does, let me recommend my own boyhood memoir, too. It’s called Odd Boy Out, and between now and November there isn’t a literary festival in the land at which I won’t be popping up to promote it. If you happen to see me at a signing, please come and say hello. These events can be awkward for authors. My very first book was published 50 years ago and I still have nightmares about my first book-signing. It was at Selfridges in London, and the line of shoppers stretched from the table where I was sitting in the book department, through the food department, out into Baker Street and around the corner into Oxford Street. There was a reason for that. I was sharing the table with another first-time author and she sold more than a thousand copies of her autobiography that day. I sold 11 copies of my book: four to my mother, four to my father, two to the deputy manager of the Selfridges book department – for customers who, apparently, had specially asked him to put them by – and, yes, one to my fellow newbie author, the very beautiful Italian lady seated on my left. She was the actress Sophia Loren. Gyles’s childhood memoir, Odd Boy Out (Michael Joseph), is out on 16th September The Oldie September 2021 9


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

On the Road: Jenni Murray

4min
pages 86-88

Overlooked Britain: Kensal Green Cemetery Lucinda

6min
pages 82-84

Dervla Murphy at 90

6min
pages 80-81

Bird of the Month: Hobby

2min
page 79

Taking a Walk: Wordsworth’s

3min
page 85

Ask Virginia Ironside

5min
pages 98-100

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 73

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Film: The Last Letter from

3min
page 64

Harlem Shuffle, by Colson

4min
page 61

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 67

History

3min
page 63

Being a Human, by Charles

4min
pages 59-60

Golden Oldies Imogen

3min
page 68

Television Roger Lewis

5min
page 66

Turning Point: A Year That Changed Charles Dickens and the World, by Robert Douglas- Fairhurst A N Wilson

3min
pages 57-58

Family Business: An Intimate History of John Lewis and the Partnership, by Victoria

5min
pages 53-54

Index, a History of the, by

5min
pages 55-56

Churchill’s Shadow, by Geoffrey Wheatcroft

3min
pages 49-50

The Sins of G K Chesterton by Richard Ingrams Dan

6min
pages 51-52

Readers’ Letters

6min
pages 44-46

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 43

Small World

5min
pages 38-40

Letter from America

4min
page 37

Country Mouse

4min
page 33

Postcards from the Edge

4min
pages 34-36

My grandfather, Chips

6min
pages 30-31

William Morris, Renaissance

5min
pages 28-29

Too much drinking at the Bar

4min
page 27

In praise of Dante, 700 years after his death A N Wilson

6min
pages 22-23

Town Mouse

4min
page 32

Media Matters

4min
pages 20-21

Why I write Jilly Cooper

3min
page 13

The last thatched cottages

4min
page 18

Diana’s first Ford Escort

4min
page 19

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

2min
pages 7-8

My comedy lessons with Frankie Howerd Gary Files

9min
pages 14-17
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.