The Oldie April 411 issue

Page 9

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

Cressida Dick is just wild about Wilde The ex-Met Commissioner is devoted to my hero, Oscar

The moment you’re born, you’re doomed. The moment you’re appointed Metropolitan Police Commissioner, you know it’ll end in tears. I have a soft spot for Dame Cressida Dick, the latest head of the Met to become unsaddled in post – for a special reason: we have a mutual interest in Oscar Wilde. I am president of the Oscar Wilde Society and she shares a birthday with him: 16th October. It was the men from the Met, of course, who arrested Oscar Wilde in 1895. In 2017, 120 years after Wilde’s release from Reading Gaol, I invited Cress (as colleagues call her) to propose a toast to his memory at a drinks party in his honour. She came with her partner, Helen. I think they had thought of announcing their engagement that night. They didn’t, but the evening was memorable all the same. ‘We cannot change the past,’ said Britain’s most senior police officer, looking out over a sea of upturned faces – many those of men old enough to have known the time when expressing their sexuality would have made them liable to arrest and imprisonment – ‘but we can look to the future and hope that it is one that is kinder, fairer, more tolerant, more loving, more humane.’ It was a strange and moving moment when the head of the very organisation responsible for Wilde’s arrest said in a quiet, firm voice: ‘As the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, I am proud to invite you to raise your glasses in a toast to the memory and genius of Oscar Wilde.’ Cressida Dick was the first female and the first openly gay Met Commissioner. Sir Robert Mark (1917-2010) was the first Commissioner to have Wilde woman: Cressida Dick

started as a bobby on the beat and to have risen through all the ranks from the lowest to the highest – the route followed by all subsequent Commissioners. Formerly the Chief Constable of Leicester, Mark was brought in ‘to clean up the Met’ in 1972 – and he succeeded. He was a friend of my father’s and I remember my dad taking me to lunch with him at New Scotland Yard. Fine wine was served (that wouldn’t happen now) and, after lunch, Sir Bob took us on a tour of the Met’s celebrated Black Museum (they don’t call it that any more). Started in the 1870s, the museum featured everything from Victorian swordsticks to the hangman’s nooses used in the execution of assorted murderers of note and the revolver used by Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in England. I realise now that my father must have known Bob Mark quite well. In the early 1970s, my parents lived in a block of flats above Baker Street tube station. It was just round the corner from the scene of the notorious Balcombe Street siege, in 1975, when four members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army held an innocent couple hostage for almost a week. When my father saw the Met Commissioner on TV, arriving to take command of the situation, he said to me, ‘Come on, boy.’ He marched me round the corner, ducking under the police barriers, and announcing to every officer who tried to stop us, ‘Friends of the Commissioner – laissez passer!’ Incredibly, we got through the cordon and right up to the Commissioner who allowed us a ringside seat for the

climax of the drama: the surrender of the four IRA terrorists and the release of their two hostages. Incidentally, the four IRA men, part of an active service unit involved in a sustained bombing and murder campaign across London, served 23 years in English prisons, before being transferred to a jail in Eire in 1998. Gerry Adams called them ‘our Nelson Mandelas’; they were released as part of the Good Friday Agreement in 1999. By coincidence, there is another Irish revolutionary who shared a 16th October birthday with Oscar Wilde and Cressida Dick – and that’s Michael Collins (1890-1922), commander-in-chief of the Irish Free State army until he was killed in an ambush a century ago, towards the end of the Irish civil war. Some days (like 8th March, the day on which I was born) don’t seem to have any notable births. Others are awash with them. Two of my favourite actors are also 16th October people: Dame Angela Lansbury, born 1925, and Peter Bowles, born 1936. Peter, a friend and neighbour for 40 years, trained at RADA. While he was there, he shared a flat with his contemporary Albert Finney. Late one night, so Peter told me, the two young men fell to talking about the part each would most like to play. Both, it turned out, aspired to play Macbeth. Albert asked Peter how he would approach the part. Peter told me, ‘I went on about Scottish history, the possibility of playing it with a Scottish accent, probably in a kilt, and how I would study all the great scholars, including Granville Barker.’ ‘How would you approach it, Albert?’ Peter asked his friend. ‘I’d learn the fucking lines and walk on,’ said Albert. Gyles’s memoir, Odd Boy Out, is out now (Michael Joseph) The Oldie April 2022 9


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Articles inside

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

Testaments of youth

5min
pages 92-97

Taking a Walk: Lundy – a

3min
pages 87-88

Overlooked Britain: A mosque

5min
pages 82-84

On the Road: Renée Fleming

4min
pages 85-86

Bird of the Month: Egyptian

9min
pages 77-79

Getting Dressed

4min
pages 74-76

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 64

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 69

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 65-66

Television Frances Wilson

8min
pages 62-63

Film: Cyrano

3min
page 60

Media Matters

4min
pages 57-58

History

4min
page 56

An Author Writes: A

4min
page 55

Wreck: Géricault’s Raft and the the Art of Being Lost at Sea, by Tom de Freston Mark Bostridge

5min
pages 52-54

Burning the Big House: The Story of the Irish Country House in a Time of War and Revolution, by Terence

5min
pages 49-50

Not Far from Brideshead, by Daisy Dunn Alexander

5min
page 51

Run Rose Run, by Dolly Parton and James Patterson

6min
pages 46-47

Readers’ Letters

8min
pages 42-43

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 41

Postcards from the Edge

4min
pages 36-38

Old lags

4min
page 31

Town Mouse

3min
page 32

The real Brideshead revisited

6min
pages 34-35

Country Mouse

4min
page 33

How to talk proper

4min
page 30

Small World Jem Clarke

4min
pages 28-29

The bores are back

4min
page 27

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
pages 10-11

The Old Un’s Notes

7min
pages 5-6

Return to the Falklands, 40

7min
pages 14-15

An Englishman’s castle is

6min
pages 23-26

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

3min
pages 7-8

The joys of Birmingham

6min
pages 20-22

The Godfather turns 50 Tom Ward

9min
pages 16-18
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