The Oldie magazine March issue 410

Page 73

Ed McLachlan

‘Hey, Nigel – I’ve just heard a rumour that the company is going to replace us with AI’

ghastly or sympathetic, depending on whose side you are on, George Russell is winningly ruthless. Conversation between the Russells is nothing if not solipsistic. When Bertha tells her husband to remove his feet from the table that once belonged to King Ludwig of Bavaria, George replies, ‘He had it once. I have it now.’ When George tells Bertha, ‘They’ve shot Jesse James,’ she replies, ‘He had his troubles. I have mine.’ The future of America is determined not only by money, of course. Race is also a part of the story, and Marian Brooks arrives at her aunt’s with a ‘coloured’ girl she met on the train from Pennsylvania. Peggy Scott (Denée Benton) is an aspiring writer and Agnes, with her nose for talent, employs her as a secretary. ‘They’re coming here to take our jobs,’ complains the housemaid. It is a witty piece of casting to have Cynthia Nixon – currently also playing Miranda Hobbs in the Sex in the City

reboot, And Just Like That – as the spinster aunt. Similarly, Christine Baranski, the democratic Diane Lockhart in the legal dramas The Good Wife and The Good Fight, is a canny choice. The performances are all terrific, the settings lush and the bustles ridiculous. The Gilded Age will be as talked about as one of Mrs Astor’s dinner dances.

MUSIC RICHARD OSBORNE 1992 AND ALL THAT Elgar, Rossini and Thomas Tallis are subjects for any season. Others who featured in the earliest editions of this column, when it appeared in the first issue in 1992, were more of the moment. And what a year it was. The times they were a-changing, much as they had been back in 1963, when Bob Dylan wrote that celebrated lyric and Philip Larkin raised

two cheers for the brave new world of sexual liberation. Larkin called his poem Annus Mirabilis. After the Windsor fire and numerous other well-publicised royal événements, the Queen dubbed 1992 her annus horribilis. Where the arts were concerned, the year was a bit of both. An early plus was John Major’s return to power, and the decision to give the newly created Department of National Heritage, begetter of the National Lottery, a seat in cabinet. The aim was to undo some of the damage of the Thatcher years, during which wrecking balls had been taken to the BBC, the Arts Council and much else whose benefits we’d taken for granted since the mid-1960s. That was when Harold Wilson’s arts minister Jennie Lee and Lord ‘two dinners’ Goodman had created an arts environment that made Britain, briefly, the envy of the world. Glyndebourne’s closure of its old theatre in 1992 in order to open a new one in 1994 was another vote of confidence in the future. This at a moment when our state-funded opera companies, for the first time in their 46-year history, were in serious disarray. Warmly encouraged by Glyndebourne’s George Christie, the fledgling summer opera festival, which music-obsessed merchant banker Leonard Ingrams (brother of Richard) had started on the terrace of his Oxfordshire manor house, moved up several gears to help bridge the gap. I reviewed that 1992 Garsington season, carefully omitting all mention of the Ingrams name, lest mean-minded readers suspected nepotism on the part of The Oldie’s founding editor. By 1992, things were looking none too rosy for the classical-record industry. In a newly published book, Evenings with Horowitz, the great pianist railed at the brevity of the New York Times’s review of his latest CD amid a sea of reviews of albums of rock music. The launch of Classic FM in the autumn of 1992 was another long-term plus; the arrival of John Birt as the BBC’s new Director-General an evident minus. ‘So how many people listen to your little lunchtime chamber-music concerts?’ Birt is said to have asked the BBC’s outgoing Controller of Music, John Drummond. ‘As many as need to’ was the great man’s withering riposte. Drummond was the last Controller brought up in the old quality-driven, ratings-free dispensation that had begun with the founding of the BBC Third Programme in 1946 and continued The Oldie March 2022 73


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

5min
pages 106-108

On the Road: Celia Birtwell

4min
pages 94-96

Crossword

3min
pages 97-98

Overlooked Britain: England

7min
pages 90-92

Taking a Walk: London’s

3min
page 93

Edwina Sandys’s Manhattan

7min
pages 88-89

Getting Dressed

6min
pages 84-87

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 74

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 75-76

Television Frances Wilson

4min
page 72

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 73

Film: Parallel Mothers

3min
page 70

Media Matters Stephen Glover

4min
pages 67-68

Boris – the fall of Falstaff

4min
page 66

Love Marriage, by Monica Ali

4min
page 65

Constable: A Portrait, by James

5min
pages 61-62

Against the Tide, by Roger Scruton, ed Mark Dooley

2min
pages 63-64

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 47

One Party After Another: The Disruptive Life of Nigel Farage, by Michael Crick

2min
pages 55-56

Readers’ Letters

8min
pages 48-49

A Class of Their Own, by

5min
pages 57-58

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 44

Goodbye to Hollywood

6min
pages 38-40

Pearls of wisdom from The Oldie’s 30-year archive

4min
page 41

Small World Jem Clarke

3min
pages 42-43

Town Mouse Tom Hodgkinson

4min
page 34

Country Mouse Giles Wood

4min
page 35

History David Horspool

4min
page 33

My Irish home is now a ghost

3min
page 32

Do act with your heroes

4min
page 31

A Supreme Court Justice

4min
pages 26-27

Francis Bacon, Queen of

4min
page 30

Thirty years of Oldie laughs

7min
pages 28-29

My true ghost story

7min
pages 18-20

My friend Auberon Waugh

6min
pages 22-24

What happened when I went

4min
page 25

Sport’s golden oldies

4min
page 21

RIP the alpha male Mary Killen

4min
pages 16-17

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

3min
page 6

The great Liberal comeback

3min
page 11

The Old Un’s Notes

3min
page 5

The strange death of youth

4min
page 13

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Our founding father, Richard

7min
pages 14-15

Barry Cryer remembered

4min
pages 7-8

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10
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