Lady in Waiting My Extraordinary Life in The Shadow of The Crown by Anne Glenconner
Lady in Waiting My Extraordinary Life in The Shadow of The Crown by Anne Glenconner
Lady Glenconner is now 87. She was born Lady Anne Coke in 1932, the
eldest daughter of the 5th Earl of Leicester, and growing up in their
ancestral estate at Holkham Hall in Norfolk. A Maid of Honour at the
Queen’s Coronation, she married Lord Glenconner in 1956. She was
appointed Lady in Waiting to Princess Margaret in 1971 and kept this role –
accompanying her on many state occasions and foreign tours – until
Princess Margaret’s death in 2002.
Lady Glenconner now lives in a farmhouse near Kings Lynn in Norfolk.
Lady in Waiting
My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown
Anne Glenconner
www.hodder.co.uk
zuleika.london
First published in Great Britain in 2019 by Hodder & Stoughton An
Hachette UK company And by joint imprimatur with Zuleika Copyright ©
Anne Glenconner 2019
The right of Anne Glenconner to be identified as the Author of the Work
has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,
or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written
permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of
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similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library
Hardback ISBN 978 1 529 35906 0
Trade Paperback ISBN 978 1 529 35907 7
eBook ISBN 978 1 529 35908 4
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For my children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
Contents
About the Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
1: The Greatest Disappointment
2: Hitler’s Mess
3: The Travelling Salesman
4: The Coronation
5: For Better, For Worse
6: Absolutely Furious
7: The Making of Mustique
8: A Princess in Pyjamas
9: Motherhood
10: Lady in Waiting
11: The Caribbean Spectaculars
12: A Royal Tour
13: A Year at Kensington Palace
14: The Lost Ones
15: A Nightmare and a Miracle
16: Forever Young
17: The Last Days of a Princess
18: Until Death Us Do Part
19: Whatever Next?
Acknowledgements
Picture Acknowledgements
Picture Section
PROLOGUE
One morning at the beginning of 2019, when I was in my London flat,
the telephone rang.
‘Hello?’
‘Lady Glenconner? It’s Helena Bonham Carter.’
It’s not every day a Hollywood film star rings me up, although I had
been expecting her call. When the producers of the popular Netflix series
The Crown contacted me, saying that I was going to be portrayed by Nancy
Carroll in the third series, and that Helena Bonham Carter had been cast as
Princess Margaret, I was delighted. Asked whether I minded meeting them
so they could get a better idea of my friendship with Princess Margaret, I
said I didn’t mind in the least.
Nancy Carroll came to tea, and we sat in armchairs in my sitting room
and talked. The conversation was surreal as I became extremely self-aware,
realising that Nancy must be absorbing what I was like.
A few days later when Helena was on the telephone, I invited her for tea
too. Not only do I admire her as an actress but, as it happens, she is a cousin
of my late husband Colin Tennant, and her father helped me when one of
my sons had a motorbike accident in the eighties.
As Helena walked through the door, I noticed a resemblance between
her and Princess Margaret: she is just the right height and figure, and
although her eyes aren’t blue, there is a similar glint of mischievous
intelligence in her gaze.
We sat down in the sitting room, and I poured her some tea. Out came
her notebook, where she had written down masses of questions in order to
get the measure of the Princess, ‘to do her justice’, she explained.
A lot of her questions were about mannerisms. When she asked how the
Princess had smoked, I described it as rather like a Chinese tea ceremony:
from taking her long cigarette holder out of her bag and carefully putting
the cigarette in, to always lighting it herself with one of her beautiful
lighters. She hated it when others offered to light it for her, and when any
man eagerly advanced, she would make a small but definite gesture with
her hand to make it quite clear.
I noticed that Helena moved her hand in the tiniest of reflexes, as if to
test the movement I’d just described, before going on to discuss Princess
Margaret’s character. I tried to capture her quick wit – how she always saw
the humorous side of things, not one to dwell, her attitude positive and
matter-of-fact. As we talked, the descriptions felt so vivid, it was as though
Princess Margaret was in the room with us. Helena listened to everything
very carefully, making lots of notes. We talked for three hours, and when
she left, I felt certain that she was perfectly cast for the role.
Both actors sent me letters thanking me for my help, Helena Bonham
Carter expressing the hope that Princess Margaret would be as good a friend
to her as she was to me. I felt very touched by this and the thought of
Princess Margaret and I being reunited on screen was something I looked
forward to. I found myself reflecting back on our childhood spent together
in Norfolk, the thirty years I’d been her Lady in Waiting, all the times we
had found ourselves in hysterics, and the ups and downs of both our lives.
I’ve always loved telling stories, but it never occurred to me to write a
book until these two visits stirred up all those memories. From a generation
where we were taught not to over-think, not to look back or question, only
now do I see how extraordinary the nine decades of my life have really
been, full of extreme contrasts. I have found myself in a great many odd
circumstances, both hilarious and awful, many of which seem, even to me,
unbelievable. But I feel very fortunate that I have my wonderful family and
for the life I have led.
CHAPTER ONE
Hitler’s Mess
WE WENT TO live with our Ogilvy cousins in Downie Park, one of the
Ogilvys’ shooting lodges in Angus: their main house, Cortachy Castle, had
been requisitioned and was being used as a hospital for Polish officers.
Although Carey and I were unsettled by the separation from our parents,
going to Scotland felt like an adventure. I loved my Ogilvy cousins. There
were six of them, and the three youngest – David, Angus and James – were
all about the same age as me and Carey. We knew them well because every
summer they would come and stay at Holkham, having great fun together,
exploring and making up games. We watched as the boys played endless
rounds of cricket on the terrace, wearing their special linen kilts that Carey
and I wished we had. Our nanny wasn’t quite so keen on them all because
the best fruit – a valuable treat in those days – was kept for them and she
would say they had come to ‘take over’.
They were all very welcoming at Downie Park, and I was especially
fond of David, whom I followed everywhere. I adored their mother, my
Great-aunt Bridget, who was born Lady Alexandra Coke and was my
grandfather’s sister.
Great-aunt Bridget was a Christian Scientist – a nineteenth-century
religion established by Mary Baker Eddy, which, during the First World
War, cut a swathe through the aristocracy, converting many to it. It operates
on the belief that sickness is an illusion that can be corrected by prayer. This
provided comfort for Great-aunt Bridget and her husband, my Great-uncle
Joe, the Earl of Airlie, because he, like many men, was suffering from the
effects of the Great War. Great-aunt Bridget practised her beliefs and passed
on many useful pieces of advice to me. Perhaps the advice that stuck with
me most is ‘Things have a habit of working out, not necessarily in the way
you expect, and you must never force them.’ Her grounded approach served
Carey and me well, because we both found it very disconcerting to be away
from our parents, with the outbreak of war.
On 3 September 1939, Great-aunt Bridget brought us down to the
drawing room in Downie Park, where we listened to Neville Chamberlain’s
declaration of war on the ancient wireless. There was something heavy and
serious in the Prime Minister’s voice, which mirrored the atmosphere in the
room. I stared at the carpet as I listened, not really knowing what was
happening, wondering when we would be able to go home.
There was a very different atmosphere when, in 1940, Princess
Elizabeth directly addressed the children of Britain. Again, we sat on the
carpet in the drawing room, huddled round the wireless craning our necks
towards Princess Elizabeth’s voice, excited that we all knew her. It felt as if
she was talking directly to us. At the end, Princess Elizabeth said, ‘My
sister is by my side and we are both going to say goodnight to you. Come
on, Margaret.’ And Princess Margaret responded, ‘Goodnight, children.’
We all answered back, thinking they could hear us, somehow imagining
they were in the wireless. The Princesses were our heroines. So many
children of our parents’ friends had been sent off to America in order to
escape the war and there were the two Princesses, still in England, in as
much danger as us all.
The war meant that Carey and I and the Princesses were no longer in
Norfolk together and the only time we saw them was when Carey, the
Ogilvys and I visited Glamis Castle – Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother’s
family estate, where Princess Margaret had been born.
Glamis is said to be the most haunted castle in Scotland and Princess
Margaret knew every nook, cranny and ghoul. As we were exploring the
grounds, she told us stories about the ghosts, the grey lady who is said to
haunt the chapel and the tongue-less lady who runs across the lawn. The
Ogilvys relished the stories and told their own, all about how there was a
ghost at Cortachy, who would beat a drum whenever someone in the family
died, leaving me relieved that Cortachy had been requisitioned. Just before
we left, Princess Margaret took us down to see the train, which puffed along
the edge of the grounds, standing on the bridge over the railway line, being
enveloped in steam.
Apart from that, we didn’t see them and life was quite limited. With no
petrol and living in a big house far from the nearest town or city, we stayed
within the grounds of Downie Park, only once going to Dundee when Uncle
Joe took us to the theatre.
In the winter we would skate on the frozen lake, and when we weren’t
having lessons with our governess, we would do our ‘war work’, collecting
sphagnum moss for the Red Cross, who used it to help to dress wounds,
knitting gloves for the sailors on the mine sweepers, and entertaining the
Polish officers at Cortachy Castle by playing snakes and ladders on their
beds and putting on amateur dramatics for them.
Every afternoon, we would take our fresh air and exercise by walking
down the long drive, then return to the house where a man from the nearby
town of Kirriemuir would teach us to dance. Carey and I put on our black
dancing shoes and in the vast dining room, with our cousin James, who was
the same age as Carey and always wore a kilt, learnt how to do the
Highland Fling and the Sword Dance.
James was not always so beguiling. He and Carey would regularly gang
up on me. This might have been because I spent a great deal of time, rather
pathetically, hugging trees, climbing up them and pretending they were my
friends. Once up them, however, I would be too frightened to come down,
so Carey and James would stand below, teasing me with their particular
catchphrase: ‘Cowardy, cowardy custard!’ I had arrived at Downie Park a
rather shy child, but I gradually came out of my shell. Being in a big pack
of Ogilvys and part of a boisterous group soon toughened me up.
My parents had sent our own governess to Downie, my mother telling
me before she left for Egypt: ‘You’re now too old to have a nanny, so
Daddy and I have chosen a governess for you called Miss Bonner and she is
very nice, and you will be very happy with her.’ Well, it turned out that
Miss Bonner was not very nice. She was fairly all right with Carey, but
really cruel to me. Every night, whatever I had done, however well I had
behaved, she would punish me by tying my hands to the back of the bed
and leaving me like that all night. I was too frightened of Miss Bonner to
ask Carey to untie me, and Carey would have been too frightened to do it
anyway. Both Carey and I suffered badly through this. I wanted to protect
Carey, fearing Miss Bonner might do the same to her, so neither of us told
anyone. While Miss Bonner did not do the same to my little sister, Carey
witnessed this inexplicable behaviour towards me and felt powerless that
there was nothing she could do. Her distress would manifest itself in high
temperatures linked to no specific illness.
Because my mother had chosen Miss Bonner, I thought she knew what
the governess was doing to me and didn’t mind, or even thought it was
good for me. It caused me terrible confusion because I couldn’t understand
why my parents would want me to be treated like that.
Fortunately, Great-aunt Bridget’s Christian Science saved me.
Eventually, Miss Bonner was sacked, not because of her ill-treatment of me
(which I am sure Great-aunt Bridget knew nothing about) but for being a
Roman Catholic and taking me to Mass. There was nothing worse than
Catholicism, as far as Great-aunt Bridget was concerned. When Miss
Bonner left, I made a big fuss, pretending to be really upset that she was
going, fearing she might somehow blame me and do something even more
horrible.
Miss Bonner left an invisible scar on me. To this day, I find it almost
impossible to think about what she did to me. Years later, she sent me a card
congratulating me on my engagement, which triggered the most unpleasant
rush of memories and made me physically sick.
Luckily, Miss Bonner was replaced with Miss Billy Williams, who was
wonderful, although she looked rather daunting with a nose that was always
running and one leg longer than the other so she had a limp. But she
twinkled with kindness.
The minute Billy Williams set foot in Carey’s and my lives, everything
changed, and within days, we were devoted to her. I think she realised I’d
had a difficult time with her predecessor, because she often gave me treats,
taking me on fun days out. One of my favourite places was an Ogilvy
shooting lodge, which was tucked into the hillside, surrounded by heather.
She’d take us all off, walking along a pretty stream that ran through the
bottom of the garden, stopping for a picnic, during which we would roll
heather in a piece of newspaper and pretend to smoke it. We thought that
was frightfully dashing.
As the months turned to years we became more aware of the horrors of
the war, overhearing conversations referring to the increasing attacks on
Britain. Even though we had been sent up to Scotland to get away from
danger, we weren’t far from Dundee, which was targeted heavily. In fact,
there were more than five hundred German air raids on Scotland so we
would probably have been safer staying in Norfolk. Once a German plane
was shot down just above Tulcan lodge and, as a ‘great treat’, Billy
Williams took me up to the wreckage to have a look. It was still smoking,
although we saw no body, and I still have a piece of map I took from the
plane, which was scattered in the heather.
As Carey and I absorbed more information, mostly through the wireless
that James’s nanny listened to tirelessly, we became convinced that Hitler
and all his henchmen would come to England and each choose a stately
home to live in. We had some idea that Hitler was going to Windsor and
presumed, rather grandly, that either Himmler or Goering would choose
Holkham. We weren’t far wrong. It transpired that the Nazis had indeed
planned to take over the country estates, although Hitler had his sights on
Blenheim.
Carey and I, I suspect like many other imaginative children of the time,
felt helpless in the face of the war. Knitting gloves and playing board games
with Polish officers somehow didn’t feel helpful enough. Our father was
fighting and our mother, we had been told, was doing ‘war work’, but we
were doing nothing to stop Hitler.
Discussing the dire situation, Carey and I became convinced Hitler was
bound to visit Holkham at some point, so we decided that, somehow, we
would go back there to kill him. In preparation for the assassination, we
created a poison that we called ‘Hitler’s mess’, a collection of jam jars
containing anything really disgusting – scraps of food and medicine, muddy
water and bits of fluff from the carpet. We hid it under our beds until it
became so smelly that Billy Williams made us throw it away and,
determined, we were forced to start again.
We had decided to make Hitler fall in love with us, which, when I think
about it now, was rather like the Mitfords. But, then, we were going to kill
him – which, I suppose, was rather unlike the Mitfords. Of course, we had
no real understanding of the situation and even less control over our own
lives. That was why we devised our plan. We had heard he liked the Aryan
look and we were both fair-haired, especially Carey, who was the blondest
little thing with huge blue eyes. We thought we must take advantage of this
in order to save Britain.
We used to practise by pretending our teddy bear was Hitler, sidling up
to him and saying things like, ‘How lovely to see you. We’re so pleased
you’ve come to Holkham,’ and ‘Do you enjoy staying here? We’ve got a
lovely drink for you, Mr Hitler – we’ve been saving it especially for you.’
We didn’t quite think through what would happen if we did actually manage
to kill Hitler, but then I suppose we didn’t get that far. We were absolutely
convinced, however, that we could and would do it.
In 1943, when I was ten and Carey was eight, our parents returned from
Egypt and we returned to Norfolk. It was an underwhelming reunion – our
parents were like strangers to us and, instead of a warm embrace after so
many years, Carey and I clung to Billy Williams, hiding behind her, out of
sight. It was only a day or so before our mother won back our affection, but
it took longer to build a rapport with our father, who wasn’t as open and
friendly and never hugged us like our mother.
By then my great-grandfather had died and my grandfather had become
4th Earl of Leicester. For a little while we lived in the Red House in the
village at Holkham, with one ancient maid nicknamed Speedy because she
moved so slowly. Carey and I enjoyed living there, playing with the village
boys in the wood near the house – we called it ‘the donkey wood’.
Then we moved into the family wing at Holkham. It was the first time,
apart from holidays, I had ever lived in the big house and it felt very
exciting to know that it was now our official home.
My grandfather liked to interest me and, wanting to teach me about
Holkham’s treasures, put me in charge of airing the Codex Leicester,
Leonardo da Vinci’s seventy-two-page manuscript, a study on water and
stars. Once a fortnight, I would retrieve it from the butler’s pantry, where it
was kept in a safe along with the Coke jewels and a Bible picture book.
I used to lick my finger and spin through the pages, frowning down at
Da Vinci’s mirror handwriting, studying the little drawings and diagrams
with interest. Bought on the 1st Earl’s grand tour, it belonged to my family
for at least two hundred and fifty years before, very sadly, my father had to
sell it, needing money for the upkeep of the estate. Acquired at Christie’s by
an American businessman, Armand Hammer, in the eighties, it was then
sold on to Bill Gates in 1994 for $30.8 million, a record sum, making it the
most valuable book in the world – and covered with my DNA.
Life soon settled down at Holkham. My father continued his duties with
the Scots Guards and my mother became head of North Norfolk’s Land
Girls. Carey and I spent a lot of time playing in the house, making dens in
the attic out of a collection of Old Masters deemed too louche for the walls
of the state rooms, oblivious to the value and the subject.
But the estate wasn’t the same as it had been before the war. There was
a prisoner-of-war camp in the park, first for Italians, then Germans, and the
gamekeepers helped guard them. Carey and I were very curious and whirled
around the outside of the camp on our ponies, spying on the prisoners. The
Italians were charming, always waving and smiling, and became friends
with my mother who, after the war, employed some of their sisters to work
at Holkham: a lot of them decided to settle in England.
The Germans weren’t so friendly, and Carey and I were terrified of
them. They wore patches on their legs and arms – shooting targets should
they escape – which the gamekeepers longed for them to do so they could
put in their game book: ‘14 pheasants, 6 partridge, 1 German’. As far as I
know, the prisoners never tried to escape – the Germans were far more
frightened of the keepers than they were of the official guards.
Holkham beach wasn’t the same either. We couldn’t picnic on the dunes
because they were being used as a military practice ground, and the beach
was covered with London buses and taxis on which the Royal Air Force
practised airstrikes. At the end of the war, the buses and taxis were just left
there. There is a big sand dune now where they were, and I expect most
people have no idea they are still under it, rusting away in their sandy tomb.
The military also practised drills all the way along the woodland near
the sand dunes and on the marsh. There was a pond at the edge of the marsh
where a wall was built for training the soldiers who, throwing smoke bombs
in front of them, had then to jump blindly over the wall and into the pond.
Carey and I would take great delight in watching and, getting carried away,
we would shout, ‘Go on, jump, you cowardy cowardy custards! It’s not at
all deep. It’s only a bit of water.’ Within moments, a furious sergeant major
would rush up, red in the face, yelling, ‘What are you doing, girls? Will you
get away? You’re ruining my training!’ at which point, we’d grab our bikes
and scamper off, giggling.
My childhood was a curious mix of carefree adventure in beautiful
surroundings and a pressing fear of the war. By the time I was eleven, long
days of playing with Carey were swapped for boarding school. In the
autumn of 1943, holding a single leather trunk with my name on it, off I
went by train to Downham – a small school in Essex for girls. Because of
the war, most of the teachers had been called up or moved into jobs to help
with the war effort. Left with the halt and the lame, I was hardly likely to
learn anything at all.
The school was in a big old house where we all had to sleep in the
cellars for the first few terms because of the doodlebugs, which,
overshooting London, would land very close to where we were:, the plaster
would fall from the ceiling into our bunks. It was terribly frightening, and
after a strike, I would check to see if I was in one piece. None of our parents
seemed very concerned.
I felt rather alone and unsure. I had been away from my parents for
three years and suddenly I was without them once more, and also without
my governess, Billy Williams, and Carey, both of whom I adored.
Gradually I did settle in, though, making friends, who included a girl called
Caroline Blackwood, later the writer, and wife of Lucian Freud, who used
to walk with me to lessons and lived in a perpetual daydream. The older I
got, naturally, the easier the five years of boarding school became, and after
two years, Carey joined me, which was a comfort.
The headmistress, Mrs Crawford, had a gung-ho attitude and, despite
having a husband, lived with another teacher, Miss Graham. Having played
cricket for Scotland, Mrs Crawford tried to teach us girls to play. I hated it –
I was always fielding a long way out, praying the ball didn’t come near and
dreading the shout, ‘Quick! Catch, Anne!’ whereupon I would inevitably
drop it. The ball was so hard it hurt if it hit you. I did, however, enjoy
lacrosse. A most aggressive game, it seemed to be made up of us all rushing
about bashing people’s teeth out with our sticks.
Our games mistress was called Ma P., though I thought she was really
half-man. She was always blowing her whistle, whether to her dog or to us
we never quite knew. She was the one who would get us into the swimming
pool. It was always freezing cold but from 1 June, like it or not, we would
‘jolly well get in’. I quite liked swimming and got some medals, including
one for life-saving, which involved Carey volunteering to be the body,
wearing clothes and being dragged halfway along the pool underwater. I
passed and she survived.
Just before the end of the war, when I was twelve, my sister Sarah was
born. Carey and I had known our mother was pregnant but when my
father’s sister Aunt Silvia rang us at school to tell us the news, we burst into
tears. We knew how desperately my father had wanted a son and heir, and
with my mother almost dying in childbirth, there was no chance of them
having any more children, marking the end of my father’s particular line of
Cokes.
Despite the huge disappointment for the family, we all adored Sarah,
whom we doted on, treating her like a doll. It was great fun to have another
sister although Carey’s and my childhood was separate from Sarah’s
because she was so much younger than us. Once the school term had
finished, we would rush home to see her, our mother proudly showing off
the rabbit-skin coat she had made for Sarah. She obviously hadn’t cured it
properly because the coat was completely stiff, so Sarah would sit in her
pram, her arms stuck straight out, rather as if she was in a straitjacket.
When we were home, my mother took charge, organising every day
with something active and fun that she would do with us all, an attitude that
was rare. My school friends would remark on how amazing they thought
she was, saying things like ‘I wish I could have a mother like yours. My
mother never plays with me.’ But after the holidays, Carey and I would
return to school on the train, waving goodbye to our mother, knowing it
would be months before we saw her again.
In those days parents only came down to the school once a year, in the
summer. There would be things like a ‘fathers’ cricket match’ and a
‘mothers’ tennis match’. At one of these parents’ open days, after the
assembly, the headmistress summoned all the girls to her study. Looking
extremely cross, she said, ‘Something very serious happened during
assembly, and unless the girl owns up, you will all be punished. A parent,
Sir Thomas Cook …’ the founder of the package holiday, incidentally ‘…
was squirted in the back of the neck with a water pistol.’
There was silence as everybody looked at each other, wondering what
would happen next. But then Caroline Blackwood put her hand up rather
slowly and said, ‘Well, actually, it was my mother who did it.’
Her mother, Maureen, Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, had been
wearing a hat with a sculpture of a duck in a pond with water in it. Every
time she put her head down, the duck dipped its beak into the pond and, as
she moved her head, the water sprayed the unfortunate Sir Thomas. Her hat
was not the only extraordinary thing she wore: her shoes had see-through
plastic heels with fish in them. They weren’t real, thank goodness, but no
wonder Caroline was so eccentric.
I was at school for two years before, in 1945, when I was thirteen, the
war finally came to an end. I felt the most enormous sense of relief,
although the atmosphere stayed tense. The nation had lost another
generation of men and, with the economy taking a huge hit, there wasn’t a
feeling of jubilation, only an awareness that life would continue being hard.
Most of the staff from Holkham didn’t return after the war and suddenly
my parents were left wondering how they would pay for the upkeep of the
estate. My father was a very capable man, but the war had changed him. He
had fought in the Battle of El Alamein and managed to survive malaria as
well as escaping death back in London: on the morning of 18 June 1944, a
migraine stopped him going to the Sunday service held at the Guards’
Chapel he often attended with his friends from the Scots Guards.
During the service the chapel took a direct hit, killing 121 people,
including a lot of his friends. It was the most serious V1 attack on London
during the war and it added to my father’s burden of loss. His brother David
had fought in the Battle of Britain and survived, only to die of thirst in
North Africa when his plane was shot down in the desert.
After the war, my father was even more anxious and easily stressed. At
the end of his life, he was plagued by traumatic visions of his time in Egypt.
Although the fighting had ended, my father was posted to Vienna to
work with the Allied forces, and in the school holidays Carey and I were
put on a train, organised by the Women’s Institute, with labels round our
necks, and sent to Vienna. We had to pass through the Russian zone and
were told not to look the Soviet soldiers in the eye when they inspected the
carriages. I was utterly petrified of those men, holding my breath as I stared
at the hems of their moth-eaten greatcoats and their black boots, shuddering
as they loomed over us, speaking in Russian.
We stayed in the British quarter in a house that had been requisitioned
by Allied forces. By a strange coincidence the house belonged to Austrian
friends of my parents, so my father had managed to allow them to stay in
their own house, even though they had to move down to the basement.
Rationing was strict and parts of Vienna were lawless. The Soviet
soldiers patrolled the streets, hurtling down the wide avenues in horse-
drawn carriages, piled high with belongings they had looted. The only good
thing about being there was that my mother managed to charm some
American officers into allowing her to buy dairy products and sugar –
something that English people had hardly seen for years – from their PX
stores in the American quarter.
Despite the unrest, Sarah’s nanny would walk me and my sisters, with
my father’s army batman, to Hotel Sacher, which was famous for its cakes,
especially its ‘Sacher Torte’, a chocolate cake with apricot filling. We had
our fresh ingredients hidden in Sarah’s pram, and when we got to the hotel,
I would hand the butter and eggs to the pastry chef, who would bake
pastries for us that we then collected, hiding them in the pram until we got
back to the house. To taste fresh, sweet pastries, especially as a child during
a time when that sort of food was extremely rare and coveted, was
wonderful. For those moments all the frightening Soviet soldiers were
forgotten and what remained was simply the delicious taste – a huge and
precious treat.
Once we were back in England, I returned to school for a few more
years, which were particularly tough because the winter of 1946–7 was so
cold: temperatures in England dropped to as low as -21 degrees Celsius.
With no heating in the school or at Holkham, we all got the most terrible
chilblains that would swell and pop, the pain stopping us sleeping.
In 1948, when I was sixteen, I finished school. It wasn’t even a
consideration that I should go on to university. Neither did I go abroad
because there was no money for that – so, like all of my friends, I was sent
to the first of my two British finishing schools, Powderham Castle. It was
owned by the Earl and Countess of Devon, who had set up a scheme
whereby twenty-five girls per year were taught how to run a big house –
their big house – under the guise of what was called ‘domestic economy’.
We were put on fortnightly rotations, shadowing different members of
the household, and soon came to know which were bearable and which
were not. We loved our time with the butler because he would let us drink
the dregs of the wine that we had served guests, who were often our
parents’ friends. They would peer up at us, amazed to see the daughters of
friends pouring them more wine. The more we poured the more they drank,
and the more they drank the more we got to finish off. The butler taught us
how to clean silver, which was really hard work – all by thumb, rubbing and
rubbing with pink vinegar paste. Our thumbs got terribly sore, but the silver
looked wonderful afterwards.
I didn’t mind shadowing the cook as a scullery maid – occasionally we
were allowed to make drop scones or chocolate cake – or the stint with the
gardener, as I enjoyed the flower arranging. But I didn’t like being with the
housekeeper because she was an absolute stickler for making beds with
hospital corners. I went with my friend Mary Birkbeck, who didn’t really
like people, much preferring dogs and horses. We weren’t very interested in
being taught social graces. Nor were we focused on finding out how to
acquire husbands, and we certainly weren’t dying to learn how to run a big
house. In fact, we soon made a pact: I did her sewing and work in the
house, and she would do my gardening (not the flower arranging) and muck
out the horse I had to look after. Any spare time we had was spent on the
platform of Dawlish station, smoking. It was the only place we could buy
cigarettes – keeping one eye out in case Lord and Lady Devon arrived
unexpectedly on the London train.
After months of rotations, we completed the course, and in 1949, I
returned to Holkham. My grandfather died that year and I was left feeling
very sad that we would no longer sit together listening to the gramophone in
the long gallery. His death meant that my father succeeded to his title,
becoming the 5th Earl of Leicester.
I was seventeen and Carey was fifteen, and we spent that summer
cycling to the cinema in Wells-next-the-Sea twice a week with our mother.
My father took me around the tenant farms, treating me like a son, wanting
to teach me about the estate. I was really glad and took an interest in getting
to know more about the inner workings of Holkham.
In the evenings Carey and I would go off to the local American
aerodromes where the big bands would perform, in the skirts we had made
from felt, which was just about the only material that wasn’t rationed. The
American airmen taught us how to jive and we had enormous fun, dancing
all night. The only problem was that our father insisted on locking the doors
at half past eleven every night, which meant we always got back once the
doors had already been locked.
There was always a bit of a palaver getting inside the Park as the gate
was locked – we had to break into our own house, which seemed rather
odd, but my father never compromised. We came up with a plan: we’d park
the car in the village, go through the gate, walk across the park with a torch,
which would light up all the eyes of the deer, and get to the house. Once
there, I would take up the coal grating and hand Carey the mackintosh we
kept with us for this very exercise. Carey would put on the coat and I would
lower her down the coal chute to the bottom. Then she would go off to fetch
an old man called Chris, who was known as ‘The Mole’, because he spent
his life in the cellars, stoking the boilers and cutting up the wood – the
house relied on heat from fires in every room, not central heating, which
was too expensive. The Mole was extremely obliging and would come up
with a key and let us in.
That same summer, the Duke of Edinburgh, who had married Princess
Elizabeth in 1947 and often came to Holkham to shoot with my father, rang
up my mother one day with an unusual request. He explained he was
inventing a new game, inspired by Battleship, and that, as part of the game,
he needed photographs of Carey and me dressed up as maids. My mother
thought nothing of it and my father, who was totally in love with the Royal
Family, would have said yes to anything.
Carey and I were both rather nervous of the very handsome Duke, who
was older than us, very confident and rather intimidating. But he came
around and was absolutely charming. I dressed up as a maid with a feather
duster and Carey donned an apron, taking the role of cook. We made all
sorts of funny poses as our mother looked on and the Duke took photos
with great enthusiasm. I’m not sure what happened to the finished game: he
never mentioned it again.
At the end of the summer, I went to London for a few months to my
second finishing school, where I learnt more than I had in my whole time at
Downham. It was called the House of Citizenship, run by Dorothy Neville-
Rolfe, who happened to be a descendant of Pocahontas. The House of
Citizenship was well known and it was Dorothy Neville-Rolfe who coined
the phrase, ‘The real art of conversation is not only to say the right thing at
the right place, but to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the most tempting
moment.’
The whole point of this sort of finishing school was to perfect our
conversation skills and to allow young ladies to practise the public roles we
were one day expected to perform as wives to eligible men. We were taken
to law courts, factories, hospitals, schools – everything to do with how the
country was run. We also did history of art to boost our knowledge so we
could engage in polite conversation. We would all sit in a room and Miss
Neville-Rolfe would pick on one of us. ‘Anne,’ she would say, ‘five
minutes on one of Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s bridges!’ and I would have
to stand up and speak for five minutes off the top of my head, never
knowing what the topic would be beforehand. Having the confidence to be
the figurehead of a community, make little speeches and present awards was
a skill that girls like me needed, coming in useful a few years later when my
mother’s time was split between Holkham and London, and I stood in for
her.
When I returned to Holkham from the House of Citizenship, I was
nearing adulthood. My father’s life as earl was in full swing and he was in
the middle of the ‘Tail Enders’ – shooting parties that marked the end of the
season, beautifully organised by my mother, but never attended by her as
they were male only, all my father’s surviving friends from the Scots
Guards descending on the state rooms of Holkham.
We girls were left to entertain ourselves – not that we minded because
we would take our trays into the drawing room and watch television. It was
still a novelty: small, like a postage stamp, black-and-white and only one
channel, the BBC, with just a single show each night.
None of us ever questioned the distinct roles of men and women. We
just accepted them. I simply understood what was expected of me. I had
been prepared for all the things I needed to be able to do in my life as a
lady. I didn’t compare my role to that of a man, or dwell on it in any detail.
I followed my mother’s example, and I suppose I thought I would marry
someone like my father and have a life like my mother’s. How wrong I was.
CHAPTER THREE
BY THE TIME I was on the cusp of adulthood in 1950, I had hardly seen
Princess Margaret for years, our childhood friendship interrupted by the
war. Gone were the days of jumping out at the nursery footmen together,
and her admiration of my silver shoes. So much had happened since then. A
whole life in merely a decade, it seemed. Inevitably we had grown apart: a
three-year age difference in those days was big enough to put us on
different trajectories.
Our fathers remained close friends, and as the King’s Extra Equerry, my
father assisted His Majesty in his public duties, as well as looking after
foreign nobility and dignitaries when they came to England. In their spare
time, they would often be together at Holkham or Sandringham, and when
my father was needed in London, he would stay at the Guards Club, which
he loved because he was surrounded by his friends from the Scots Guards.
When my father wasn’t with the King, he would be found in the estate
office at Holkham or with the gamekeepers and tenant farmers on the estate.
Meanwhile, my mother had set up a pottery at Holkham, having been
inspired by one of the German prisoners who had made his own kiln in the
camp in the park. She was determined it would be a success and understood
the need to raise money because, like all of the stately homes in England
after the war, Holkham was becoming more and more expensive to run.
People were impressed: it was unconventional for a lady to set up a
business, let alone of her own accord. As well as being extremely capable
and practical, she was rather liberal, in the sense that her headstrong
characteristics meant she not only allowed Carey and me to be a part of it,
she actively encouraged us, wanting to give us something to do. My father
was cynical about the whole enterprise: ‘And how are you doing in the
potting shed?’ he would ask her, infuriatingly condescending.
Carey and I did our best to throw pots but neither of us had the knack.
So, Carey started to paint and design instead, with my mother, whose
artistic talent, honed at the Slade School of Art, finally found its moment.
Between them they designed a marvellous hand-painted dinner and tea set
in a beautiful celadon green with snowdrops, and also a very smart blue and
white chevron set. We developed a whole range, from mugs to butter
dishes, and made quite a few things especially for Sandringham.
I tried to paint, too, but it turned out I wasn’t at all artistic. My mother,
determined to sustain my interest in the business, asked me what part I
would like to play. ‘Can I sell?’ I asked, instinctively knowing I was much
better suited to that side of things. She agreed and, almost straight away, off
I set in my mother’s Mini Minor, with suitcases in the back containing all
the samples wrapped up in newspaper, making my way around England.
If friends lived near to where I was going I would stay with them, but
often there was no option but to stay in travelling-salesmen hotels. These
were quite a shock. They always smelt of cabbage, and each morning I
would stand outside the bathroom clutching my sponge-bag in a line of
travelling salesmen. They never invited me to go first – I was made to jolly
well wait my turn and they all took ages shaving.
Not only was I the only aristocrat on the road, I was the only woman on
the road. All the men looked and acted the same wherever I went: wearing
ill-fitting suits, they would congregate in the only heated room of the hotel,
known as ‘The Lounge’. Inevitably, this room was dimly lit with a single
60-watt bulb and perpetually filled with cigarette smoke. In the evenings I
would sit, awkwardly reading a book. In the salesmen would come and start
asking me questions, and the more I answered, the more shocked they’d
become. Once they found out I was the daughter of an earl, their chins
would drop to the floor. I got used to the expression of confused
amazement. At nine o’clock a trolley would be wheeled in and sometimes a
mini-bar would appear, and the men rather sheepishly would ask, ‘Will you
be Mother?’
Despite being the odd one out, or perhaps because of the freedom that
my stays in those hotels entailed, I really enjoyed it – the independence, the
responsibility, the satisfaction of making a deal and, most of all, the feeling
of being taken seriously for the first time in my life. The experience taught
me the importance of staying down to earth and adapting to any situation.
My mother had learnt this trick particularly well – she was as good with
tradesmen as she was with the Queen.
My mother would also take Carey and me off to trade fairs in
Blackpool, where big companies, like Wedgwood, would set up their goods
in prime locations in the foyer of the hotel. We couldn’t afford a decent
stand and had no choice but to set up in the attic or somewhere equally
obscure. Determined to overcome the disadvantage, my mother would
encourage Carey and me to bring the buyers up to her. She would say, ‘Use
your feminine wiles.’ Carey was a whizzo at this, and off we’d go, down to
the foyer, reappearing with the buyers while the Wedgwood sales force
looked on, furious, as we disappeared up the stairs.
Holkham Pottery went from strength to strength, eventually employing
a hundred people and becoming the largest light industry in North Norfolk.
But in the spring of 1950, my debutante season was upon me, leaving me
with little time for the pottery. I would turn eighteen in July, which meant I
was old enough to be introduced to society – I had officially reached the age
where I was deemed ready to marry. The pressure was unspoken but evident
– my entire life had apparently been gearing up to this moment.
My father wanted me to marry one of his best friends, Lord Stair, who
was the same age as him. Lord Stair had represented Great Britain in the
four-man bobsleigh team at the 1928 Winter Olympics – four years before I
was even born. My father loved him because he was such a great shot, but I
wasn’t interested. I was a teenager; he was in his forties. ‘But, Daddy,’ I
said, ‘there is absolutely no spark between us at all. He’s very nice but no.’
‘Well, if you don’t like him,’ responded my father, ‘then what about his
younger brother, Colin Dalrymple?’
I reluctantly agreed to go out with Colin. My father got us tickets to
Henley Royal Regatta, and we spent the day together – but, as with his
brother, there was nothing between us. The date was a complete non-event.
My father was disappointed and lived in hope that I would change my
mind.
Declining all of my father’s suggestions, I was thrust into months of
socialising. For girls of my background, the point of being a debutante was
to be introduced to a generation of eligible men, with the intention of
marrying one as soon as possible. Girls didn’t have the freedom to shack up
with a single boyfriend to test them out, and if we did, we only got as far as
the heavy-petting stage. I wouldn’t have dared risk getting pregnant, and
with no contraceptive pill then, it was safer for girls to keep their distance.
The Season, as it was known, was a deliberate solution to the problem
of finding the ‘right’ man: a series of dances and weekend parties held
throughout the year to introduce aristocratic young men and women to one
another. During the spring and summer, the dances were in England, and
when winter came, everybody would go off to Scotland for the Highland
balls.
Each girl would have her own ‘coming-out’ dance or cocktail party
either at home or in a London hotel. In London, two or three dances would
be held on the same night so when I was there, I would either pick one,
especially if it was a friend’s, or I would go to a couple.
The problem with being ‘out’ in society in the early 1950s was that
there weren’t any likely husbands around as there weren’t many men. My
generation had either died in the war or were still away doing National
Service. If you weren’t married by twenty-one, you were on the shelf. My
mother was nineteen when she married my father, so even though I was
only eighteen, I felt very conscious that time was running out. Being in the
country wasn’t helping anything so I was sent to Knightsbridge, London,
where I stayed with my maternal grandmother, Ga. I adored Ga. Born Ellen
Russell, she came from New Zealand and, like Great-Aunt Bridget, was a
commanding Christian Scientist. She and her sisters were all very good-
looking and had come to England in search of eligible husbands. Soon she
was married to Charlie, 8th Earl of Hardwicke. As Viscount Royston he
was interested in sport and in particular in ballooning. He was an explorer
in Western Australia and then worked for two years as an ordinary miner in
the United States. My grandmother was responsible alongside Sir Thomas
MacKenzie, the High Commissioner for New Zealand, for a new hospital to
treat New Zealand soldiers wounded in the First World War. The New
Zealand General Hospital opened in Walton-on-Thames in 1915 and she
received a CBE for all her work in helping the many injured soldiers who
arrived there. Sadly their marriage did not last long and my grandmother
filed for a divorce.
Ga found me a job in a pottery shop in Sloane Street, owned by a
Christian Science man she knew. I dreaded going in, spending most of my
time avoiding the shop owner because he would brush past me, making
unnecessary contact. When I mentioned this to my mother, she snapped,
‘Anne, for heaven’s sake, can’t you stand up for yourself? Just slap his hand
hard!’
In the evenings, I would go off to the dances. Having got used to greasy
breakfasts on the road, I had become rather plump and my mother put
pressure on me to slim down because the dances were all about first
impressions. It was a game of luck, and wallflowers were completely
invisible.
All over London different hotel ballrooms would be filled with girls in
evening dresses, spinning around the wide breadth of the polished parquet
dance-floors. Before the war the dresses would have been made from silks
and satins, but with post-war rationing, many were made from curtains and
other unlikely fabrics. At my coming-out dance I wore a dyed pale green
and pleated parachute, which my mother had managed to get from the
American officers who were based at the aerodrome near to Holkham.
At first glance, those dances looked like the stuff of dreams, a moving
image of one of Cecil Beaton’s fairytale creations. But on closer inspection
the scene was full of nervous anticipation, thick with the anxiety that sprang
from the girls and boys, who had lived separate lives away at boarding
schools, only to be flung, quite literally, together.
The Season was one huge rush of hormones and expect-ations binding
the aristocracy together. While the aesthetics made it look innocent and
romantic, the façade simply disguised the impending necessity to secure an
heir for every titled family in England.
The whole idea was that each dance of the evening would be reserved
for an array of different suitors, so that by the end of the night and, by
extension, of the Season, one man would have danced you off your feet and
into married life. A game of probability, the dilemma came when you didn’t
have a dance partner. During those dances, any spare girls would
congregate in the cloakroom under the guise of powdering their noses,
striking up long conversations with each other and the cloakroom
attendants, half forgetting about the main event. We came to know the
cloakroom attendants very well.
I was still shy and, having no brothers and an old-fashioned father, I
found it hard to navigate the fine line that every girl had to tread in their
relations with the opposite sex. On the one hand you had to attract men; on
the other you couldn’t attract them too much. Too little flirtation would
mean they gave up on you for a more exciting girl, and too much would
land you a bad reputation. Promiscuity didn’t do girls any favours and that
was why there were chaperones. A hem of golden chairs circled the dance-
floor. On those chairs would sit a mother, an aunt, an older sister or
anybody who was deemed responsible enough to prevent any possibility of
scandal. They acted as a stern reminder, a deterrent for young men’s (and
sometimes young women’s) frowned-upon ideas. There was even an
acronym, NSIT – not safe in taxis – used of certain young men to remind
the girls not to allow their dates to get too carried away.
In the spring of 1950, like all the debutantes, I was presented at court to
the King and Queen. My mother had been presented wearing a flowing
white evening dress, but times had changed. Tradition was modernised: my
presentation at court was held in the afternoon, and we wore short dresses.
Just before my eighteenth birthday, in June 1950, I had my coming-out
dance at Holkham. The first of these had been held in June 1740, for
Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester in its second creation, where 130 guests
sat in the orangery, lit by thousands of candles hung in lamps. More than
two hundred years later, Holkham was lit again, this time by searchlights
left over from the war. The whole of the long avenue was covered with
criss-cross coloured lights, and the house was floodlit. Even the obelisk and
the woods were lit up. It was like a Walt Disney production and the music
spilt out of the ballroom into the park.
Tatler had just declared me ‘debutante of the year’, which I was
delighted by, although the status added to the pressure I felt. The season had
only begun in May, so having my dance in June meant I hardly knew
anyone.
As I was about to change into the parachute dress that my mother was
so thrilled by, my father said, ‘Well, I hope you don’t look like a parachute,’
which didn’t help settle my nerves. He always said slightly the wrong thing
and never exactly filled me with confidence. A few years later on my
wedding day, all he could muster was ‘I suppose you’ll do.’
The guests, who had filled many of the houses in North Norfolk, had
dinner parties together before arriving to dance the night away. The dances
started at ten or eleven o’clock and went on all night. Although Princess
Elizabeth didn’t come because she was in Malta, Princess Margaret and the
King and Queen arrived at about eleven, my father meeting them at the
South Gate and escorting them down the long avenue.
As I came down the marble stairs I stopped to take in the scene: there
would have been nothing more romantic than to meet a young man that
night, at my own dance. But the odds were low. My father had allowed me
to invite only cousins and girlfriends from school because he was very
careful about the men. He was in receipt of a list, given by friends, full of
the ‘right sort of people’ for me, so my dance was full of strangers, cousins
and my father’s friends.
My dance was held in the state rooms, which came alive to the sound of
Tommy Kinsman, the most popular band for these parties, known as the
‘Debs’ Delight’. Tommy Kinsman had played at several of the dances I had
been to and would happily play requests, so my school friends and I had
made lists of all our favourite songs ready to give him. Queen Elizabeth
was a big fan of the band and was equally thrilled they were there, smiling
and sparkling throughout the night.
A buffet supper was served between dinner and breakfast, with eggs,
venison and vegetables from the estate, and champagne from the cellars. In
the days beforehand, I had spent a lot of time visiting the kitchen, watching
as the delicious food was being prepared. With rationing still in place, the
supper felt luxurious and, all in all, the evening was an amazing spectacle of
frivolity and fun.
Magical as it all looked, I found it quite terrifying and I ended up
spending a lot of time lingering at the edge of the ballroom and going off
into the park, handing out champagne to the people in charge of the lights. I
felt shy either not knowing or trying to avoid most of the men there. Instead
I watched Princess Margaret dance with Mark Bonham Carter – Helena
Bonham Carter’s uncle – Billy Wallace, a family friend, whom she later
considered marrying, and my cousin David Ogilvy, having a lovely time as
she swirled around in her light blue dress.
One thing the evening achieved that made me happy was to reunite me
with Princess Margaret. As the sun rose, I stood next to her, chatting, on the
front portico at Holkham, watching the geese fly overhead in the dawn. I
realised then that, even though we were now both grown-up, when you
have been childhood friends with somebody, you can pick up where you left
off. A lot had happened to her. A lot had happened to me. And here we
were now, both on the threshold of our adult lives.
While the evening unravelled into the most beautiful night I will ever
remember, something terrible happened that I didn’t find out about for
years. Once people started to rise, having gone to sleep at dawn, David
Ogilvy passed the fountain, which had been playing all night, and noticed a
coat in the water. He couldn’t reach it, so he went back to the house and got
some help. To their horror they discovered it was a person, a young
gardener, who had somehow drowned, while hundreds of people were
dancing and laughing, drinking champagne, only feet away from him. The
tragedy was kept from me. My father was absolutely devastated, as were
the other gardeners, but none of them wanted to upset me, so that summer
and for years afterwards, I had no idea and continued to remember my
beautiful dance fondly. Now this much darker memory is associated with it.
Although I met no dashing young men at my own dance, the Season led
to a few boyfriends. First, there was Nigel Leigh-Pemberton, who was
extremely nice – probably a bit too nice. He was a singer and eventually
went abroad and sang under the name Nigel Douglas. He was very kind but
keener on me than I was on him. And whatever he planned, something
always went wrong.
Once he invited me to the opera. When I said yes, he made a point of
warning me that I had to be ready at a set time. Unfortunately I was late.
Dashing back to Ga’s house to get ready, as I rounded the corner I saw, to
my horror, a huge hansom cab with a pawing horse. I thought, Oh,
goodness, this is Nigel’s treat!
Nigel, of course, was very upset because we were too late to travel to
Covent Garden in it. We went to the opera in a taxi and the hansom cab
collected us afterwards instead. Sitting in it was frightfully embarrassing
because everybody stared as we clip-clopped down St James’s Street – and
suddenly there was the most awful noise, drawing even more attention to
us. One of the wheels had got entangled with a taxi bumper and we were
completely stuck. All the drivers started honking their car horns as the
traffic came to a grinding halt. I was mortified and felt so sad for Nigel
because it was meant to be such a lovely surprise.
Another time, he asked me to help him because he was singing in a
nightclub. In the middle of the floor there was a golden cage. ‘You’re to sit
in the cage, on the perch, and swing while I sing “A Bird In A Gilded
Cage”,’ Nigel told me, ‘and it will be wonderful.’ I sat there and it wasn’t at
all wonderful and very uncomfortable.
Nigel and I drifted apart.
Then there was Roger Manners, a more successful match. Handsome
and intelligent, he was a little too highly strung for me. Ironic, considering
my future husband would turn out to be the most highly strung individual
anybody could ever possibly hope to meet.
And then there was Johnnie Althorp. He had recently returned from
Australia, having been ADC to the governor of South Australia. The
moment he arrived at Holkham, at my father’s invitation, I fell madly in
love with him. I thought he was wonderful: funny, handsome and charming.
We went out together in London, and one night he took me into the garden
and asked me to marry him. A wave of euphoria swept over me and for
days after I really did feel as though I was walking on air. We told both sets
of parents but kept the news a secret from everybody else.
Everything went by in a daze. If I was dancing with some other
(probably perfectly nice) young man, I was wholly uninterested. I had eyes
only for Johnnie. By this time, I had left Ga’s house in London and become
a paying-guest to Lady Fermoy, a friend of Queen Elizabeth, whose family
also lived in Norfolk and had a house on the Sandringham estate.
Lady Fermoy was extremely sociable. ‘If you have a young man taking
you out,’ she would say, ‘do bring him to the drawing room to have a drink
first.’
So I did. And that was my mistake. When I introduced her to Johnnie,
her eyes lit up, and the next time I brought him round, not only was she
there but so was her daughter, whom she had deliberately called back from
school. Her daughter, Frances, was only fifteen at the time, but after she met
Johnnie, she sent him a letter with a pair of shooting stockings she had
knitted.
Shortly after that he and I were due to meet at Ascot. He was Equerry to
the King and I had been invited to stay at Windsor Castle to go to Ascot
with the Royal Family. I was, as ever, looking forward to seeing Johnnie
and expected the weekend would be marvellous fun.
I had borrowed my mother’s lady’s maid, and when we arrived at
Windsor Castle we climbed up and up to a room in the tower. Out of the
window the view was of the Long Walk, with the copper horse in the
distance. As we unpacked, we laid out my four dresses for each day at the
races. They were beautiful. I should have been excited, but as I hadn’t heard
from Johnnie, and there was no message from him, I couldn’t settle. All
through that first night, I lay awake, listening to the soldiers stomping
around under my window, going in and out of the pillboxes, presenting
arms.
The next morning, as I had breakfast in bed – the tradition for all of the
ladies in royal households – I wondered if Johnnie had arrived and not been
able to get a message to me. During the tour of the gardens before
lunchtime I was thinking up reasons as to why he hadn’t made contact.
Even at lunch with Princess Margaret and the other guests, Johnnie was still
nowhere to be seen.
After lunch we drove to the top of the racecourse and got into carriages.
Riding in the carriages was wonderful. It was like being in a huge pram,
fastened in with a cover. The crowds cheered as they set eyes on the Royal
Family and the buzz of the excited crowd had a great impact on the rest of
us. We arrived at the Royal Box and it was then I was told that Johnnie
would not be joining us because apparently he was ill. I felt a pang of
heartache and my mood flattened. Something was wrong.
I spent the day managing to pretend to be as happy as everybody else
until we all went back to Windsor in cars for a rest, before going down for
drinks and dinner. Queen Elizabeth was such a sparkly person and she
really suited the crinoline evening dresses she always wore, and welcomed
us in her usual charming way. If only I’d been able to enjoy it. I talked to
the Duke and Duchess of Northumberland, Billy Wallace and my Uncle
Joe, all of whom were there that evening. When someone happened to
mention that they had recently seen Johnnie, who was apparently quite well,
I realised that he must be avoiding me. I felt awful. I had to stop myself
looking really glum. I did a lot of hard swallowing in a bid not to cry. It was
difficult trying to be polite and jolly and enjoy it. I couldn’t. I couldn’t
understand what I had done wrong and Johnnie never told me why he had
broken off our engagement.
Later, however, I found out that his father, Jack, Earl Spencer, had told
him not to marry me because I had Trefusis blood. Trefusis blood was
labelled ‘mad blood’ or ‘bad blood’ because the Bowes-Lyon girls
(Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret’s cousins), Nerissa and Katherine, had
been put in a state asylum and were hardly visited by anyone in the Royal
Family to whom they were related through Queen Elizabeth. Although the
family connection was extremely convoluted, my maternal grandmother
was Marion Trefusis and, however diluted, I suppose no earl or future earl
would want to risk their earldom by contaminating it with ‘mad blood’.
Not only did Johnnie then marry Frances, but their youngest daughter
was Lady Diana Spencer, who later became Diana, Princess of Wales.
Johnnie and Frances would famously divorce and, rather unusually,
Lady Fermoy testified against her daughter in favour of Johnnie having
custody of Diana. Johnnie went on to marry my friend Raine, Countess of
Dartmouth, who before their engagement often rang me up asking for
advice on how she could get him to commit. I wasn’t sure why she thought
I was a good person to ask, considering I had never succeeded myself.
Whether Johnnie and I would have been happy together I don’t know,
and will never know, but the whole thing really did affect me. I spent the
rest of the summer in a very gloomy mood. I tried to distract myself with
the pottery, and my father involved me in the running of the estate, taking
me around the tenant farms, but Johnnie and our broken engagement
lingered in the back of my mind.
As summer turned to autumn, my father’s friends descended once more
on Holkham for the shooting season. Christmas came and went, and all
through January my father and the King shot hare on both estates and were
busy planning the last weekends of the season, the Tail Enders, when on 6
February 1952, the King died quite suddenly in his sleep at Sandringham.
He had had an operation the year before, to remove part of a lung, which
was reported at the time to have been a success, so his death was a shock.
My father hadn’t realised how ill the King had been and was left devastated.
We all were. I was so used to seeing him going off shooting with my father,
and he was so young, at fifty-six, which made his death even sadder.
My mother wrote a letter of condolence as soon as she heard the news.
Princess Margaret replied, admitting how desperately sad they all were but
they took comfort in knowing he had spent the last days of his life doing
what he loved best. She ended the letter by describing the February dawn
on the day he died, and how she believed the King would have liked it.
Britain descended into mourning: people lined the railway tracks,
standing silent and solemn as they watched the funeral train carrying the
King’s coffin make its way from Sandringham to London. The mood in
Norfolk stayed sombre. A distinct silence gathered eerily inside the walls of
Holkham. The King had been such a part of Holkham and of Norfolk: there
was a feeling that the community had lost one of its own. Our gamekeepers
were especially sorrowful.
King George VI lay in state at Westminster Hall. Three hundred
thousand people queued to pay their respects to the Sovereign who had
picked up the mantle after the abdication of his brother and subsequently
led the country through a world war.
My mother, Carey and I entered the hall to pay our own respects
through a side door so we could see my father, who was one of the Scots
Guards standing guard on the coffin. I vividly remember that moment: he
stood there, head down in respect, holding his bearskin and sword.
On 15 February my parents went to the funeral. I watched it on
television and was particularly moved by the sound of Big Ben, which
tolled fifty-six times through the grey misty morning, once for each year of
the King’s life.
The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II was deliberately delayed.
Rationing was still in place and Winston Churchill feared that holding such
an expensive spectacle in the midst of a low, post-war economy would
threaten the popularity of the monarchy.
Life at Holkham slowly went back to normal but I carried on feeling
sorry for myself. Several months went past and my mother got so fed up
with me she decided to send me off to America to sell some of the pottery,
hoping a change of scene would cheer me up. The idea alone made me feel
happier and I was very excited, having been abroad only once – to the
South of France, which I’d loved. I was longing to go on more adventures.
Off I went over the Atlantic, in November 1952, on the Queen Mary
with my suitcase of samples. I was travelling steerage because my family
didn’t have a lot of money, especially after the war. My parents were not
extravagant people and both had a practical approach to travel, so I shared
the cabin with four other women. Once we had got onto the high seas, the
waves hurled themselves against the ship, so all the others were terribly
sick. I had a stronger stomach and, in the end, I went and slept outside in
the corridor, which happened to have a sofa.
Luckily my godfather, John Marriott, a friend of my father from the
Scots Guards, was travelling in first class and invited me to dine with him
each evening. He had married someone extremely rich called Momo Kahn,
and her Louis Vuitton luggage was stacked all along the corridor, which
became her vast wardrobe. Each evening I would leave the poor vomiting
girls and spend the evening with John and Momo, dining at the Veranda
Grill, which served copious amounts of caviar – in huge silver buckets. And
then back I would go, to third class, bunking in the corridor. It was a portent
for my whole life – one minute involved in something very glamorous, the
next doing something so far removed that I wondered whether I’d just
dreamt about the glamorous moments.
Arriving in New York, I was met by Momo’s sister, Mrs Ryan, who was
friends with my mother and whose daughter Ginny ended up marrying
David Airlie, my favourite Ogilvy cousin. Mrs Ryan was the only person I
knew in the whole of the United States, and she lived in a beautiful double
penthouse in New York’s Upper East Side, opposite the River Club, in the
same block as Greta Garbo, overlooking the Hudson River.
When I told Mrs Ryan I was taking my samples to Saks, the famous
department store, she politely refrained from saying anything. She wasn’t
surprised when I came back looking defeated: Saks didn’t let anyone in
without an appointment. Holkham and the pottery might have gained a
reputation in England, but suddenly I was a little fish in a big pond and was
being told by a stern receptionist that there were no appointments for six
months. Mrs Ryan, who was a frequent shopper at Saks, made a quick
phone call and straight away I had an appointment for the next day. To my
delight, they bought some of the pottery and off I went to more places,
helped by more phone calls from Mrs Ryan. The most popular items turned
out to be the Toby jugs of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh and the
piggy banks. There’s no accounting for taste.
Mrs Ryan introduced me to her whole circle and soon I was under the
wing of her friend Mrs Carlson. Before long I was being whirled up by
American society and taken on the Super Chief train where at Albuquerque,
Indians got on to sell their turquoise jewellery, and to Los Angeles, where I
was met by C. J. Latta, the head of Warner Brothers in London, another
Christian Scientist, who introduced me to film stars in Hollywood,
including Bob Hope, David Niven, Bette Davis and Danny Kaye. I went on
to New Orleans, to Mardi Gras where I danced with the city fathers,
enjoying myself. There was a real sense of discovery and adventure. I
ended up going all over the States on cheap and efficient Greyhound buses
– from Florida to Kentucky and back to New York. The experience made
me want to travel more and opened up my naïve outlook on life.
One morning in February 1953, after another late night of dancing, I
was sitting at the breakfast table, rather bleary-eyed, with Mrs Ryan and
some other guests when the maid came in and handed me a telegram. My
first thought was that something bad had happened at home but to my
astonishment the telegram read: ANNE YOU MUST COME HOME STOP
YOU’VE BEEN ASKED TO BE A MAID OF HONOUR AT THE
QUEEN’S CORONATION STOP.
Everybody was so excited, and the telegram was handed around the
table and read eagerly by all. I was delighted, although it soon became clear
I would have to deal with the daunting consequence of being the centre of
attention. The news travelled fast – Mrs Ryan was thrilled and showed me
off. The American press soon got wind of it, triggering another wave of
excitement. Suddenly I found everybody was treating me like royalty,
asking me to show them how to curtsy and wave like the Queen. At one of
the last few balls I went to, a makeshift throne was presented to me. It was
very embarrassing, as were the articles in the local newspapers,
accompanied by photographs of me looking like a deer in headlights – the
Washington Post wrote an article with the headline ‘Girl With Pedigree Can
Be Pretty Too.’
It was another irony: one minute I was crammed on to a Greyhound bus,
the next I was being summoned home for months of rehearsals in
preparation for taking part in Britain’s most significant ceremony for a
generation.
Although I was sad my trip was being cut short, I was absolutely
thrilled to be chosen. So many people in my family had been Equerries and
Ladies in Waiting throughout the centuries, and now I had been given a
role. I felt immeasurably lucky: there I was being selected, all because I just
happened to be just the right height and size, as well as being an unmarried
daughter of an earl, a duke or a marquess – the criteria for being chosen. It’s
funny how in the end I found the silver lining in not marrying Johnnie.
Poor Carey was desperately envious, as were many families we knew,
especially considering my mother and I would both be part of the
procession: my mother had been asked by the Queen to become a Lady of
the Bedchamber – a high-ranking Lady in Waiting.
One consequence of the news was that suddenly I was selling a huge
amount of pottery, especially the Toby jugs. Everyone went mad for them.
When my mother met me off the Queen Mary at Southampton, I was
greeted by a throng of journalists and photographers and there I was,
waving my order book, far more excited about my pottery sales than my
Maid of Honour status. Stepping off the ship into a frenzy of interviews, I
was thrust into the limelight.
CHAPTER FOUR
The Coronation
AFTER THE CORONATION, I was photographed for the covers of magazines and
even got a few very peculiar love letters from strangers asking for my hand
in marriage, but I remained single, not having found the right man.
With two sisters and no brothers, the opposite sex was inherently a
mystery to me. Men seemed old-fashioned, traditional and predictable.
They were creatures whose interests lay in country pursuits during the day
and military reunion dinners during the evening – to neither of which
women, needless to say, were invited. The season had whipped up dozens
of brief interactions for me: Nigel Leigh-Pemberton had taught me that
there was a sensitive side to men, but Johnnie Spencer had contradicted this
with brutal rejection. I was left wondering what would become of me and
whether my father would succeed in persuading me to marry one of his
ageing friends from the Scots Guards.
In the summer of 1955, when I was twenty-two, I met Colin Tennant for
the first time, at a deb party at the Ritz, held by Lord and Lady Northbourne
for their daughter, Sarah. I was waiting at the bar with a friend and they
must have known Colin, who was with his stepmother Elizabeth
Glenconner, whom he adored: she was always brilliant with him and so
kind to me. He obviously took a fancy to me because he rang me up and we
started to go out. I was relieved and excited. Not only was a man paying me
serious attention, but the man in question was like no one I had ever met.
Colin was tall and terribly handsome, and I found him very attractive.
The son of the 2nd Baron Glenconner, he had grown up between Glen, his
ancestral Scottish estate in the Borders, and London, living in Admiral
House, Hampstead, as a boy. He’d gone to Eton, where he rowed, then New
College, Oxford, where he became popular on account of the large
breakfast parties he gave in his rooms.
After Oxford, he was commissioned into the Irish Guards, then
transferred to the Scots Guards, before joining C. Tennant & Sons, the
family merchant bank. His family was very rich, which allowed Colin to be
very generous, and he found any excuse to hold a party. He often
entertained friends at the Gargoyle, his Uncle David’s private members’
club in Dean Street, Soho, right next to the Mandrake, another popular
haunt. Colin was very much part of ‘the Princess Margaret set’, composed
almost entirely of men, who spent hours and hours at clubs like the 400.
He also had another set of creative friends, including Lucian Freud and
Ian Fleming. As it happens, a few years before I met Colin he was staying
with Ian in London. After dinner one night, Colin and the other guests read
out some of the pages of the book Ian had just drafted, dismissing the story
with roars of laughter, having no idea of the iconic fame it would reach. It
was Fleming’s first James Bond novel, Casino Royale.
Although his background might have been similar to others, Colin’s
combination of intense charm, quick wit and intelligence made him unique.
He hardly drank and didn’t touch drugs: his energy was completely natural
and he was creative and fun in a way that other men I’d come across
weren’t.
People were drawn to him from the moment he set foot in a room,
including Princess Margaret. Their friendship was platonic, but Colin had
had several affairs before he met me, with, among others, Ivy Nicholson, a
model, who ended up falling for Andy Warhol; Pandora Clifford, Samantha
Cameron’s grandmother; and the 11th Duke of Argyll’s daughter, Jeanne
Campbell, who went on to have many famous lovers, including Presidents
Kennedy and Castro.
Colin’s charm rarely failed him, although there was one occasion, at the
400, where he dug himself into hole while talking to Princess Marina, the
widow of the Duke of Kent. Colin exclaimed that one way of finding out
whether a sapphire was real or paste was to drop it in water to see if it kept
its colour. To prove that genuine sapphires would keep their colour, he
invited Princess Marina to drop her colossal sapphire ring into the water
glass. She did but, to Colin’s horror, the sapphire’s colour drained. Colin
immediately said he must have got the theory the wrong way around. She
was not amused.
Suddenly this charismatic man was with me. All through the summer,
he took me out in his Thunderbird, which was impossible to get into
because it was so low. It was not a fun experience at all because of Colin’s
terribly fast, erratic driving. We went down to Bray, Berkshire, for long
lunches and spent a lot of time lying about in meadows. In London he took
me out to dinners, introducing me to his friends, before returning to his flat,
where a lot of heavy petting went on.
My idea of love and romance was based entirely on the black-and-white
Hollywood blockbusters, starring the likes of Grace Kelly and Cary Grant,
which my mother and Carey had watched at the cinema in Wells-next-the-
Sea. Reality was marred: romance didn’t come very naturally to Colin.
Although incredibly charming, he wasn’t very affectionate and was nothing
like Heathcliff, the character from Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights on
whom I based all my daydreams.
Colin also had a very unfortunate temper, which I did witness
occasionally in our early days together. In those moments he always said,
‘Oh, Anne, when we get married, I won’t need to lose my temper.’ Excited
that he might propose, and not wanting to dismiss his advances because of
what seemed the one bad point about him, I convinced myself he would
keep his promise. After all, there were so many brilliant things about him –
one of them being that he wasn’t like my father’s rather staid friends.
Colin’s good intentions didn’t stop him making known his complaints:
when we first went to dinner to meet his father, for some reason Colin
thought he hadn’t paid me enough attention. On the way home, he blew up
into a dramatic state, ranting about how his father had let him down and
hadn’t been nice to me. As far as I was concerned, his father had been
perfectly pleasant, but that didn’t seem to matter to him.
My mother had also seen Colin lose his cool. They had been in the
Bahamas at the same time and she had witnessed an incredible outburst
while they were both on a boat. She had also heard about some antics at
Balmoral the summer before, and the Royal Household disliking him,
labelling him unruly. She warned me about his temper but Colin kept
reassuring me with the same promise: that when we were married
everything would be all right.
At the end of the summer I took him to Holkham to introduce him to my
father, who gazed at him stiffly and with great suspicion. Not long
afterwards, for better or for worse, we got engaged. I went home to tell my
father, who was expecting the news and was very carefully ignoring it and,
therefore, me. We were at Holkham, where I pursued him around the house,
through the endless rooms, as he kept saying, ‘No, no, no, not now, Anne.’
Finally, I cornered him and blurted out the news. He didn’t really react,
offering me no congratulations. Not only was my father still fixated on the
idea of marrying me off to one of his friends but also he saw the Tennant
family as worlds below the Cokes. While our family had been established in
the fifteenth century, springing from fortunes in law and then land, the
Tennant family had made its – albeit vast – fortune through the invention of
bleach in the Industrial Revolution. Not only were they tradesmen, as far as
my father was concerned, they were also nouveaux riches.
This was not the first time a young Coke had brought their betrothed to
Holkham only to receive a negative reaction: when my grandfather, the
future 4th Earl of Leicester, fell in love with Marion Trefusis, my
grandmother – a great beauty and a marvellous lady I remember fondly – he
took her to meet his grandfather, the 2nd Earl. Pretending he could no
longer hear or speak, the 2nd Earl of Leicester had taken to writing
messages in his truckle bed. Taking one look at Marion, he scribbled
furiously and handed the note to my grandfather. ‘Take her away,’ it read.
On 16 December 1955, when our engagement was announced in The
Times, my father promptly wrote a letter to Colin telling him, in no
uncertain terms, that he was to continue calling both him and my mother
Lord and Lady Leicester. Colin was rather dashed by this. I felt it a shame,
especially as my mother would have been perfectly happy for Colin to call
her Elizabeth.
Years later, I discovered that before the official announcement Princess
Margaret had written to my mother on the subject of Colin, agreeing that
she was quite right to be concerned, describing him as a ‘fairly decadent
fellow’, before going on to offer reassurances by saying he had ‘shown
good taste in loving Anne’, which meant she felt ‘he must be better
already’.
This letter was never mentioned to me, and I only came across it after
my mother had died. It is very telling that Princess Margaret described
Colin as decadent, and typical of both her and my mother to settle on
acceptance rather than to intervene too much. I can see why my mother
didn’t show it to me at the time, and it is impossible now to say whether it
would have made me think twice or not.
With only three months between the engagement and the wedding in
April, I set to work busily making lists, arranging everything from the
flowers to the music, while Carey designed the bridesmaids’ dresses. For
my dress, I looked at designs from Norman Hartnell and Victor Stiebel,
another top designer of the day – he went on to make Princess Margaret’s
going-away outfit for her honeymoon – but it was Norman Hartnell’s that I
fell for: its A-line design, made from embroidered silk, was exquisite.
My father prepared for the wedding as though I was a son, ensuring all
the workers and tenant farmers I had got to know through shadowing him
were included by setting up three tents in the park with a wedding cake in
each, and then the main reception in the state rooms of the house.
In the days before, the surrounding area was taken over by guests,
including a coachload of staff and workers from Colin’s home, Glen, in
Scotland, a lot of whom had never seen the sea before. The long gallery
filled with wedding presents, including a silver inkwell from the Queen and
the Duke of Edinburgh, and a gold compact mirror from the Queen Mother.
Everybody from the surrounding area came to look at them.
On 21 April 1956 we got married in St Withburga’s Church on the
Holkham estate. Once again, I stood on the marble stairs, just as I had done
for my coming-out dance, but this time in my Norman Hartnell wedding
dress, with the very handsome Coke diamond necklace, instead of my
debutante dress made from a parachute, and I breathed it all in. This time I
wasn’t rushing off to offer champagne to the workers, having not been
asked to dance. This time I was the bride of Colin Tennant, the socialite of
our generation, on the verge of being an independent married woman.
My father’s Rolls-Royce was polished up, and we had a chauffeur
called Smith, who drove us through the park to the church. My father was
rather nervous, quietly fussing over tiny things. My mother was already at
the church, having made it lovely by arranging the flowers around the
hanging lamps.
The service was a blur, but I remember coming out to huge crowds
cheering as they saw us. A lot of people from the village and around had
come to see us, and especially to catch a glimpse of Princess Margaret and
the Queen Mother, who was in her furs, waving and smiling. The Queen
wasn’t there as she was celebrating her birthday, something my father
hadn’t realised when he had set the date.
I was pleased Princess Margaret was there even though since my
coming-out dance we had seen each other only occasionally. She spent a lot
of time in London, going out to nightclubs, and I didn’t: I stayed at
Holkham, busy with the pottery.
It was Colin who brought us back together, rediscovering a friendship
that would last a lifetime. At our wedding, however, Princess Margaret
looked quite cross. She was said to hate any of her friends marrying,
presumably because it would not only mean she would have fewer male
friends to take her out to nightclubs but also remind her that she was still
unmarried. She arrived at our wedding looking like a slightly frumpy nurse
in a dark blue coat and a blue hat and gloves, oblivious then that she would
marry our wedding photographer, Tony Armstrong-Jones, four years later.
Although Tony was an Eton and Cambridge man, my father considered
photographers tradesmen, and rather rudely called him ‘Tony Snapshot’ and
didn’t invite him to have lunch with the wedding party. While Tony ate on
his own downstairs, his future bride was the guest of honour. Tony took the
most wonderful photographs, which was why we hired him – he was the
very best of the day and people raved about him for good reason. But he
also took an instant dislike to Colin, which became more and more apparent
in later years. Incidentally, Cecil Beaton had approached my father, wanting
to be the official photographer, but when my father said he had already
booked Tony, Cecil was disappointed. My father decided to invite Cecil as a
guest and he took some wonderful photos, then sent the bill to my father,
which didn’t go down well.
Colin and I returned to the house for the reception in the Rolls-Royce
and, as was the tradition, drove the long way around the park, so that we
went through the village, to enable everybody to see us. Smith stalled on the
hill in the village. With the car at a standstill, the crowd came looming up,
peering in through the windows. I felt very on show and started to feel
anxious, saying, ‘Smith, please hurry. Can’t you get the car going again?
It’s so embarrassing sitting here.’ He was very flustered but eventually he
got the car started and off we went.
The guests were greeted, the cakes were cut, the speeches made in all
three tents and then the state rooms. Then the photographs were taken, all
with the backdrop of a perfect sunny day. I enjoyed myself, although as the
time ticked past, I began to feel distracted. I imagine every bride catches
herself in a surreal moment at some point during her wedding day. For me it
was the anxious anticipation of the wedding night that played on my mind,
especially when it was time for Colin and me to leave Holkham. Most
brides of my background, in those days, were virgins. And apart from a
broken heart, courtesy of Johnnie Althorp, I was totally inexperienced when
it came to love affairs.
My mother had told me about sex. I was eleven and about to leave home
to go to boarding school. I hadn’t yet started my periods, so my mother
covered that too. She began talking about Biscuit, our dog: ‘You know how
we shut Biscuit up when she has blood coming out of her bottom? Well,
that is what will happen to you soon.’ And then she said, ‘Later on, when
you’re grown-up and get married, do you remember Daddy’s Labrador
getting on top of Biscuit? Well, that’s what happens when you get married
and have sex, except you will probably be lying down in a bed.’ I was never
told anything else.
As the afternoon turned into early evening, I went up to my mother’s
bedroom to change out of my wedding dress and into a blue silk coat, hat
and gloves. It was at this point that a wave of horror hit me: I realised I was
about to leave not only the house but my life as I knew it. My mother
wasn’t surprised when I broke down. ‘I thought this might happen,’ she
said. ‘This is the beginning of a whole new life.’ She told me she
understood the weight I felt and that she had been in that position herself
when she was only nineteen, much younger than my twenty-three years.
When I eventually reappeared, Colin saw my red eyes and I think it worried
him because the journey from Holkham to the little airfield was strained.
From the airfield, a small private plane took us to Croydon, for our
passports to be checked, and then on we went to Paris, the first stop on what
was supposed to be a six-month honeymoon. By the time we got to the
Hôtel Lotti, right next to the Arc de Triomphe, it was the middle of the
night and I was exhausted, ready to go to bed immediately. But not Colin.
On seeing that our room contained two single beds, he became absolutely
furious.
Off he went to the front desk, where the tiny night porter got quite a
shock as this imposing Englishman flailed his arms, his voice raised to the
roof, not caring that he was waking up all the guests. The porter soon
realised that the only prospect of calming him down was for him and Colin
to haul a double mattress from the basement all the way up four or five
flights of stairs. Colin shouted all the way as the hotel’s other guests came
out into the corridors to see what all the commotion was about. Finally, over
the top of the twin beds was flopped a dirty, sagging double mattress. And
underneath it all, somewhere, lay the exhausted Frenchman.
And there I was, waiting silently, clutching my closed silk handbag with
both hands, wondering what would happen next. To my surprise, Colin
climbed on to the bed and was snoring within minutes. I lay there
bewildered. Colin had already broken his promise – only hours after we had
left the church, I had witnessed his first meltdown of our married life.
Although I didn’t experience the wedding night, it caught up with me in
the morning and our first attempt at sex was not as enjoyable as I had hoped
it to be. It was awkward, painful, and certainly not the night of passion I
had been hoping for. Colin was obviously dissatisfied, which made me feel
terribly awkward. I knew he had been very promiscuous, often visiting Mrs
Fetherstonhaugh, who ran one of the ‘poshest brothels’ in London, where
the ‘ladies’ were quite often vicar’s wives, who would work part-time shifts
for pocket money, returning to their civilised lives in the evenings.
I suppose he had never been to bed with a virgin before, but rather than
teaching me, he was critical and, instead of easing me into the physical side
of marriage, he had an alternative plan. ‘I’m taking you out tonight for a
surprise,’ he said, after a slightly uncomfortable day at the Louvre.
Imagining he was whisking me off to the Ritz, or maybe the Palace or Le
Grand Véfour, I put on my best dress and felt excited, but as we drove
through central Paris and out the other side, I began to get nervous.
The day before I had been in my wedding dress, exchanging vows in
front of the Queen Mother, Princess Margaret and hundreds of other people,
and now I was in a car being driven through the seedy outskirts of Paris,
getting further and further away from what I had hoped and expected. What
was even more disconcerting was that for the whole journey Colin refused
to tell me anything. ‘It’s a surprise,’ was the only thing he said.
The destination was nothing short of appalling – a filthy, run-down
hotel, with a funny smell. After climbing some stairs, we entered a room
and sat down in a pair of red velvet, winged-back chairs. Then I was
presented with Colin’s ‘surprise’: two strangers, naked, in front of us,
having sex.
I had been conservatively brought up. I was wearing a demure silk
dress. This was the first day of my honeymoon and this was the surprise.
Why he thought it was a good idea, why he thought I would like it, I can’t
tell you to this day. We sat next to each other but, thankfully, out of sight
because of the wingback chairs. I stuck the back of my head to the chair,
sitting bolt upright, wincing and keeping my eyes closed, dreading what
Colin might be doing next to me.
The intertwined pasty bodies of the French couple squelching into each
other on the bed was the most unattractive thing you could possibly
imagine. I found it perfectly disgusting. Every now and then they asked us
if we would like to join in. So, I found myself saying politely, ‘That’s very
kind of you, but no thank you.’ They carried on, oblivious, and once they
had finished, they got up and left the room. Colin and I were still sitting in
the wingback chairs. We hadn’t exchanged a word. I thought: This
honeymoon is going to continue for six months. Six months. How am I
going to cope?
From Paris, we boarded the Queen Mary to New York. During the first
night on board, Colin lost his temper again, shouting and screaming in a
way I would become used to but which, at the time, was still a huge shock.
This time it was my fault. My father, a stickler for fresh air, had always
insisted I slept with the windows open, so as soon as we arrived in our
cabin I opened the little round porthole. Later that night, once we were on
the high seas, a huge wave crashed against the ship, the water coming
through the porthole, completely soaking us and the cabin. Colin was
incandescent, accusing me of having done it on purpose. Then he got a
cold, which meant he wouldn’t let me forget about the wave through the
porthole until he was better. With Colin bedbound, I spent the days away
from him, which, by this time, was quite a relief, exploring what the Queen
Mary’s cinema, shops and places to eat had to offer. I could enjoy, too, just
sitting and people-watching as dozens of very old ladies dripping with
jewels were romanced by gigolos.
By the time we got to New York, Colin had recovered, and we went
straight on to Cuba, which was thick with political unrest. Fidel Castro’s
popularity was rising, but at that time President Batista was still in charge.
Even though the hotel we were staying in wasn’t fully built, and the island
was riddled with mosquitoes, the honeymoon was improving by then. There
hadn’t been any more nasty surprises, and Colin and I were getting on well
together. He seemed to be settling down a bit, but everything changed when
he took me to a cock fight.
Apparently cock fights are, or at least were then, a major part of social
life in Cuba. We sat among the crowd, huddled round a clear circular area,
in a dark room, dimly lit by hanging naked bulbs. In the clearing, there were
two cockerels and a few men. I didn’t feel very relaxed or excited: cock
fighting was not my idea of fun and the atmosphere was rather shifty.
Conscious of the experiences in Paris, I wondered, with imposing dread,
whether this would simply add to the budding collection. I watched
uncomfortably as the men cruelly set about provoking the cockerels –
pulling their feathers, shouting at them, making them puff up their chests in
defence. Once they had cajoled them enough, they let the cockerels go,
throwing them towards each other, so the fight would commence.
Well, that’s what normally happened. However, on this occasion, one of
the cockerels, instead of confronting the other, immediately flew up into the
air and made a beeline for me. I was the only fair-haired person in the room,
and I think it must have mistaken my blonde hair for straw because, before I
knew it, I had a cockerel sitting on my head with its spurs digging into my
scalp, my blood dripping down the side of my face. Colin’s response was to
be absolutely furious, shouting at me that I had ruined the cock fight and
ruined all the bets that had been placed. Soon, the entire crowd was
shouting at me, leaving me feeling as bewildered as the cockerel, which
continued to cling to my head.
I was left shell-shocked and things stayed tense, the honeymoon
continuing to rack up uncomfortable situations. On the very long train
journey to Yellowstone, Wyoming, Colin lost his temper once more, this
time over a card game. It wasn’t one of those grand trains like the Orient
Express so there wasn’t a lot to do on it. We spent most of our time in our
cabin, which was a squeeze even with Colin on a chair and me on the bunk,
which could be pushed up against the wall by a lever to make more room.
We both enjoyed playing cards, but there was always a major problem:
Colin didn’t like losing. This time, I kept getting good cards, all of them
better than his. I prayed that I would pick up bad ones, but it wasn’t to be. I
was winning and could sense Colin’s mood changing. Suddenly he
exploded, stood up in a rage and deliberately flipped the lever switch. The
bed I was on shut like a trap. I was squashed, my arms and legs sticking out,
my head bolstered against the wall. Fortunately, and by this time perhaps
surprisingly after the number of shocks he’d given me, Colin realised I was
hurt. He was apologetic and relatively sympathetic, and rushed off to get
help.
Fortunately, Yellowstone marked the end of our honeymoon and the end
of my baptism of fire. It was cut short when I began to feel sick because I
was pregnant. This was some relief. As far as I was concerned the
honeymoon had gone on quite long enough and I was very pleased to be
going home. As we left Yellowstone, I experienced the great sinking feeling
that I was now going back to face the rest of my married life, almost
certainly replete with uncomfortable situations.
It had all started in Paris, a place I have never quite been able to relax in
since. The next time Colin and I went, he took me to a stage show of a man
making love to a donkey.
CHAPTER SIX
Absolutely Furious
took me with him to Trinidad to see the land that his family
IN 1958 COLIN
owned, leaving Charlie behind in the care of a nanny. I was very excited,
having never been somewhere so exotic – the days of grand tours were over
and my family had not had the money to travel much. Colin, on the other
hand, had travelled extensively and had fallen in love with the West Indies
on his many visits. Not all of the Tennants had taken to life in Trinidad:
Colin’s father, Christopher, had been only once, in the twenties, but didn’t
like it so never returned. He had, however, shipped back a few caimans and
given them to his brother Stephen (the infamous Uncle Stephen), who kept
them in his house before reluctantly giving them to a zoo. Although the
caimans were put on the hotplates in the dining room to keep warm, they
were always escaping and the housekeeper spent a great deal of time going
round the house with a broom, discovering them behind doors and under
sofas.
I was enchanted by the warm air, turquoise waters and white sand bars.
We stayed with John and Janet Lovell in the Maracas Valley in the middle
of the rainforest on the Ortinola estate, which C. Tennant & Sons owned.
Colin adored the Lovells, who had played a significant role in forming his
love of the West Indies when he had stayed with them after he’d left
Oxford.
When we were there, Colin heard about an island in the Grenadines that
was for sale called Mustique – from the French moustique, meaning
‘mosquito’. Owned by the Hazells, a Creole family, for almost a hundred
years, Mustique, which had a dwindling cotton estate, had become an
increasingly expensive burden, and by the time Colin found out about it, it
had been on the market for five years. Curious, he made arrangements to go
and have a look while I went back to England to be with Charlie. After
sailing round the island, Colin bought it for £45,000 without even having
set foot on it. It was a risky asset, having no running water and no
electricity, and only about a dozen acres were under cultivation growing
cotton, while the rest of the island’s 1,300 acres or so were frazzled to a
crisp.
Anybody else who had considered buying it must have concluded it was
a non-starter. Even St Vincent, one of the largest of the Grenadines, was
much more advanced, and still communication was terrible: letters took a
fortnight to be delivered, if at all, and there weren’t any telephone lines. If
anybody needed to fly anywhere, there was a little seaplane: although it
took off on a runway, it would land on the water, much to the horror of any
passengers who hadn’t been warned. What was even more of a concern was
that Colin knew nothing about cotton or agriculture, tropical or otherwise.
But for Colin, it was as though he had been born to live in that part of
the world so Mustique offered him a vibrant existence, his character
infinitely suited to life on a Caribbean island, a Panama hat much more his
thing than a bowler. He was in a high state of excitement from the moment
he bought the island, embracing life on Mustique as though he was the
embodiment of it all, longing to show it to me.
I was intrigued to see it, but the first time I went to Mustique, I was in
for a shock. To begin with, it was a palaver to get there, and after flying
from England to Barbados, from Barbados to St Vincent, I boarded a boat,
only to endure a very rough two-hour crossing. Eventually, the boat
dropped me ashore, on a huge stretch of white sand with a jungle of
manchineel trees coming right down to the beach where, I was relieved to
see, Colin was waiting for me. Between us and the only road, feral cows
roamed freely. Twice Colin and I had to shin up manchineels, which in fact
are the most poisonous trees in the world, but that risk was preferable to
being gored by ferocious cattle.
When we eventually got to the road, we climbed onto a tractor, with a
trailer that had plastic chairs strapped on it to accommodate more
passengers. The tractor was nothing like Colin’s Thunderbird, although he
drove it equally enthusiastically round the island, excited to show me
everything. The road took us up from Macaroni beach to a stone building,
the Cotton House, where the cotton was prepared: the ladies on the island
picked the cotton and carried it in their aprons to the house, where they laid
it all out on the floor before teasing it to get out the seeds and bundling it
together. It was then shipped to St Vincent where it was packed before
being sent to England to be spun. I found it fascinating to find out about
each step. It reminded me of the pottery – so many people were involved in
making a pretty mug or plate, which the end buyer probably didn’t think
about, in the same way it hadn’t occurred to me to consider where my
cotton clothes or bed linen had come from.
The only other substantial structure was The Great House, a building on
a stone base with a wide veranda. Inside there was one huge room with a
very long table that could seat about thirty people. Perplexed, I said to
Colin, ‘Why is there such a big table here? Are we going to entertain?’
Colin explained that it was for cotton buyers, who came twice a year and sat
round the table to discuss rates and inspect samples before striking a deal.
Apart from the cotton houses, there was a tiny fishing community, the
islanders living in a collection of tin huts, and that was it. There was almost
nothing familiar to anyone from England, and although seeing the cotton
estate was interesting, I walked around feeling increasingly bemused,
wondering why this had all appealed so much to Colin.
The views were stunning, like picture-postcards, but the land was
barren, and I found it hard to imagine that I would ever want to spend any
time there. What made it all much worse was that the island was riddled
with mosquitoes – it wasn’t called Mustique for nothing. My lily-white skin
was not made for the Caribbean, but the mosquitoes were sure it was made
for them, even biting me through the gaps of the cane chairs when I sat
down for a rest, my skin going red and blotchy, coming up in welts.
When Colin turned to me, and asked what I thought, I didn’t hold back.
‘Colin,’ I said, ‘this is sheer madness!’
He looked at me. ‘You mark my words, Anne,’ he said defiantly. ‘I will
make Mustique a household name.’
Colin’s certainty was convincing, but I was left wondering what our
lives would have in store. We had only gone to Trinidad for a short trip and
now I found myself realising that our conventional life was going to change
completely.
We moved from Kent to London, and from then on, Colin and I went
back and forth between Mustique and England, staying on the island for
weeks on end, leaving Charlie behind. Both of us had been brought up by
nannies and governesses, and in those days, no mothers I knew cooked for
their children or ate with them.When I was growing up, mothers were put
on pedestals, associated with treats and special occasions, while the
monotonous discipline and general looking-after were done mostly by
others. Children had their routine and adults had theirs. Being a wife
seemed more urgent than being a mother. Colin needed support throughout
our marriage: he didn’t seem able to cope on his own, always needing me to
be there, just in case. I never considered refusing to go out to Mustique and,
as with everybody else I knew, wives stayed with their husbands.
Colin spent longer away than I did, which was a relief: although the
sound of having your very own desert island was wonderful, the reality was
far less attractive. Growing up in freezing Norfolk, in a house with footmen
and maids, didn’t prepare me for weeks of eating tinned beans and
sweating, rather than sleeping, at night. Without the practical attitude I
inherited from my mother, the inner strength I had built up living through
the war, and from my experiences as the only female travelling salesman, I
doubt that I would have managed to cope. While Colin had a ‘vision’, I was
left wondering whether I would ever adapt to this new Robinson Crusoe
life, feeling relieved each time I went back to England.
Slowly, I began to get used to island life, accepting that I just had to
jolly well get on with it and not complain. We ate fish for almost every meal
so eventually, as a change, we would hunt for lobster: Colin and I would
make our way down to the beach, through the thickets, avoiding the cows,
to the lagoon. In the shallows we found lobsters in their holes and, putting
towels over our hands, we would grab them and drag them out. They were
more trouble than they were worth, since the warmer water made them very
tough. With no running water, we caught rainwater on the roof and
showered using a bucket with holes on it fixed up in the tree at the back of
the house. It was rudimentary, but we managed. In fact, Colin seemed not to
mind in the least, although I really missed being able to have a bath.
As well as Colin’s dream of making Mustique a household name, he
wanted to establish better living conditions and an infrastructure to ensure
that the island as a whole would prosper. Influenced by the Lovells, who
had worked hard to generate a fair and stable environment on the Ortinola
estate, Colin worked tirelessly, finding out what could be improved on the
island and what might help the local community
The cotton estate on Mustique was a dying business, threatening the
islanders’ outlook, but although Colin wasn’t knowledgeable about the
cotton industry, he did have a good head for business. He set about
introducing himself to every single person on the island, engaging with
everybody, starting to build relationships with them, and I did the same.
Without an official purpose, I learnt about their way of life: I went down to
see the boats come in, watched the fishermen work and, although most of
them spoke only Patois and very basic English, they became more friendly
over time, especially when I bought fish from them. I went to the little
school and struck up a rapport with the mistress and noted that they could
all do with more books. I organised a shipment, which overjoyed her when
they arrived.
Some felt at ease with me more quickly than with Colin, and a steady
trickle of people began to approach me, starting conversations with the
words, ‘We didn’t like to bother Mr Tennant but …’ I always listened
carefully, then thought up ways to help solve each problem.
When a young man called John Kiddle got in touch out of the blue,
asking for a job, saying he had experience in tropical agriculture, Colin
hired him on the spot. All John had come with was a sorry story about his
business partner running off with all the money and a reference from his
vicar, but Colin was just glad to have someone on board. While Colin and
John were busy, I spent a lot of time on my own, and there would be whole
days when I would read because I had nothing else to do. I read Jane
Austin, Proust, and revisited one of my favourite novels, Emily Brontë’s
Wuthering Heights.
Learning to adjust to the much slower pace of life was a big challenge.
It was frustrating that nothing ever seemed urgent, and difficult to accept
that time was a vague concept in that part of the world. It wasn’t just the
pace of everything that was hard, but also the completely different culture,
and I often found myself wondering what I was doing, trying to make a life
somewhere that was so different from home. If I had married my father’s
friend, Lord Stair, I would have been running his Scottish estate; if I had
married Johnnie, my life would have been firmly in England. Instead, I was
navigating an entirely new identity on a run-down desert island.
In 1959, having realised I was pregnant with our second son, Henry, I
happily returned home. Going back to English society, to stucco-fronted
houses and formal dinner parties in London, was like being catapulted to
another world: there was London, beginning to be swept up in the new fads
of prawn cocktail, duck à l’orange and Crêpes Suzette, busy experiencing a
revolution of mini-skirts and beehive hairdos. It was a huge transition to
make and I found it almost impossible to comprehend that Mustique existed
at the same time as England and everything it entailed.
I continued to split my life between England and Mustique, going from
being with Colin to being with our two small children. Colin was in his
element, remaining passionately attached to the island, his vision for change
slowly coming into sight. I think he felt free to be himself and was never
affected by the challenges of bucket showers, or lack of electricity.
It was only the bravest of friends who visited in the early years. In 1960,
two years after Colin had spontaneously bought Mustique, Princess
Margaret married Tony Armstrong-Jones, our wedding photographer, who
was given the title Earl of Snowdon by the Queen, and was fast becoming
what many people now consider one of the most iconic photographers of
the day.
When their engagement was announced we were thrilled for Princess
Margaret. The whole nation was behind the match because everybody had
felt so sorry for her when she couldn’t marry the divorced Group Captain
Peter Townsend. Following the wedding, they set off on their six-month
tour of the Caribbean. They waved to cheering crowds as they left London
on the Royal Yacht Britannia, passing the Docklands and Tony’s ‘little
white room’, his famous photographic studio at number 59 Rotherhithe
Street, where Princess Margaret had secretly spent so much time.
When they arrived in the Caribbean, they made their way to Mustique.
Colin could hardly contain his excitement, while I felt rather nervous that it
would be a disaster. The last time we had entertained them in London, at the
next house we had moved to in Rutland Gate Mews, Colin had decided that
Princess Margaret liked ox tongue of all things and rushed off to Harrods to
get some. He brought back a box filled with curled-up grey tongues. They
looked far from appealing. In fact, they looked perfectly disgusting – and,
even worse, when we all sat down to dinner, Princess Margaret took one
look at the solid grey tongue and went green. So did Tony. The tongues met
the plates with a thud. We hid them politely behind our vegetables, and no
one said a word. Suffice to say, they never returned to dinner at the Mews.
As we stood with our binoculars, scanning the horizon until Britannia
came into view, I had mixed emotions. It anchored on Walkers Bay, which
was promptly renamed ‘Britannia Bay’. A smart little boat came to shore
and a man in white naval uniform appeared at the door with an invitation to
dine with them on the yacht. I wrote back, saying, ‘Ma’am, it is very, very
kind. We’d absolutely love to, but we haven’t had a bath for about two
months and we really, really stink, and so I don’t think we’d be very good
guests.’
A reply came, saying they quite understood but wished for our company
regardless and would have a cabin put at our disposal. I was thrilled and
took the opportunity to soak, for quite some time, in the bath. It was bliss. I
would have enjoyed any old bath, but there was something rather special
about bathing on the royal yacht.
The following day, Princess Margaret and Tony came ashore, and we
took them on a tour of the island. I’d half expected them to flatly refuse the
ride, but they both got into the trailer, and I noticed Princess Margaret had a
big smile on her face, enjoying the relaxed atmosphere. For the rest of their
stay, we invited them to use any beach they liked, and reassured them that
they would be left alone, undisturbed. So, every day the sailors came and
set up a tent for them. On the last day, they came and had a drink with us.
We didn’t have much to offer, just rum and the most disgusting mixer called
sorrel, a bright pink drink, made from slightly sour hibiscus, which the
islanders brewed. I could see Princess Margaret wincing as she sipped it. I
felt the same.
That was the moment when Colin said, ‘Ma’am, we haven’t given you a
wedding present. Would you like something in a little box or would you like
a piece of land?’
Princess Margaret turned to Tony and made up her mind without
waiting for him to respond. ‘Oh, I think a piece of land would be just
wonderful,’ she said.
It was Tony’s first and last visit. He never returned, largely because of
his dislike of Colin, which went back some way. Colin and Princess
Margaret had hit it off in the 1950s when they had met at a drinks party held
by Elizabeth Lambart, one of the Queen’s bridesmaids. In the summer of
1954, when Colin had been invited as Princess Margaret’s only guest at
Balmoral, the press decided he had either proposed or was about to. It was a
made-up rumour but it meant that when Tony came on the scene he didn’t
exactly take a shine to Colin. I think he also held a grudge from our
wedding when he had overheard my father referring to him as ‘Tony
Snapshot’. Years later, someone rang Tony to ask him about Colin and he
blurted out that he had always detested him, before slamming the phone
down. Apparently, he referred to Mustique as ‘Mustake’. But for Princess
Margaret, Mustique would eventually end up providing her with a whole
new life.
With the visit a success (at least for Princess Margaret), Colin was even
more enthusiastic and, with John Kiddle’s help, the cotton estate seemed to
have a more hopeful future – the workforce was motivated by Colin’s bonus
schemes, and the production rate hit a stable rhythm. Proud of his efforts,
Colin came back to England, full of excitement.
After that Christmas of 1960, though, I could see why Colin might
prefer the freedom and lightness of being on Mustique. We spent Christmas
at Holkham, which was never very relaxing because my father had rigid
rules about shooting. The problem for Colin was that there was a long-
standing tradition of the guns being placed by rank. Members of the Royal
Family were put in the middle of the drive, and that Christmas Eve the
Duke of Edinburgh was there. His equerries were placed beside him; next
were other dukes, followed by any marquesses, then earls and viscounts.
Colin, not being any of those, was right at the bottom of the heap. At the
beginning of every shoot, my father would tell him: ‘Colin, you’re going to
walk with the beaters.’ Colin wanted to stand in line and shoot and was
livid, although somehow managed not to show any outward anger.
On one of the shoots, he did the unforgivable thing of telling my father
at lunch, halfway through the day’s strict itinerary, that he was ‘rather cold’
and was ‘going to go back in’. My father nearly fainted at the audacity of it.
If you were asked to shoot at Holkham it was a tremendous honour, really,
and people longed to be invited, so Colin telling my father it was too cold
and leaving didn’t go down at all well. On the other hand my mother, in
spite of her reservations about Colin before we’d got married, had become
very fond of him, and he of her.
On that Christmas Eve, I was sitting in the smoking room listening to
Colin telling everybody all about Mustique, encouraging Carey and Sarah
to come out, when he was handed a telegram that read, ‘GREAT HOUSE
BURNED TO THE GROUND’. We were left completely shocked,
especially once we realised that the fire had been started deliberately: John
Kiddle had burned it down, making it look like an accident. We later found
he had stolen all the money he could find to put in a suitcase and hide in a
ditch, started the fire, then returned to the case to run off with what was all
the staff’s wages, before fleeing the island. Fortunately no one was hurt but
so much for the vicar’s reference.
After this, Colin lost faith in the whole project and tried to sell
Mustique, but when no one was interested, he commissioned a
prefabricated house to be built as a replacement for The Great House. When
he returned to find it complete, his vision was restored.
A few years later, his rekindled energy was divided when, in 1963, his
father handed over Glen, the family estate in the Scottish Borders, deciding
he wanted to live on Corfu where he pursued his passion for painting. Glen
was a baronial masterpiece built of grey stone that appears round the bend
of the long drive like a fairytale castle, sitting in a beautiful valley with
Loch Eddy at the top, surrounded by heather. I was thrilled by the idea of
living in the Scottish Borders. I had loved my time with Great-aunt Bridget,
Uncle Joe and my Ogilvy cousins, and had longed to live in Scotland again.
I was as excited about Glen as Colin had been about Mustique.
As the new custodian, Colin darted from Mustique to Glen, modernising
one and restoring the other. Glen had been ‘Georgianised’ by Colin’s
stepmother: seeking advice from a leading interior designer, Syrie
Maugham, she had ripped out the original fireplaces and squared off the
rooms, hiding the towers. We set about undoing all the changes, reinstating
the William Morris wallpapers, uncovering the original moulded ceilings to
reveal the beautiful cornices and plasterwork, and installing the Tennant
tartan carpet in the drawing room.
There were a great many rooms – twenty-six bedrooms and sixteen
bathrooms – yet even though it was enormous, it felt very relaxed and
comfortable. The staff stayed on, including Mrs Walker, the best country-
house cook for miles. At the end of each week she would come and find me
somewhere in the house and give me a list of menu options for the
following week. I would go through them and simply choose. Those were
the days. I only wish I had spent more time in the kitchen because now I do
all my own cooking and I am sure I would have learnt a lot of useful things
from her.
Colin and I had fun transforming Glen together and he was glad I
embraced life in Scotland so fully. He admired my resilience on Mustique
too. By 1964 life had settled into a routine: after Christmas we would go to
Mustique, and we spent the summers at Glen. The rest of the year Colin
would come and go, and I would stay in London. Charlie and Henry, who
were four and six by then, would come with their nanny up to Glen, and
Colin would take them fishing in the ‘wee burns’ – the little streams that
ran from Loch Eddy.
August was always very busy because friends and relations would come
and stay on their way up to the Highlands. In fact, so many people came, it
was as if I was running a hotel. ‘I think I could go down to London and get
a job at the Ritz,’ I told Colin one summer. ‘I’d run it frightfully well.’ I
was reminded of Great-aunt Bridget, who ran Cortachy Castle and Downie
Park with ease. She always wore a neat kilt and a good cashmere twin set;
and she would walk quickly around the house giving instructions.
One of the things I looked forward to most was my school friend Sarah
Henderson coming up with her son, my godson, Shamus, whom she would
take up the glen with my boys to shoot rabbits, which they all loved. She’d
help me with the flowers, which took two days to do. Every single dressing
room, bedroom and bathroom had Wemyss Ware vases, which Colin
collected, full of flowers of one sort or another. All the flowers were picked
for us by the gardeners, who were very keen on gladioli – ‘glads’, they used
to call them. I’d take the pale green and the pale pink ones and give the
brightly coloured ones back to the gardeners, which delighted them. The
hall and the drawing room were so big, rather like those at Holkham, that a
small arrangement would have disappeared. Instead Sarah and I would fill
huge vases – and the house smelt wonderful.
All the food came from the estate – grouse, pheasant and venison, all
kinds of vegetables from the kitchen garden and the huge greenhouses, in
which we grew peaches and nectarines. I never went shopping for food
because if anything was needed that the estate couldn’t provide Mrs Walker
ordered it and it would be delivered by the butcher, the baker … the
candlestick-maker. They all used to come right to the kitchen door and
would give Mrs Walker something extra for herself to encourage her to go
on ordering from them.
Glen was beautiful all year round: in August the hillside was brushed
with the purple of the heather but when Uncle Stephen got out of bed one
summer and came to visit, it appeared the heather was not to his liking. ‘Oh,
darling boy,’ he remarked to Colin, ‘what a pity the valley is such a vulgar
shade of purple.’ Not wanting to see Uncle Stephen disappointed, Colin
rushed off and somehow managed to buy hundreds and hundreds of blue
paper flowers, dashed off over the valley and distributed them among the
heather so that, from the house, the view was full of blue. ‘Oh, darling!
That’s much better, isn’t it?’ said Uncle Stephen, before turning his
attention to other things.
In autumn, the light changed to a yellowish tinge, which lit up the house
magnificently, and Christmases at Glen were spectacular: outside, the
landscape would be covered with thick, glistening snow, while inside, an
enormous tree cut from the estate would stand magnificently in the hallway,
covered with beautiful pre-First World War decorations I had found tucked
away, lit with real candles.
Even in such an isolated place, Colin managed to strike up new
friendships and meet new people, often inviting them to have a look round
or even stay, so I wasn’t surprised when we acquired some unexpected
tenants. One afternoon, Colin was walking down the road to the local town
when he met a group of people coming up the drive dressed in hippie
clothes. Intrigued, he greeted them and asked them what they were doing
there. ‘Well,’ replied one of the girls, heather in her hair, ‘we’re looking for
somewhere to live and we thought you might have something.’
Colin offered them some terraced cottages on the estate called ‘The
Row’, which were in terrible disrepair. The long and the short of it was they
said yes and moved in. It turned out they were musicians so, just like that,
we had our own resident band, marvellously called the Incredible String
Band. In return for their accommodation, whenever people were staying,
they would play – at dinners, in the gardens, on picnics – all over the glen.
On another occasion, Colin, who was on his way to Glen from New
York, rang up. ‘I’ve met an actress called Brooke Shields and she is on her
way to Glen to stay with us for a few days.’
I had never heard of her but when she came she was delightful, staying
with us for several days. She was very, very pretty although she had
extraordinary bushy eyebrows, which weren’t very fashionable in those
days. She entered into everything we did – coming on picnics, rowing the
boat on the lake and playing with the children.
Some of the other guests were rather more difficult. Colin was not by
any means the only demanding person I knew. He would arrange certain
things and invite certain people and then leave me to sort them all out, often
complaining that I wasn’t enthusiastic enough. Once he told me he had
invited Raine Dartmouth, who later became Princess Diana’s stepmother
Countess Spencer, Clarissa Avon and Bianca Jagger at the same time. I said,
‘You’ve asked three of the most demanding women I know. They’re lovely
by themselves, but all together? This is going to be a nightmare!’
The evening they all arrived I was going up the passage when I heard
this very loud banging coming from Raine Dartmouth’s room. I rang for the
housekeeper, Mrs Sanderson, who explained what was happening: ‘Didn’t
Lady Dartmouth tell you? She said the cupboard was not suitable for her
evening dresses because the rail wasn’t high enough up. She asked for the
house carpenter.’
While that was going on, Clarissa Avon, former Prime Minister
Anthony Eden’s wife, arrived. She was a great friend of Colin’s and I
suspected had had a fling with him, which seemed to make her more
confident when staying with us. I was in my bath, having two minutes of
rest, when I heard ‘Bang bang bang’ on the bedroom door.
‘Who is it?’ I called out. ‘Can it wait a moment?’
‘It’s Clarissa here,’ came a voice. ‘You said you would lend me some of
your diamonds.’
‘Yes, I will,’ I replied, ‘but I’m in the bath at the moment.’
‘Well, get out of the bath,’ she commanded.
I didn’t really have a choice, so I got out of the bath and, in my towel,
handed her the diamonds.
Meanwhile, Bianca Jagger was in her bedroom. All the bedrooms had a
bell so that guests could let the maid or housekeeper know they were
needed. When in her room, Bianca seemed to spend most of her time
ringing the bell, demanding hot coffee. So Mrs Sanderson would traipse up
and down the stairs with a constant supply: ‘Tring-tring-tring’ went Bianca
and up and down went the coffee.
It was full on. I had to work out all the place settings for dinner and
lunch, which often needed to be considered very carefully, and then, when
these three ladies were still there, Princess Margaret arrived. Fortunately,
she was by far the easiest: she brought her own maid and was always polite.
So many people came and went that I spent a great deal of time helping
Mrs Sanderson change the bedding and get the house in order ready for the
next lot of friends or family. When everybody was there, I was always
making sure they had what they wanted and trying to make it a success.
Sometimes it would all get a bit too much. If I felt I had had enough I
would go for a walk, simply to get away from everybody. In the woods I
would pass one of the members of the Incredible String Band, who used to
buy and sell gypsy caravans. One day I was on a walk and as I passed by
his latest acquisition, on impulse, I asked him, ‘Any chance you would like
to sell me that caravan? I need somewhere to escape!’
He looked rather puzzled but sold it to me and helpfully moved it so
that it was far enough away from the house to give me some undisturbed
peace. I loved it: it became my own private space and I did it up with red
and white knitted cushions and made red and white curtains. Before I had
my bolthole, I would be followed round the house by the guests and the
housekeeper alike. Everybody was always asking me questions. The little
gypsy caravan made it all so much easier because I would go there to read,
knowing no one could bother me because no one knew where I was.
Colin never wanted to get away – he was a ringmaster in Paradise once
everybody had arrived. He built a stage in the drawing room and all the
guests, including Princess Margaret, who loved Colin’s idea of
entertainment, would perform, and he would ask people from the village to
be the captive audience. I have no idea what they made of it all. It reminded
me of when I was a child, performing plays for the Polish soldiers at
Cortachy. At Glen we would all change in the library, come out of the
French windows and into the drawing room so that we suddenly appeared
all at once.
One summer we put on a production of Swan Lake. Colin had bought all
the swan outfits in America when we were on a family holiday earlier that
summer. He had decided to hire a Winnebago and we drove around the
States in that ghastly monstrosity. When Colin saw a shop he wanted to go
into, he would simply park anywhere and get out. While he was in one such
shop, a pair of overweight policemen on motorbikes pulled up, got off their
bikes and said, ‘Ma’am, you can’t park there, it’s a violation. You need to
move.’
‘I don’t know how to drive it, Officer,’ I replied. ‘My husband’s just in
the shop. He won’t be long.’
Sure enough, Colin soon appeared, dressed in a bright pink tutu,
wearing plastic boobs, a tiara and carrying a wand. ‘So sorry, Officers!’
Colin said. ‘I won’t be a minute.’ The policemen’s jaws dropped to the
ground and, without saying a word, they got back on to their motorbikes
and drove away.
Another summer, Princess Margaret dressed up as Mae West and sang
‘Come Up And See Me Sometime’, and always the Incredible String Band
would play late into the night. As long as I could get away when I needed
some peace and quiet, I absolutely loved being there. Glen was a constant,
somewhere I came to rely on, especially since our London address was
always changing.
At last our marriage had got into its stride, and I could turn my focus to
trying to adapt to moving between running Glen, with its staff and over fifty
rooms, a smart London town house and being marooned on Mustique,
showering with a bucket and catching lobster with my bare hands.
CHAPTER EIGHT
A Princess in Pyjamas
WHILE MOST OF our friends stayed put as custodians to a stately home, Colin
was always on the lookout for something new and liked nothing better than
to try out houses around London, continuing to move us from one to the
next. We’d gone from his mother’s to Patrick Plunket’s brother’s house in
Kent to Rutland Gate Mews – a house I hated on account of its linoleum
floors.
Then, in 1963, Colin declared he had bought another house. This time it
was the former home of the famous nineteenth-century American painter
James Whistler in Tite Street, Chelsea. Tite Street had been a popular
destination for people from the arts, racking up an impressive list of
occupants in the past, such as writers including Oscar Wilde, other painters
such as John Singer Sargent as well as composers, film critics and novelists.
This creative part of London appealed to Colin and the house was
impressive. The problem was that over the years it had sloped so drastically
into the mud that it needed to be pulled down and rebuilt. Naturally, Colin
threw a demolition party, asking guests to come wielding hammers and
wearing hard hats. In return for a donation to one of the charities that we
supported, guests were invited to smash the walls down, his mother being
one of the last to leave.
After it had been demolished, it was rebuilt and decorated. It took a
couple of years to finish, which meant we continued to move in and out of
other houses in the meantime. When we finally moved in, we stayed put for
several years.
During the sixties, when Colin and I were in England, we had a social
engagement almost every night, and every weekend we were invited to stay
at friends’ houses, all around the country. Often there would be thirty or
forty other people invited for big dances, and to allow big guest lists, we
would often stay with neighbours, getting to know people by proxy. We
went to Boughton, Hatfield, Chatsworth, and once we went to shoot at
Wentworth Woodhouse, which happens to be the biggest house in Britain.
Built on a coal mine, it smelt dreadfully of coke and the heather was black.
We also stayed with Jane, Duchess of Buccleuch, at Drumlanrig Castle with
Princess Margaret, although when Jane decided it was time for bed, she
announced, ‘I’m turning all the lights off – here’s a torch.’ We were left to
grapple through the pitch-black corridors to our bedrooms with a tiny torch
in a fit of giggles.
We were invited to Blenheim quite often. The first time we went, I was
anxious about the Duke of Marlborough, Bert, who had a reputation for
being frightening, with a quick wit and a quicker temper. I excused myself
as soon as we had arrived to adjust my wig: at that time all the ladies wore
wigs. I only wish we wore wigs now because when we did I never needed
to go to the hairdresser. I had a curly wig, which made me look quite like
Harpo Marx, who, rather unusually for a man, had a peroxide blond perm.
Reappearing with my wig secure, I prayed I would not have to play
bridge with Bert because he had a fearsome reputation for being unpleasant
to his bridge partners if they did not play to his exacting standards. But, of
course, Bert said, ‘I’ll play with Anne.’
‘I’m terrified of playing with you,’ I replied, rather bravely, I felt,
‘because you’re very, very good and you don’t suffer fools gladly.’
Thankfully, we had very good cards and I somehow engineered it so he
always played the hand and he was charming – far nicer to me than Colin
would have been.
Like everyone else I knew, we left our children in the care of a nanny or
governess when we went away for weekends. As well as a nanny, I had a
nursery maid and, with the butler, housekeeper and two cleaners, the house
was run whether we were there or not. The first nanny Charlie had was
Nanny White, who doted on him. Each time she wheeled him out in the
pram, if he saw a cake shop he would point, and in Nanny White went to
buy a huge iced bun for him. No wonder he liked her so much. When Henry
was born, I took him off to Holkham with a maternity nurse. When I arrived
back, Colin greeted me with the news that he’d sacked Nanny White over
something very small. The truth was, she wasn’t very easy to get on with
and one remark or scowl from her had pushed Colin over the edge. I hadn’t
sacked her because Charlie loved her so much.
Charlie was devastated and seemed to blame Henry: from a three-year-
old’s perspective, Henry had come along, taken Mummy off and somehow,
as a result, his beloved nanny had gone away too. Poor Charlie had a mini
nervous breakdown and ran away into a cornfield. His hair was blond, like
the corn, and the field was so big, and he so small, it took a long time to
find him. We went backwards and forwards shouting for him until, in the
end, I found him crouched like a rabbit. It broke my heart.
We got a new nanny, but it turned out she wasn’t very kind and I didn’t
find out very quickly, which I bitterly regret. After her, there was another
nanny and a few lovely au pairs, including a brilliant Swiss girl called
Helen, who stayed until the boys went to boarding school.
I would see Charlie and Henry in the nursery before leaving them to
play and be put to bed by the nanny because I normally had an evening
engagement. I was always busy with fundraising events, the most
memorable being the 500 Ball at Claridge’s, in London, for which I
organised a headdress competition. Being quietly competitive and not
wanting to be accused of not trying, I went to the hairdresser John Olofson,
who had created an impressive two-and-a-half-foot headdress of gilded
grapes and vine leaves for me. It was so big, I had to sit on the floor of the
taxi so it could fit in.
Mostly, these events wouldn’t finish until the early hours of the next
morning, so I had a routine with the children: already bathed and dressed,
they’d climb onto my bed while I ate breakfast and we would talk. If I was
at home during the day, I would take them out to play and in the evenings I
would read them books, their favourite being Where The Wild Things Are.
While the children’s lives were in London, Colin spent most of his time
on Mustique, which for many years wasn’t a good place for the children to
be. They were left behind until they were older. I felt torn, leaving my
children, but so much was happening on Mustique and Colin was desperate
to have me there in support.
Slowly, Mustique started to become a bit more appealing. In 1965,
Colin’s friend from Eton, Hugo Money-Coutts, arrived on a small yacht
with his second wife, Jinty. They were on their way around the world, but
as soon as Jinty came ashore, she told Colin that she was fed up with being
stuck on a boat. With that, Colin invited them to stay and Hugo began to
help Colin with the running of the island.
Jinty set about making her mark on Mustique by shipping a boatload of
horses to the island, and Hugo was intrepid. He taught himself how to fly,
using a tiny grass runway to take off and landing on the cricket pitch next to
his house. We’d fly to St Vincent for supplies and I was the only passenger
who didn’t have a contingency plan in case the plane crashed. Jinty always
had a bottle of gin and placed herself nearest the window, ready to jump
into the sea, and Colin, fearing the same fate, would come equipped with a
snorkel and mask. I was just glad we could get about. For one thing it meant
we wouldn’t be marooned in an emergency – which I worried about far
more than Colin ever did.
With friends on the island, life was easier for me: if I got fed up with
something, Jinty would understand, and if Colin was full of energy and I
wasn’t, he would go off with Hugo.
Having a working cotton estate meant that Colin could use a lot of the
cotton in clothes and linen. The Sea Island cotton was high quality and very
soft, like silk, so Colin was tremendously excited about showing off his new
clothes, especially a pyjama-type suit, made in a range of colours. When
people admired one, he would smile and say, ‘I grew it myself.’
Wearing his cotton pyjamas, he set about modernising the island,
employing a local plumber from St Vincent, known as ‘Pipeline’, to tackle
the challenge of running water by making a dam with a collection point, but
Pipeline made the awful mistake of putting the filter in wrongly so to start
with we got all the silt and none of the water.
One day Colin and Hugo were on St Vincent when they came across a
young man lying in a ditch, having been thrown from his motorbike. His
name was Basil. They took him to hospital, and a few days later, when
Colin visited to check on his progress, they struck up a rapport. When Colin
found out Basil didn’t have a job, he offered him the position of barman at
his soon-to-be-opening bar on Mustique. Basil accepted and, unlike John
Kiddle, he was an inspired appointment. The bar was named ‘Basil’s Bar’
and is still there today.
Basil had a way with people, especially with women. Once Mustique
was more developed, Colin started to invite widows or divorcees, bringing
them over for some ‘fun in the sun’, and so, of course, Basil charmed them
all, ending up living with one of them – the beautiful blonde Viscountess
Virginia Royston. But in the mid-sixties, there weren’t too many people to
charm, and instead it would be normally just me and Colin, with Hugo and
Jinty propping up the bar.
As well as Basil’s Bar, a new school was built, and the tin village was
moved and updated from tin huts to permanent housing. Pensions were
distributed to the older people, and jobs were offered to the rest. All the
people I had got to know since the beginning told me every time they saw
me how glad they were that ‘Mr Tennant has come’.
Just before Charlie started school, I brought him and Henry with me to
Mustique and the school mistress helped Charlie with his reading, although
he was far more interested in exploring the island. Both boys loved being in
the sea and played on the beach just like I had done as a little girl at
Holkham.
My mother and sisters came out in the early years and continued to
visit. My mother especially embraced the lifestyle, enjoying wearing old
cotton trousers and leading a far more relaxed life than the formal one she
was used to back in England, but my father never came. ‘Abroad?’ he
would say. ‘What for?’ Holkham had everything he needed so he stayed
put.
One day at the beginning of 1968, out of the blue, Princess Margaret
rang Colin to ask, ‘Is it true? Did you really mean it about the land?’
‘Yes,’ replied Colin, thrilled that she was taking an interest. Having
given Princess Margaret and Tony a piece of land for their wedding present,
we thought they had forgotten about it. For the first years of their marriage
Princess Margaret had been immersed in a new circle of bohemian friends,
and now that she had two children – David, who was born in 1961, and
Sarah in 1964 – her life was centred around her family. We were busy on
Mustique so we had not been much in touch.
‘And does it come with a house?’ Princess Margaret asked.
Colin, not wanting to disappoint, replied he would build her a house.
She was delighted, ending the call by saying she would plan to come out to
Mustique to see the land.
I got in touch with her to warn her that she probably wouldn’t want to
do that because the whole island was still far from habitable. Since her first
visit in 1960, Mustique had changed substantially but it still wasn’t fit for a
princess. I explained that there were still only Tilley Lamps, because there
was no electricity, that the water had acquired the tinge of a satsuma orange
on account of the roof tiles, and that there was certainly no hot water, but
she was not deterred and said how much she was looking forward to
coming.
When she arrived a few months later, Princess Margaret accepted the
limitations straight away and adapted without a fuss. Whenever she wanted
a shower, she would use the bucket in the tree, just like we did. The food,
too, was really basic. Although we had fresh fish, everything else was
tinned, but she didn’t seem to mind.
We had no proper furniture, so we sat on plastic or wicker chairs,
playing cards when the light wasn’t good enough to read. Colin never once
lost his temper with Princess Margaret, even if she did have a winning
hand.
Mosquito nets covered the beds and during the night we were inundated
with some extraordinary mice. Princess Margaret called them ‘flying mice’
because they would rush up the net, then jump to the next one in great leaps
that seemed to defy the laws of gravity. Perhaps her own experiences had
made her surprisingly adaptable – by then she had lived a life of contrasts:
riding pillion on Tony’s motorbike through the lamp-lit streets of London
was a world away from waving in a horse-drawn carriage; Tony’s
Docklands studio was nothing like an existence within the Royal
Household, and his bohemian friends moved in a very different circle from
that of the rest of the Royal Family.
She was very excited when we took her to Gellizeau Point, the land
where her house would be built. A peninsula at the top end of the island,
Colin had suggested it because it was difficult for people to get to and
therefore more secure. Of course this meant that it was difficult for us to get
to and covered with scrub. I offered her a pair of Colin’s cotton pyjamas.
There she was, clambering up the hill, wearing Colin’s pyjamas, with string
tied around her ankles and wrists to stop the brambles scratching and the
mosquitoes biting. She wore wide sunglasses, a straw hat and a big smile,
not minding at all. She wasn’t vain. She just got on with things.
We got to the site and walked around the imaginary house, which Colin
had marked out with wooden stakes. When his back was turned, she pulled
up the stakes and took them into the undergrowth.
‘What are you doing, Ma’am?’ asked Colin.
‘Well, I think I ought to have a bit more land,’ was her reply.
‘What do you need more land for?’ retorted Colin.
‘Gatehouses for my protection officers,’ declared Princess Margaret.
And that was what she got.
Although incomparable to a royal palace, Mustique offered Princess
Margaret a break from her husband. Like Colin, Tony was unpredictable,
sharing similar character traits: he was eccentric and extremely demanding,
often rubbing people up the wrong way. But, just like Colin, he could be
incredibly charming. Although Princess Margaret and Tony had been madly
in love, their relationship had become strained and the press sought stories
in every look, every outing, every move the Princess made. There was no
press on Mustique and, since Tony had said he hated the place, he wasn’t
likely to follow her there, though he always made a point of telling her that
he might come, as though to stop her relaxing.
Princess Margaret was rather like my mother in that she didn’t dwell on
things. Neither did she spend hours complaining about Tony. She told me
enough to allow me to understand her position – including that she no
longer looked in her chest of drawers but would get her maid to do it
because Tony had developed a habit of writing little notes saying things like
‘You look like a Jewish manicurist and I hate you.’
She was used to being treated with the utmost respect – everybody else
bowed and curtsied to her and called her ‘Ma’am’, although she would sign
off with ‘Margaret’ in letters to friends. I never minded: her father had been
King Emperor, she was royal, so it wasn’t surprising she had ‘royal
moments’. The formalities never interfered with our friendship, but I
suspect Tony resented them. Everybody she had ever met had treated her in
a certain way and there was Tony, being spiteful in creative ways, bothering
to come up with nasty little one-liners to write down and hide in her glove
drawer, with her hankies or tucked into books.
I was glad Mustique provided Princess Margaret with sanctuary and I
made sure she had everything she needed – she wasn’t used to doing things
for herself and would often make little requests that it was easier to carry
out than to ignore. During the day we swam together, and in the late
afternoon we would often go and sit in Basil’s Bar, watching the sunset,
sceptically waiting for the ‘green flash’ that is supposed to appear on the
horizon just after the sun vanishes. Neither of us believed it, yet we always
seemed to be distracted by the thought, pausing our conversation to stare at
the view, just in case we saw it. We never did but it became a fun habit.
In the evenings, she and Colin would discuss her house, and it was over
dinner one night that Princess Margaret suggested that her friend, her
husband’s uncle Oliver Messel, the leading stage designer of the twentieth
century and a great artist, design her house because she had visited him in
Barbados and had loved the house he had built for himself. She also hoped
at one point that involving him might encourage Tony to spend more time
with her and to like Colin.
Colin thought it was a wonderful idea and got in touch with Oliver, and
the following year Princess Margaret came back to Mustique to see the plan
of the house that he had created. Colin was pleased to have Oliver involved
and, ever resourceful, went one step further than asking him to design just
one house. Already a fan of his sets, enchanted by the décor of Truman
Capote’s musical House of Flowers in New York, for which Oliver had
been awarded a ‘Tony’, Colin approached him and commissioned him to
design all the houses he planned to build on Mustique.
Colin had turned his attention to building and selling houses because the
cotton wasn’t making any money. For ten years he had tried different
schemes to improve business, but the problem was that the industry as a
whole was dying – alternative synthetic materials were being produced
much cheaper and in far larger quantities in China, and the trad-itional
crops of the Caribbean couldn’t compete.
Conscious of the islanders’ livelihood, he knew that the houses would
provide more stable employment because each would be set up with
domestic staff: the people whose jobs were in jeopardy would have
alternative employment options. He was passionate about the new plan for
developing the island and it played to his strengths. It also aligned with his
visions of making Mustique a household name and creating a thriving
community, so he set up the Mustique Company. As well as Oliver, Arne
Hasselqvist, a construction engineer from Sweden, came on board with a
few investors. The idea was to split up some of the island into plots, design
beautiful villas, then sell them to shareholders who would also invest in the
rest of the infrastructure.
The plan to use Oliver to attract Tony failed: Tony stayed disinterested,
but Oliver was a huge success, although he and Colin did have some
frightful rows, which was to be expected since both were so highly strung.
The first plot was sold before any houses had even been designed.
Honor Svejdar, née Guinness – the famous Irish brewers – and her second
husband, Frankie, had come ashore to visit Basil’s Bar. When they met us,
Honor complained that she didn’t want to stay on the boat any longer, just
like Jinty had done earlier. By the end of the conversation she had asked if
she could buy a plot and, on the spot, Colin agreed.
Honor and Frankie bought two of the very best plots and a beach, which
she named ‘Honor Bay’. Frankie drank a lot so he built himself a wooden
bar outside the house near the road, where he would entertain the workmen
in the evening when they passed by. When my mother visited, she became
great friends with Honor, going snorkelling together in bath caps, with bags
attached to their waists to collect shells. They would even go out at night
with torches to find them. I wasn’t quite as fond of shells as they were, once
I discovered they would smell terrible if they weren’t cleaned properly.
Many a time when my mother and I flew home together, her shells would
make the plane smell appalling.
Only after Colin had sold the beach to Honor did he realise no more
should be sold – that the beaches should be kept for everyone. Nevertheless,
the sale spurred him on, convincing him he would achieve his vision for a
profitable island, with a thriving community, that he could run as a luxury
estate.
CHAPTER NINE
Motherhood
IN 1968 WE finally moved into the White House in Tite Street, designed by
a French architect, and the wait was worth it. The house was a real marvel,
described as the most stylish in London. The press were very interested in
the interior, and for a few weeks, I appeared in a great many magazines,
perched on the edge of a sofa, proudly showing off the house. It was very
‘of the time’, made from Portland stone, with an iron spiral staircase and a
hallway floor of marble that was inspired by the Impressionists, with black,
grey and white circles of different sizes. There was an octagonal outer hall,
which was bathed in natural light, with branches of coral set against the
walls; a bathroom with sunken bath and bronze taps, silk walls in the dining
room, and silver door handles everywhere shaped like shells. Downstairs
was designed around our favourite paintings – a Turner, a Gainsborough, a
Watteau, and a pair of Arcimboldo’s fruit portraits.
Colin was delighted that the house was being talked about and praised
for its impressive design because he loved to make a statement and the
White House was an excellent setting for the many extravagant parties we
had.
I found all the parties he got so excited about difficult to enjoy,
especially the fancy-dress parties, not only because I didn’t like drawing
attention to myself but because I always seemed to have to mend an outfit
at the last minute. Before the parties, Colin would rush around nervously,
making final preparations, and I would be trying to make sure everything
was in order so he wouldn’t lose his rag at the last minute.
I was far less interested in outrageous ensembles, which was lucky
because Colin needed to be admired the most. Probably his most ridiculous
fad was wearing paper knickers, which, for a time, he showed off to
everybody, drawing attention to them with a new party trick where he
would declare, ‘I’ll eat my knickers,’ after which he would put both his
hands down his trousers, rip off the knickers and stuff them into his mouth,
playing up to the more prudish people he came across, amused by the stir
his actions provoked.
Perhaps having such an eccentric and unconventional father affected
Charlie and Henry, who by the time we were living in Tite Street were eight
and ten, but it is impossible to know for sure. Although Colin was
incredibly proud of both his sons, he didn’t take an active parenting role
with them when they were small. This was completely expected in those
days.
Colin was away far more than I was and, like my father, found it
difficult to be affectionate or tactile. Instead, he would come home with
presents and treats for the boys, who would look up tentatively, with
wonder, at their tall, slightly intimidating father. Although he could be
fantastic with them – he was so good at telling stories – I did my best to
keep the boys away from Colin if he was in a bad mood, on tenterhooks in
case they got caught up in it.
When Charlie was about eight, his behaviour started to change,
becoming rather strange. For a long time, I couldn’t work out whether he
was following in his father’s attention-seeking footsteps, but there did seem
to be a tangible difference. While he was highly strung, like Colin, he didn’t
have the ‘Tennant rages’ that ran in the family, but he developed rituals that
were nonsensical and took up hours of his time – things like having to wait
for somebody to accompany him down the stairs or going around and
around in circles in a precise and deliberate way. It was as though he was
very superstitious, though in this respect avoiding cracks on the pavements
was about the most normal thing he would do.
Gradually the rituals took over, so he was doing a hundred loops of the
house before he could go out. At about the same time he developed a dark
side. At prep school while the other boys got out books from the library
such as Beatrix Potter’s Peter Rabbit, he picked books on sinister topics.
Unsurprisingly he was plagued by terrible nightmares and, concerned for
his wellbeing, his form mistress called us in for an emergency meeting. She
told us: ‘I do see how Charles has a disadvantage. He’s very worried about
his Nazi grandfather.’
Colin and I looked at each other in astonishment. ‘Nazi grandfather?’ I
replied. ‘He hasn’t got one.’
‘Oh,’ she said. ‘Come and look at his desk.’
Inside his desk was a collage of Colin’s father’s head stuck to a Nazi
general’s body, covered with swastikas. We both left the meeting wondering
where on earth Charlie had got these dark ideas from. With no obvious
answer, and knowing that all boys seemed to be fascinated by guns and
fighting, after a long discussion we dismissed it as a phase.
Unlike the common boyish obsession with blood and gore, Charlie’s
rituals were harder to dismiss, but children do plenty of nonsensical things
and, knowing that making a big deal out of something often exacerbates it,
we felt that ignoring his peculiar habits was the best thing to do. With no
outward reaction, we hoped Charlie would simply grow out of them. He
didn’t. In fact, his rituals got more intense, not to mention more time-
consuming, so Colin took him to see a psychiatrist, who diagnosed
neurosis. These days, he would have been diagnosed with obsessive-
compulsive disorder, but then none of us knew what that was, including the
doctors. The diagnosis of neurosis didn’t exactly solve anything, and the
doctors provided no answer as to how to stop it.
When I look back now and think of Charlie as a little boy, my heart
sinks because we had no idea of the extent of his torment, or that it would
go on troubling him for years to come. He was our pride and joy – a longed-
for boy, our first son, the heir to Glen.
Charlie and Henry’s relationship was strained, and Charlie would often
be quite mean – moving away when Henry went to sit next to him or
refusing to touch something Henry had touched. Henry had a very different
character and was easy in comparison, with nothing untoward about him
and a calm disposition. Instead of graffitiing his desk with swastikas, Henry
went off to Buckingham Palace for weekly dancing lessons with Prince
Andrew, which he really enjoyed.
In 1968, after Charlie and Henry, I had a third son, Christopher, who
even as a baby had a really lovable character and seemed to bring my two
older sons closer together. After a few years, Charlie appeared to be more
settled, smiling more, his rituals lessening. Happiest at Glen, he’d go off
with the gamekeepers for hours or would ride his mini motorbike round the
estate. We thought everything was fine, that his troubled days were behind
him. I was so relieved: all I wanted was for my children to be happy – I had
desperately wanted to have them. Having grown up in the war, my friends
and I had all longed for big families, feeling it was nature’s way of
replacing a lost generation. But although I had these three wonderful boys, I
secretly wanted a girl. I had saved my childhood dolls thinking that one day
I would have a daughter to give them to. In 1970, I was thrilled when I
ended up having not one daughter but two when our twins, May and Amy,
were born. I hadn’t been expecting twins. I’d just thought I was having
another large boy – Henry had weighed ten pounds nine ounces. When the
girls were born, a delighted Colin rushed off to Paris to buy outfits from
Baby Dior, as well as coming up with their pretty anagram names.
Life felt complete, but when I think about all five children’s childhoods,
I see a marked difference in Christopher and the twins’ childhoods
compared to Charlie and Henry’s. Charlie was twelve years older than the
twins, Henry ten, so the older boys were already at boarding school by the
time Christopher and the girls were born. There was such a big gap between
my children’s ages, it was almost like having two families.
While Charlie and Henry had had a succession of nannies, who came
and went, the younger three had stability, which made all the difference.
This came in the form of a nanny called Barbara Barnes, who was from
Holkham village, her father working on the estate. The children adored her,
and she became an ally to me. She stayed with us for twelve years, until the
twins went to boarding school in 1982, when she went on to become
Princes William and Harry’s nanny but has stayed in our lives ever since.
As well as being adored by the children, Barbara got on well with Colin
and dealt with his more difficult behaviour extremely well. Once I heard a
terribly loud banging from Colin’s study and then I heard him shouting.
Unhesitating, Barbara marched into the study, to find Colin standing on the
table, stamping his feet and yelling. She said firmly, ‘Lord Glenconner, will
you get down and be quiet? You’ll frighten the children.’ And he did. Just
like that. Another time, Colin, Barbara, all five children and I were in a tiny
plane near Mustique when suddenly the pilot warned us that he might have
to make a crash landing in the sea. Having been told to put on our life
jackets, we sat very quietly, hoping everything would be all right, except
Colin, who panicked. Putting his snorkel and mask on, he started shouting
and scrambling around, searching for the inflatable life raft. As soon as he
had found it, Henry pulled the rip cord, the raft promptly filling the cabin.
Barbara got out a pair of scissors from her bag and punctured the raft,
which deflated, although rather slowly. By this stage, Colin was screaming
at the top of his lungs, so she said very loudly to him, ‘Will you be quiet,
Lord Glenconner! You’re scaring us all!’ And, once again, he did. He would
never have stopped if I had told him to do so. The plane didn’t crash but the
raft had to be removed before we were able to get out, Colin disembarking
rather sheepishly, having taken off his snorkel and mask.
Barbara was always on hand to manage situations and made it easier for
me to interact with the children because we worked as a team. With
Christopher, I couldn’t bear to give up breastfeeding, so for a year Barbara
and Christopher came with Colin and me to all the different weekend
events, and when the twins were babies, she would give one a bottle, while
I fed the other.
It was such a joy to have two little girls, although they mostly seemed to
prefer each other’s company – they liked sleeping together, tucked up in
one cot. Sometimes I felt unwanted because they had each other and didn’t
need me in the way I’d thought a daughter would. Barbara understood how
I felt, which helped. I would never have confided in anyone else, especially
not Colin.
I felt relieved I had Barbara because not only did I know that my
children were being looked after properly when I wasn’t with them but she
made it easier for me to interact with them, allowing me a better balance
between being a mother and a wife.
When the twins were toddlers Barbara would take them and Christopher
to Ranelagh Gardens, part of the grounds at the Royal Hospital, Chelsea. It
was a very formal place to go because the nannies would sit on different
park benches according to the titles of the family they were employed by –
nannies working for earls wouldn’t dare sit on the bench full of nannies
employed by dukes.
Every morning, I’d take Christopher and on Barbara’s day out the twins
to the gardens, pushing a huge double pram, which looked like a tank. They
loved the gardens because instead of there being a flat lawn, like most of
the other London parks, there were hillocks covered with bushes, so they
could escape from the watchful eyes of the adults. I was always amazed to
see the lengths some people went to – one pram had the family’s crest
painted on the side, and some children’s sleeves were pinned to a piece of
white linen that was tucked over the child’s lap when they were seated in a
pram, maintaining an appearance of perfection as they were wheeled along.
Looking back, Barbara was almost identical in character to my beloved
governess Billy Williams, having the same effect on my younger children
as Billy had had on me. They were very settled and secure in their routine.
But Charlie and Henry lost out, only becoming a bigger part of our lives
when Christopher was born. Colin always said he was sure Charlie would
have fared better if Barbara had been around when he was small, certain
that Charlie’s odd behaviour would never have materialised if he had had a
decent, permanent nanny like her.
While nannies were a staple part of family life, so was boarding school,
but while the children loved Barbara, they hated being sent away to school,
although the twins found it easier because they had each other. It was
agonising seeing them all so upset. I would drive them to school and each
one would be in tears, which would set me off, making it worse. We tried to
make up for this: in the holidays, Colin planned trips for us to take with the
children, introducing them to different countries and cultures. At one point
he decided to take us all to every capital in Europe. We went to Amsterdam,
Madrid, Rome, but, not wanting to go to Berlin, Colin had the wonderful
idea of going to King Ludwig’s castles in Bavaria. The children loved the
castles, on which Disneyland’s fantasy designs are based. When I took them
to a room that was full of kit-kat portraits of all the women Ludwig had had
affairs with, despite him mostly preferring his own sex, they giggled in
delight when I pointed out one of my ancestors, Jane Digby, who was
staring down at us from the wall, and told them her story. She had fallen for
King Ludwig when she was sent away from Holkham after being caught
having an affair with the librarian.
The very best holiday we ever went on wasn’t until the twins were
about fifteen years old. We took Nick Courtney with us, a great friend, who
used to work with Colin. Colin organised a camping trip in the Himalayas,
which started off predictably shakily because Colin got very cross with me
for some obscure reason but then he relaxed. Perhaps it was the mountain
air but soon he was interacting with the children and became rather like a
child himself, dissolving into hysterics when a cow peed on his tent. The
relaxed atmosphere meant we all had a lot of fun, despite the pouring rain,
which led to little streams running through our tents. Deciding to abandon
camping, Colin managed to sort out an alternative immediately – a Kashmir
houseboat, which was painted in bright colours and suited us perfectly. The
holiday continued smoothly.
These holidays were a marvellous experience for the children. Colin
was like a walking encyclopaedia, knowing a great deal about a great many
things, and had moments of being utterly wonderful, getting them to look at
things in new ways and igniting their imaginations.
When the twins were young and Mustique was still developing, we
spent Christmas and Easter all together at Glen, the house resounding with
the children’s shrieks of excitement as they opened their stockings on
Christmas morning and ran around the garden on Easter Sunday on big
Easter-egg hunts. Glen was a brilliant house for children because of the
space and size, providing endless opportunities for games. Colin and I used
to play a game with them called ‘Rescue’. Everybody went to hide, except
one of us who was ‘the hunter’ and would stay on a sofa in the hall, which
would be their prison. The hunter had to guard the sofa but also had to leave
to find the others, capturing anyone on sight. Colin was brilliant at being the
hunter because he would be so theatrical, calling out as he searched, saying
things like ‘I’m coming to get you … I know you’re there … fee fi fo fum
…’ following the sound of giggles coming from a linen cupboard or from
behind a door.
It was one of those games in which people crept along the corridors,
then burst out on each other in peals of laughter, going on for hours if
someone was particularly sneaky or patient: the sort of game best played in
a house like Glen, full of nooks and crannies and different staircases, giving
everybody a circuit. We all loved it. It reminded me of ‘the Dark Game’ that
Billy Williams had introduced me and Carey to: she’d turn all the lights out
and try to find us as we ran away, bumping into things, giggling in the dark.
In life there are some things, often simple things, that can make you
incredibly happy and for me playing Rescue with the children and Colin,
and the Dark Game with my beloved sister and governess, are some of my
happiest memories.
Every August, Princess Margaret would bring her children, David and
Sarah, with Nanny Sumner, to Glen on their way down from Balmoral. As
Princess Margaret played the piano and sang Glenn Miller’s ‘Chattanooga
Choo Choo’, we all joined in. The song became a firm favourite among the
children. In the daytime they would go off to the Military Tattoo while the
adults went to the Edinburgh Festival.
We had an Italian butler at Glen called Elio. One evening when we
came back, Elio rushed up to me and said, ‘Lady Anne, something
extraordinary happened tonight. You must ask Nanny Barnes and Nanny
Sumner about it.’
The next morning, I asked Barbara and she explained. ‘Nanny Sumner
and I had just put all nine children to bed, when Elio appeared very
flustered. He told us to come – “Quick, quick, quick!” And out of the
window we saw a hovering cigar-shaped object with green lights. It looked
like a UFO. It came down the valley over the birks and slowly went off.’
When I told Princess Margaret she said, ‘What had they been drinking?’
but when we went up to where they said they had seen it, all the heather
was completely flattened. Colin rang up the nearest air-force base, in case
they had been doing some sort of exercise that could explain it, but they
were none the wiser. Over the following days, other people reported similar
sightings in Peebles and the surrounding area, and we were all left
wondering what on earth it was. The UFO was never seen again, but each
August the same routine was rolled out, and our families intertwined
happily.
As well as Glen, we spent time at Holkham with my parents, going to
the beach for picnics and for walks in the pine woods, collecting fir cones
and shells. Carey and Sarah would come too with their families: Carey lived
near Holkham and had married Brian Basset, a friend of the Queen Mother,
so she spent a lot of time at Birkhall, the Queen Mother’s house in Scotland,
to fish. Carey was much better at fishing than a lot of the men, much to
their irritation. She would bring her three sons for picnics with us and was a
huge hit with my children. She was double-jointed and would do this funny
walk with her bottom sticking out and have everyone in hysterics.
Sarah had also got married, to David Walter, and was living in
Perthshire with their two sons. Carey’s husband, Brian, didn’t appreciate
Colin’s character but David and Colin got on very well so it was always fun
when we took the children to stay in their thatched house. All the children
would make dens and campfires next to the stream and Sarah would take
them red squirrel spotting. When Sarah came down to Holkham in the
summer, she would bring her dachshunds and the twins would walk them
along the dunes. Then we’d go crabbing, filling our buckets with crabs
before turning the buckets on their sides and watching the crabs race back
to the water.
I taught all the children to sail in the creeks of Burnham Overy Staithe,
just as my mother had taught me. I’m not sure I successfully transferred the
passion to my children. Sailing brings out the worst in people and I think I
was rather fierce. Suddenly requests are demands – I suppose because of the
risk involved there is an unusual priority of clarity over politeness – so there
I would be suddenly shouting orders: ‘Pull this!’ or ‘No, not that!’
Although none of them naturally took to sailing, they all loved going to
Holkham and enjoyed all the things I had done as a child, like jumping into
the fountain on a hot day, and dashing off around the park. I would tell them
all about Lord Nelson, how he had grown up in the next village and paced
along the banks of the creeks we sailed on, looking out to sea, hoping to be
called to battle, which captured their imaginations.
Once the twins were older, we often spent Easter and Christmas on
Mustique. There was an Easter-bonnet competition every year, which the
twins loved. May was staunchly independent but Amy sought Colin’s help
and he approached the task with characteristic enthusiasm. One year Amy
won with a bonnet Colin dubbed ‘Goldilocks’ and stuck gold streamers to
her hair; the next year he made a hole in a gourd and she wore it like a
deep-sea diver’s helmet, complete with a snorkel and mask. Everybody
entered these competitions, including the adults – I remember Bianca
Jagger parading around with the top of a cactus stuck to her head.
But, of course, the better the time the children had at home, the more
they would dread going back to school, and nothing I was able to do made
saying goodbye any easier for any of us. I don’t know if anyone ever
enjoyed being carted off to boarding school – Prince Charles used to write
long letters to my mother from Gordonstoun, saying how much he longed to
come home and complaining of the endless weeks without a holiday: the
longest term was fourteen weeks.
When I was at school, parents only visited the school once a year and
the conditions were far from ideal. I also had to endure the doodlebugs,
which were bombs, flying overhead and the hard stale bread that was put
into the oven for a second life. We were all given five boiled sweets a week,
which I would hide in my doll’s petticoat so they weren’t stolen, and we
had to endure powdered egg, which was utterly disgusting.
In comparison, my children went to good schools and were made a fuss
of when they were at home in the holidays. When we were all in London, a
weekly delivery of the freshest food from Glen would be sent down on the
overnight train and our butler would fetch it from King’s Cross. Schools
had changed so much by the time I had children that there were all sorts of
exeats and opportunities to visit or take the children away for weekends.
Some terms it seemed they spent more time out of school than in.
But, despite my efforts, Charlie, as an adult, described Colin and me as
‘remote figures in his childhood’. He was right, but I had never thought
about it like that until he said those words. Only through my relationship
with Barbara, and her relationship with my children, did it occur to me that
there were different ways of approaching motherhood, that maybe the
approach I knew, especially with the older boys, was not necessarily the
most fulfilling for me as a mother or for the children. Sadly, by the time I
had grasped this, the children had grown up.
I look at my daughter May now, and I am in awe of how she works full
time, supports her husband and brings up her children without a nanny, so
much more consistently involved in their everyday life than I ever was.
Compared to some friends in my generation, I was quite hands on, but
compared to my daughter’s generation, I can see how much things have
changed.
CHAPTER TEN
Lady in Waiting
ONE DAY IN early 1971, after the twins’ christening, at which Princess
Margaret had become a godmother to May, she said to me, ‘I do hope
you’re not going to have any more children.’
I replied, ‘Absolutely not. Three boys and twin girls are quite enough.’
‘Well, in that case,’ she said, evidently pleased with my answer, ‘would
you like to be one of my Ladies in Waiting?’
The invitation couldn’t have come at a better time because Colin was
going through a particularly difficult phase of which Princess Margaret was
fully aware. She wasn’t daunted by his behaviour, having been used to the
King’s temper – my father was always retrieving wastepaper baskets that
the King had kicked across the room. It had been Princess Margaret who
had been the best person to calm the King down, often being summoned to
change his mood, and she was always able to ignore Colin’s behaviour,
reminding me to do the same.
From time to time, Princess Margaret witnessed Colin’s histrionics, the
most public of which ended up with him receiving a letter from John King,
the head of British Airways, banning Colin for life from using his planes.
The three of us were flying back from America, and for some reason, while
Princess Margaret and I had first-class tickets, Colin didn’t: he was ushered
right when we got on to the plane as we went left.
Princess Margaret and I sat down in our seats, oblivious to Colin’s
plight. He flipped, demanding to be seated near us, and when the cabin
crew denied him, he lay on the floor, in the middle of the aisle, having a
full-blown tantrum. His wails were loud enough for us to hear and we were
absolutely horrified by the scene he was making, I instinctively got up to try
to sort it out. Princess Margaret said very firmly, ‘Sit down, Anne.’
There was a kerfuffle as security dragged him off the plane. We saw
him out of our window being hauled away, still screaming, ‘Help me, Anne!
Anne! Help me!’
Princess Margaret said, ‘Take absolutely no notice, Anne.’
Colin was arrested and the plane took off without him. Just like my
mother would have done, Princess Margaret disregarded the incident but
knew only too well that I sometimes needed a break. Colin turned up three
days later, but nothing more was said.
Given an official purpose and responsibility not only gave me a
distraction but also meant I became more independent of Colin. He was
utterly in awe of the Royal Family, especially Princess Margaret, so he was
very proud that I had been given an official role and very supportive in my
acceptance of her offer. I think he felt it somehow cemented his closeness
with her, and would mean that we’d spend even more time in her company,
assuming he would be able to come along to everything I was invited to. It
didn’t quite work like that, much to his disappointment, but he did spend
more time with her, something he always looked forward to. I think their
friendship accentuated his desire to impress – Princess Margaret being on
Mustique was the perfect reason to throw parties that he made even more
spectacular, which in turn meant that he would be seen as a wonderfully
creative genius, which he was.
Princess Margaret was no fool, deliberately choosing friends to be
Ladies in Waiting. She appointed quite a lot of us, including her cousin Jean
Wills, Janie Stevens, Davina Alexander and Elizabeth Cavendish, who had
introduced Princess Margaret to Tony Armstrong-Jones, and Annabel
Whitehead, who now holds the office of Lady in Waiting to the Queen.
I was Lady in Waiting to Princess Margaret until her death, spanning
three decades, merging friendship and duties: sometimes I would spend my
time with Princess Margaret as her official Lady in Waiting; at others, she
would be assisted by another and I would be with her as a friend.
My mother was Lady of the Bedchamber to the Queen from 1953 until
1973 so for two years we overlapped, carrying out similar roles. Most of
our commitments revolved around accompanying the Queen and Princess
Margaret on royal engagements and special occasions, making sure the
event went as smoothly as possible. Just as my mother was for the Queen, I
was there so Princess Margaret felt she had someone with her she knew and
trusted wherever she was, in case she needed something.
Ladies in Waiting are only a small part of the Royal Household and the
Queen has a much bigger household than Princess Margaret did. Princess
Margaret had a chauffeur, a butler, a chef, a scullery maid and two daily
maids, who spent a lot of time replacing her ash trays since she was a chain-
smoker. She also had a dresser called Mrs Greenfield, who would organise
each outfit, laying the clothes out in advance so Princess Margaret could
choose what she wanted to wear. Mrs Greenfield also helped her dress as
well as running her bath every evening. The Princess also had a hairdresser
who would either come to the Palace before an event or she would go to the
salon, where she would also have her nails done, but she always did her
own make-up. There were several protection officers, headed by John
Harding, who became a friend over the years, staying at his post for
decades. These people made up the personal staff, and then there was Nigel
Napier, her private secretary, who would be found in the office, along with
four secretaries.
Princess Margaret had a good reputation for looking after her
household, making sure her dresser and maid had nice rooms if they went
away with her and that everybody was being looked after. Every year,
Princess Margaret had a Christmas tea for her Ladies in Waiting. Under the
huge Christmas tree there would be lots of parcels and she would hand them
out to us. Sometimes she gave us really thoughtful presents, but at others
she would give us things she deemed useful: she was rather fond of kitchen
gadgets and once she gave Jean Wills a loo brush, saying, ‘I noticed you
didn’t have one of these when I came to stay.’ In fact, Jean had hidden the
loo brush when Princess Margaret had visited, and was rather upset by the
gesture. Sometimes we’d be given handbags that had clearly been given to
her and rejected after she had used them a few times. But she could also be
generous, giving me several antiques I had admired while out shopping
with her.
Most of the royal engagements I went to with Princess Margaret
involved visiting hospitals, factories, schools or charities of which she was
patron. John Harding and a couple of other protection officers would come
on day trips, and if we went away for longer, Nigel Napier would come, as
well as the dresser, Mrs Greenfield.
All these engagements might have been boring, but they weren’t. It was
interesting to meet all sorts of people, and when it came to her charities,
Princess Margaret chose only the ones she really wanted to be a part of and,
determined to make a difference, would embrace her duties fully. This
energetic approach meant we had long discussions about each of her
charities and she offered all her Ladies in Waiting the chance to be a part of
the organisations we showed an interest in. Because my cousin Angus
Ogilvy suffered from arthritis, I became involved in the National
Rheumatoid Arthritis Society, and I was president of SOS (now called
Scope), and the National Association of Maternal and Child Welfare,
arranging masses of fundraising events, held mostly on Sundays when stars
such as Vera Lynn, Roger Moore, Bob Hope and John Mills were free.
Similar to Colin, Princess Margaret was fiercely knowledgeable about a
great many things, so when we were on our way to an engagement, she
would eagerly tell me an array of facts, anything and everything about the
regiments to which she was Colonel-in-Chief, and quotes from the Bible,
which she often used, rather naughtily, to put the many clerics she met on
the spot.
Being married to Colin had afforded me years of good practice for the
role. Always trying to pre-empt issues that could easily arise meant I had
become very good at anticipating his needs, and this skill was vital for any
Lady in Waiting. If we were at lunch or dinner, I would stay within sight of
her so she could always look at me. From her expression, I would know if
she needed me. When we arrived somewhere new, I did things like find out
where the lavatories were so that she wouldn’t have to ask, and would
always stand outside the door so no one else came in.
There were dozens of little things that became second nature to me,
which helped her to relax and meant the official engagements ran more
smoothly. I got to know small but useful things, such as that she drank a gin
and tonic at lunch and whisky with water in the evening. It meant I could
tell the people at each event, so she wasn’t given the wrong thing. Not only
did having someone with her who could communicate her needs help
everybody relax a little, it also meant that Princess Margaret wasn’t
constantly faced with having to answer the same, albeit well-meant,
questions each time she went to an event, which made it more enjoyable for
her too.
If she was going to a cocktail party, or anything that involved a lot of
people, I would be given a list of the most distinguished guests and
anybody else she particularly wanted to meet so I could find them among
the crowd and lead them to her. This was a delicate process of diplomacy
because I would have to judge by Princess Margaret’s expression whether
she wanted to stay in the conversation she was having, or whether she was
ready for the next introduction, whereupon I would usher the person
forward. There I was, hovering nearby, waiting to swap one person for
another, trying to be as seamless and polite as possible.
Once I had successfully set Princess Margaret up with the next guest, I
would be studying the list, trying to match names with the faces of people
I’d often never met before. I wanted to scurry around and identify them
prior to any encounter, but instead I had to be relaxed and glide around
alongside her. Sometimes I would lose her – she was so small and would
always be surrounded by people, so if I had gone off to find someone in
particular, quite often I would then have to search frantically for her but
without giving away my panic. I had to be like a swan, looking calm on the
surface when actually I was paddling like mad underneath the water.
On days when Princess Margaret didn’t have an engagement and was at
home in Kensington Palace, she was a creature of habit. She always had
lunch at half past one, sitting down for three courses, often eating the same
thing, especially prawn cocktail, which she enjoyed, remaining convinced
that the Marie-Rose sauce was a far more exotic mix than its staple
ingredients of mayonnaise and tomato ketchup. She was rather fond of
teatime: at five o’clock she would be found drinking a cup of very weak
Earl Grey with a ginger nut or Leibniz chocolate biscuit to accompany it,
and at dinner she always had the same pudding: a lemon sorbet served in
half a lemon, like the ones found in some Indian restaurants. Cream was
offered alongside the sorbet, and she would pour a little bit on at a time,
endlessly amazed by what happened to the cream. She’d say, ‘Oh, do look,
it’s so lovely – it’s freezing, it’s freezing just like that.’
I really enjoyed going to Kensington Palace and especially looked
forward to being in the office to help write and sort out the thank-you letters
after an event because I was very fond of Nigel Napier. The most
diplomatic person I’ve ever come across, he employed his tact throughout
his often challenging role, which involved getting Princess Margaret out of
sticky situations with his clever and inventive explanations …
Ever protective, he was also very fond of Princess Margaret and we
always had a lot of fun together. Getting on with the other people who
supported Princess Margaret made everything much more enjoyable and a
lot easier, although when she came to Mustique, only John Harding, and
occasionally Nigel, would come with her. Instead, when she arrived, Colin
would have arranged local security that would team up with John and they
would stay with us in our prefabricated house. Colin, accepting that I would
be at her beck and call and not his, would rush around in preparation for her
arrival, making sure the police were on standby for her and lining up
everybody he could muster so she had a grand welcome.
Even though it was basic, and for years there were no celebrities and no
grandeur on the island, she had privacy – a bolthole. It was far from formal,
partly because Princess Margaret liked feeling relaxed and partly because
there wasn’t any choice. In the daytime, she would wear her one of her
many whale-boned swimming costumes with a short skirt. They were
patterned with either stripes or flowers and suited her hourglass figure, but I
began to notice that whispers circulated whenever she got out of the water. I
soon realised it was because her swimming costumes were transparent
when wet. Approaching the subject delicately, I said, ‘Ma’am, I wonder
whether you are aware that your swimming costume is rather see-through.
Perhaps I could get it lined for you.’
‘Oh, Anne,’ she said, somewhat exasperated. ‘I don’t care. If they want
to look, they can look.’ And that was that.
The days were spent leisurely, revolving around the late hours Princess
Margaret kept. Just before lunch, we’d normally go off to one of the
beaches for a picnic, setting up a parasol in the sand. The food left a lot to
be desired in the early days, often requiring a large dollop of Hellmann’s
mayonnaise to hide the blandness.
Princess Margaret didn’t like the feeling of sand between her toes,
though, which was a bit of a problem. Colin came up with a simple solution
she was very happy with. Every time she went on the beach, he made sure
there was always a bowl of fresh water and lots of clean towels for her, so
she could rinse her feet, ridding them of sand, whenever she felt she needed
to.
After lunch, we would all go for a swim, the conversation never
ceasing, Princess Margaret in full flow. As she swam breaststroke, keeping
her head above the water, I would swim sideways, treading water, rather
erratically, so I could continue the conversation. We would swim out in the
bay and around the yachts. Often, we’d be invited up on deck for a drink of
water. We’d accept, although wishing we’d been offered a more exciting
drink. Everybody was always stunned when they realised Princess Margaret
was dripping wet on their deck, a reaction that never failed to quietly amuse
me.
In the late afternoons we’d return to the house and, like a big sister, she
loved untangling my hair. Standing behind me while she brushed it, she
would comment on all the different natural highlights, leaving me with a
feeling of contentment, once she’d finished, and my hair beautifully sleek.
She enjoyed doing things like that – she always offered to rub on sun lotion
or apply ointment to mosquito bites.
In the early evening we’d sit at Basil’s Bar, drinking sundowners and
watching for the green flash, as we’d done ever since she had come alone
for the first time. Then we’d have dinner with anyone who was there at the
time, although friends were limited and sometimes it would just be Princess
Margaret, Colin and me, drumming up our own entertainment, which Colin
was good at, or playing cards late into the night.
By the early seventies, not only was there an electricity generator but
the houses on Mustique were being built and the once-barren scrubland full
of manchineel trees showed a glimmer of things to come: more and more
villas appeared, statuesque, on the hillsides. Between 1960 and 1978, Oliver
Messel designed seventeen house plans in his particular style, which was
eventually described as ‘Caribbean Palladian’. Most of the houses were
based on a classic plantation house and he concentrated on creating what he
described as ‘indoor-outdoor living’. A master of scene-setting, he
incorporated arches in all the houses to frame the views, which became like
perfect backdrops.
All the houses were slightly different, and had wide verandas or
terraces; the interiors were generally white, with accents of bright colours.
A lasting legacy that went beyond Mustique was Oliver’s use of his
favourite colour – a sage green, which he used for the wooden shutters and
doors, now known as both ‘Messel Green’ and ‘Mustique Green’. As each
house was finished, crates and crates of antiques and soft furnishings were
shipped to Mustique and Colin would unpack them, buzzing with
excitement, before I helped him set up the houses. Realising people bought
them more readily if no imagination was required, we lived in each one
until it was sold, then moved to the next. Although moving around was
disruptive, I had got used to it and the children, who would come out on
their school holidays, enjoyed comparing each house to the next, seeing it
as part of the adventure.
Princess Margaret came only once out of high season, in the year before
her house was finished in 1971, curious to see how it was developing, but
chiefly because she needed a break from Tony, her marriage continuing to
go downhill. The trip was not a success because storms rolled in from the
Atlantic, changing the atmosphere, a grey descending on the island, coming
as an unwelcome surprise. Princess Margaret promptly renamed where she
was staying ‘Gloomsville’ and never returned again before Christmas.
Having been very involved with the designs, discussing little details
with Colin and Oliver, she had become increasingly excited about her
house’s completion. When we were both in London in the months leading
up to it being finished, she had rung up several times to ask me to go
shopping with her.
I had been delighted at the invitation, looking forward to going to
Colefax & Fowler or some other glamorous place, but she always chose
Peter Jones. Off we went to Sloane Square, where we were met by the
manager and taken around the furniture and fabric sections. It was all very
low key, with just John Harding the protection officer following a few steps
behind. She chose very simple things, mostly white furniture and Laura
Ashley-type curtains. Later, she had one or two things from antiques shops
shipped over for the main sitting room, including some glass lamps, which
she filled with shells, carrying on collecting things throughout the year.
In February 1972, she came to stay in her newly completed house,
naming it Les Jolies Eaux – French for ‘pretty waters’. She was delighted
with the house, which had panoramic views, framed by the arch in the
sitting room, which had a wall of French windows that opened out on to a
swimming pool, surrounded by a terrace.
We all came out to Mustique with the children, supported by Barbara,
and everybody helped her unpack. The mood was one of excitement as
Charlie and Henry opened boxes for her, and they’d peer inside before she
would smile broadly, satisfied with the items she got out of each box.
Les Jolies Eaux made Princess Margaret very happy. It was the only
house she ever owned and provided her with an independent base from her
husband. Not only was he prone to mood swings, like Colin, they were both
also having affairs. We complained but without over-indulging, speaking
bluntly, then brushing our troubles aside, concentrated on doing the things
we enjoyed. She loved collecting shells to make tables decorated with shell
tops, so together we would comb the beach, then take them back to the
house to clean, lining them up out in the sun. It is surprising how such
activities can have a calming effect and divert attention from any
difficulties.
In the summer of 1973 Glen, as usual, was full of friends staying for
days on end. Towards the middle of August, Princess Margaret was on her
way to join us for a long weekend. As we were busy preparing a huge
dinner party for the end of the week, a friend called regretfully to cancel,
thereby leaving us one short. Because everybody went abroad in August,
Colin suggested that I should ring up his ‘Aunt Nose’, Violet Wyndham
(who had a large nose), because she seemed to know everybody and was
bound to come up with a suitable suggestion. When I explained the problem
to her, she gave me the number of Roddy Llewellyn, whose father Harry
had famously won the only gold medal for Great Britain in the 1952
Olympics – in the team jumping equestrian event with his marvellous horse,
Foxhunter.
Young and available, although we’d never met him, Roddy fitted the
bill. I remember feeling rather awkward ringing him up, even though Violet
had rung him to forewarn him about the invitation. I said, ‘Hello, you don’t
know me, but we’re having a weekend party at Glen, and I know it’s rather
rude of me to ask at such short notice, but somebody’s dropped out. Would
you like to come?’
To my delight and relief, he accepted and was able to catch the train to
Edinburgh almost immediately. Colin drove to Edinburgh station to meet
him, accompanied by Charlie, who was by then a teenager, and Princess
Margaret, who was intrigued because she knew Roddy’s father. I stayed
behind, busy sorting out all the rooms, getting ready for everybody. They
didn’t return for hours. Finally I got the call from John Harding warning me
that the car would be arriving in ten minutes – something the protection
officers always did whenever Princess Margaret was due to arrive
somewhere. I stood outside, ready to greet them at the door, wondering
what they had all been up to.
When the car pulled up, there were Princess Margaret and Roddy in the
back, more or less holding hands. Colin explained that they had met him off
the train and gone for lunch at a bistro in Edinburgh. Princess Margaret and
Roddy had immediately clicked, even though Roddy was seventeen years
younger than her.
Charlie then explained, with a twinkle in his eye, that they had taken so
long because Princess Margaret had whisked Roddy off shopping to find
him some swimming trunks for the pool. With a big grin on his face,
Charlie said that the trunks were so tight they could have been described as
‘budgie smugglers’.
I said to Colin, ‘Oh, gosh, what have we done?’
When Roddy had been at Glen for about two days, he told me how
beautiful he thought Princess Margaret was, and I said, ‘Don’t tell me, tell
her.’
So he did, and from then on, Princess Margaret and Roddy were
inseparable, staying up late after dinner, sitting at one of the card tables in
the drawing room after an evening of playing bridge or canasta. They
remained very close to each other, their heads almost touching.
It soon became clear that they had, quite simply, fallen in love. Roddy
bore a striking resemblance physically to Tony but, unlike Tony, he was
very kind. He was full of entertaining stories and had a schoolboy humour
that appealed instantly to Princess Margaret. After the weekend in Glen,
they were together for eight years, and friends for life, making all the
difference to Princess Margaret who, by the time they met, had endured
several years of unhappiness with Tony.
By the mid-seventies, Princess Margaret’s marriage was at breaking
point, but with two children and being very religious, she didn’t want a
divorce. In the end, Tony pushed her to it because in 1978 his mistress,
Lucy Lindsay-Hogg, became pregnant with their first child. Day after day
there were screaming headlines, with pictures of Princess Margaret caught
looking miserable, not helped by the fact that she had the type of face that
looked sombre when she wasn’t smiling.
During this press-frenzied time, and in an attempt to escape their
ghastly intrusion into her private life, over the next several months Princess
Margaret would come quite frequently to stay with me in my Norfolk
farmhouse or at Glen. She didn’t bring a dresser, just John Harding, whom
the children adored on account of his ability to tear a telephone directory in
half.
Roddy would arrive later in the evening and I would leave them to
relax. Going through such a private matter in public, and the scandal of
being the first high-profile member of the Royal Family to divorce since
King Henry VIII, was enough to make anybody need a friend.
The visits to Glen and Norfolk were completely different from the
formal royal engagements. The house in Norfolk is the one I bought from
my father at the beginning of my marriage, and where I live now. It is an
old flint-stone farmhouse surrounded by fields. There is no glamour –
people wear wellington boots and mackintoshes – but I think that appealed
to Princess Margaret. There was a sense of her being truly ‘off duty’ when
she spent time there, similar to when she was on Mustique.
She would turn up with her Marigold gloves and, not wanting to be an
imposition with the absence of her maid, she brought her own kettle. This
was because she was used to having breakfast in bed: she brought it so she
could make her own tea in her bedroom each morning. The problem came
when she didn’t know how to work the kettle. ‘Oh, Anne, do you think you
could help? I think there’s something wrong with my kettle. It doesn’t seem
to be working properly.’ In fact, although she had been considerate in
bringing the kettle, it was more trouble than it was worth, and I ended up
doing everything anyway.
Over the years, she adopted the same routine: she would insist on
cleaning my car – with Roddy when he came too – and she’d lay all the
fires, always reminding me, ‘You weren’t a Girl Guide, but I was, so leave
the fires to me.’ Our friendship was ordinary, and she relished mundane
activities far more than I did. I would find her dusting the bookshelves and,
more than once, dismantling my chandelier to clean it in the bath.
She loved being outside, and we would spend whole days pottering
about in my garden, kneeling down next to each other weeding. When we
went out, she didn’t want to meet anybody new: she just wanted to put on
her brown lace-ups and mackintosh and explore gardens, churches or
country houses with me and Colin, if he was there, and a few select people I
would invite. Often our mutual friend Jack Plumb came to stay. He was a
history professor at Cambridge and a brilliant conversationalist. Sometimes
we would go and have dinner with him in college with a group of
undergraduates, and Princess Margaret would be in her element, easily
holding her own, despite being acutely aware she had never been to
university.
Another friend I invited to Norfolk when Princess Margaret was staying
was Christopher Tadgell, a professor at Canterbury. He knew everything
there is to know about architecture and churches so we would go off round
the county, visiting churches, and Princess Margaret would ask all sorts of
questions, absorbing absolutely everything.
In the evenings, we would all sit in my drawing room, she always in the
chair to the left of the fireplace, and talk for hours, often about what we had
seen and done during the day. ‘What about another little drinkie-winkie?’
she would say, and Colin would disappear into the drinks cupboard and
come out with another round of drinks – whisky for her, vodka tonic for me,
while John Harding bumbled around in the kitchen, reading the newspaper
until Princess Margaret eventually turned in for the night.
People complained about Princess Margaret being difficult, but I think
quite often it was because she was bored or fed up. She would often be
invited to meet strangers at lunch or dinner but, not surprisingly, her idea of
fun wasn’t sitting next to the mayor, the bishop and the chief of police for
Sunday lunch. When she was staying with friends, she didn’t want to be on
show. She also appreciated being asked what she wanted to do and what she
wanted to eat but she often wasn’t. Great dinners would be arranged, when
actually she preferred much simpler food.
I minded very much when people complained about her behaviour. I
knew she could be difficult: she was known for her icy stare if she felt
someone had overstepped the mark, often accompanied with a curt remark
normally with good reason. She had moments of being very grand indeed,
but I worked round these ‘royal moments’, finding her quietly amusing. I
didn’t like it when people criticised her, especially when she was already
being hounded by the press.
Somehow, Tony had got the press on his side and Princess Margaret was
vilified. Before they divorced, I went on a few engagements with both of
them, which were no fun at all because Tony was so unpredictable. I would
go to Kensington Palace to collect Princess Margaret and would instantly
know if he was there because there would be an uncomfortable feeling in
the air. One time, when Princess Margaret was unwell, Jean Wills and I
were asked to sit outside her room to stop Tony going in. It was extremely
awkward because Tony was very angry about it and wanted to let Princess
Margaret know how he felt. To discomfort her, I suppose, he stormed off
down the stairs, slammed the front door, got into his car and, revving his
engine, drove round and round the courtyard near her window, honking the
horn.
Princess Margaret was devastated that her marriage had failed, feeling
very strongly about divorce, as did I. In some situations I can quite see how
it is impossible to avoid, as was the case for Princess Margaret. It was the
same for my grandmother, Ga, who had divorced her husband, the 8th Earl
of Hardwicke, because of ‘cruelty’. The details were vague, but I think he
had chased her around the house with a knife enough times for her fears to
be taken seriously. They got divorced quietly and it was never mentioned
again.
We weren’t alone in dealing with difficult marriages. My sister Carey
had trouble with her husband, who, after a few years, refused to talk
directly to her and instead would talk through his Labrador, saying things
like ‘Tell her to bring the bloody paper over here.’
When I’d discovered Colin was having affairs, I had been incredibly
jealous at first and found it very hard to accept. He had also had offers from
men, often rather proudly telling me that Field Marshal Montgomery had
taken a shine to him when he’d set the record for high jump in the Irish
Guards and had stayed keen on him. Over the years, Colin had lots of
girlfriends, some I knew of, others I didn’t. I tried not to mind. When he
died, a lot of them came out of the woodwork, including one African
American lady, for whom he had bought a nail bar in America. I only found
out about her when she went to the press and I read about how he had
broken her wrist. Hopefully her wrist healed well enough for her to carry on
doing people’s nails.
There was one particular mistress he had for years. I had heard rumours
about her to start with, but it was only when Colin and I turned up to a party
in Kew Gardens and I saw them together that I could sense immediately the
unmistakable chemistry between them. You could absolutely tell, and I
minded very much. There was never a flaming row between us, or a
confession of any sort. I was too polite, which always irritated Colin.
Occasionally, after a drink or two, I would start a screaming match with
him, but not often.
I avoided confrontation and didn’t want to degrade our marriage to a
constant string of arguments. Apart from his infidelity and his temper, we
got on so well and we both valued our relationship, which was based on a
solid friendship. More to the point, we had five children, so I wanted to
maintain unity for their sake. The odd thing was that Colin would complain
to me about his girlfriends. He once told me, when he came back from
some sand bar off Africa where he had taken this particular long-term
mistress, ‘I’ve had the worst holiday ever. And I’m afraid I’ve behaved
rather badly.’
‘Colin, that doesn’t sound too good,’ I replied, not quite sure what he
could possibly expect me to say on the subject of his holiday with his
mistress.
‘I’m fed up with her! She went and broke her leg before the trip and the
whole point of going there was to canoe and see wild animals, but when I
tried to get her into it, her leg wouldn’t fit in because the bloody thing is in
plaster so won’t bend. And then we had to lie in the boiling hot straw hut all
day …’ He went on and on, not knowing how ridicu-lous he sounded.
In the end I said, ‘I really don’t want to hear about your holiday with
your mistress. I’m sorry you didn’t have a good time, but can we talk about
something else?’ There was no point in feeling sorry for myself. Almost
every single couple I could think of was interlaced with other people’s
husbands and wives. Rarely, it seemed, were there just the two partners in a
marriage. It was an aristocratic curse. Affairs were expected and wives just
worked around it. Even married to a princess, Tony wasn’t satisfied, going
off with a string of women.
Once I knew Colin had changed the playing field, I levelled it. I had a
very dear friend for many years who was always wonderful to me: he made
me laugh and we got on terribly well. We had lunch every week and spent
the occasional weekend together. It made the whole situation bearable. I felt
able to cope, happier and more independent. When Colin found out he was
very jealous, but his own behaviour was so appalling, he couldn’t really
object. It had a positive effect on our marriage because I wasn’t consumed
by jealousy and it allowed our friendship to stay strong. We were always
talking together and laughing a great deal without a feeling of bitterness.
Colin’s long-term mistress had tried and failed to get him to leave me
and marry her. When it came down to it, Colin and I remained loyal to one
another. Colin never tried to divorce me. As he always said, ‘We were
brought up not to throw in the towel but to bite bullets and fold towels
neatly.’ While it was rather easier for him to say, I did agree with the
sentiment.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
OUR HOUSE ON Mustique, named The Great House after the original one that
had been burned down, was the last house to be built by Oliver Messell, in
1978. It was perhaps the greatest of all, influenced by a mixture of eastern
architecture. With a central circular room, which had a domed roof, inspired
by Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, and ornate screens of open tiles from Asia and
Indonesia, it was breezy and wonderfully light. Surrounded by a palm
grove, which Colin had had the insight to plant when he had first bought the
island, his pride and joy was the exquisitely carved temple brought from
India. It looked as if it had been made from lace. Unfortunately, it arrived in
various pieces, and the five men who assembled it put it together in the
wrong order, leaving Colin furious. This wasn’t the first or the last time
Colin had lost his cool throughout the development of Mustique: he had had
several explosive arguments with Oliver, especially when Oliver wanted to
use concrete painted like marble and Colin refused, buying a marble quarry
to ensure both a good price and the final word.
The Great House was the last house Oliver ever designed and, sadly, he
died just before it was completed. Colin and I attended his funeral in
Barbados. We were late for the service, and when the taxi driver drove past
the church, Colin got so cross that he communicated not only through
shouting and screaming but also by biting the driver’s arm, fortunately not
drawing blood.
By then, having been married to Colin for over twenty years, I knew to
expect this sort of behaviour, which I couldn’t control and neither,
apparently, could Colin. Although Colin was sometimes impossible to
manage, it didn’t take away from his achievements. When I look back on
those years on Mustique, they are bursting with colour and energy, full of
adventure, none of which I would have had without Colin. Recently I read
in the papers that Mustique is ‘unique’, and something that could ‘never be
replicated’. I agree, and that’s down to Colin and his vision.
It was Colin’s eccentricity that helped put Mustique on the map: he used
his flair to entice people to come and look round the island. To start with,
most of the people were passing by and came ashore out of curiosity –
Nelson Rockefeller, the American billionaire and 41st Vice President of the
USA, anchored his yacht off Mustique, and with Bob Dylan’s yacht also
nearby, the word began to spread.
Janie Stevens, a great friend and another Lady in Waiting to Princess
Margaret, was married to Jocelyn Stevens, who was the editor of Queen
magazine, now Harper’s Bazaar. After Colin and I mentioned that
Mustique needed some publicity, Janie spoke to her husband, who sent the
Queen’s photographer cousin Patrick Lichfield, who was also a cousin of
mine, to photograph us for an article. The result was a great success. In the
glossy pages of the magazine there were double-spread photos of Princess
Margaret surrounded by Colin, me and anyone else who was there –
islanders and expats alike. The photos alluded to a bohemian atmosphere
but with a unique twist of royalty, all within a picture-postcard backdrop of
coconut palms and turquoise waters. The scene was as inviting as it was
intriguing.
By the mid-seventies, a steady trickle of articles was being published
about how Mustique was the new ‘place to go’. Other than being a
destination for Princess Margaret, this was a huge exaggeration, but it was
easy to believe when Colin told people it was so – he made such an
impression in his own right that he became a draw. He understood this and
played up to it, even hoping that his own logo, a red capital G for
Glenconner, would become famous.
People certainly had memorable tours with Colin, who went further than
most to secure buyers: to show how deep the water was he would
sometimes walk, fully clothed, out to sea until his hat floated off, even
though the water was in fact only waist deep and actually he was walking
on his knees.
Mick Jagger was the first proper celebrity to stay on Mustique, although
his initial visit wasn’t a success. He arrived, out of season, with his wife
Bianca and his daughter Jade in tow. He stayed for a week and left
unimpressed, but his presence legitimised the claim that big names visited
Mustique, generating more media attention.
Colin decided that if he threw extravagant parties, people would hear
about them and want to be invited to these ‘Caribbean Spectaculars’. Out of
all the parties, his fiftieth birthday Golden Ball, in 1976, was the one that
secured Mustique the label of being the hedonistic paradise for the rich and
famous. And commercially it worked: directly after the party, Mick Jagger
bought a villa called L’Ansecoy, which has panoramic views of St Vincent
and Bequia. He also invited Princess Margaret and me to a Rolling Stones
concert in London. It was so loud that we kept our fingers in our ears the
whole time.
The fiftieth-birthday invitation was for almost a week’s worth of parties,
all-expenses-paid: the airfare, the accommodation and everything in
between. Everybody stayed dotted around the island in different houses:
Princess Margaret had Oliver Messel, Rupert Loewenstein, the financial
manager of the Rolling Stones, his wife, my great friend Princess Josephine
Loewenstein, and Carolina Herrera, the fashion designer famous for
dressing a string of First Ladies from Jackie Kennedy to Michelle Obama,
and her husband Reinaldo. Carolina always showed Princess Margaret and
me her collections when we flew home via New York, and very generously
would invite us to choose what we liked, her tailors making little changes
for Princess Margaret so that what she picked was unique to her.
Once the island was full, the party started. Colin had planned every hour
meticulously: a boat trip to see the wreck of SS Antilles, which had come
aground on the coral reef a few years before; there were calypso singers
who sang among everyone, making up lyrics about many of the guests, and
Dana Gillespie, who was famous for singing ‘Andy Warhol’, written by
David Bowie, sang at the Cotton House. There were lunch parties held at
different people’s houses – at the architect Arne Hasselqvist’s, the rum was
served from an enormous old copper sugar pan. And then the finale, the
Golden Ball, although Colin got so stressed in the run-up that he collapsed
and had to be given an injection by the doctor to revive him for the night. It
did the trick, and soon enough he was rushing around in his usual high-
octane state of excitement.
It did look spectacular. People have often commented that they think
Colin wanted Mustique to be where fantasies came true, and it certainly
looked more like a dream than reality that night: everything was gold – the
trees had been painted, the grass sprayed, and even the beach had been
covered with gold glitter. Colin got some of the local lads oiled up, and they
wore nothing at all except a gold-painted coconut strategically placed down
below.
When people thought Colin had pulled out all the stops, there would be
one more. He was always coming up with ideas to impress the guests, as
though they were the audience for some great theatrical production – which,
really, was what the parties were. Suddenly, more golden boys appeared on
the beach carrying a litter, enclosed by gold streamers. They put it down,
and out stepped Bianca Jagger.
The photos of the Golden Ball, taken by Robert Mapplethorpe, became
iconic, especially those of Mick and Bianca Jagger: Mick looked slightly
weird in a sort of pixie straw hat sprayed gold, and Bianca dressed as a
character from Gone With the Wind, wearing a gold crinoline. The photos
were published, and Colin was thrilled because he was also dressed up to
the nines, in a skin-tight white satin suit, laced with gold. I was less thrilled
because somebody had suggested that I should paint my face gold, but it
had the most terrible effect, highlighting every wrinkle and crease. I spent a
lot of the party trying not to smile.
That night made Mustique famous for ever, mainly down to the golden
boys dancing around Princess Margaret. Even for the mid-seventies, the
scenes were an unusual sight.
The parties continued over the years, and Mustique’s reputation grew,
the most splendid being Colin’s sixtieth-birthday party, in 1986, which he
spent two years planning.
Several American guests flew in on Atlantic Records’ company jet and
some famous people were scattered around, like Jerry Hall, who, by the
time of Colin’s sixtieth birthday, had replaced Bianca.
Most of the guests, though, were relations: my mother and sisters loved
coming out, and a great many rum punches and daiquiris were consumed.
Old friends Ingrid and Paul Channon came with their children, who were a
great hit with ours because they entered into all the games with such energy,
lots of the Guinness family, a few of Princess Margaret’s other Ladies in
Waiting, and friends like Prue Penn, whom I have always loved and laughed
a lot with. Patrick Lichfield was there, busily taking photographs, including
one of Princess Margaret’s bottom as she leant over to have her portrait
taken by someone else, and Laura Brand, the rather eccentric sister of Lord
Hambleden, who always wore sombreros and was always in the sea. Sadly,
a few years later Laura drowned. She and her husband Micky were in
Grenada and she went for a swim. Micky was on the beach when all of a
sudden, her hat floated past, out to sea. All of our children were at the party,
with many of their friends and endless cousins, and just like Colin’s fiftieth
birthday, the celebrations for his sixtieth went on for a week. It made the
headlines – ‘Bring your own jewels,’ one paper said, and another described
Colin as the ‘ringmaster of a crazy aristocratic circus’.
Well: Princess Margaret did bring her own jewels to ‘The Peacock Ball’
and wore them with the dress Carl Toms, an iconic set and costume
designer, designed especially for her. She looked ravishing in ivory silk
with gold embroidery, which set off her diamond tiara perfectly. Princess
Margaret loved her dress, telling me she’d been waiting all her life to wear
a dress that made her feel like a princess. Her son David came with his
lovely girlfriend Susannah Constantine, who went on to be one half of the
television duo Trinny and Susannah presenting the BBC series What Not to
Wear.
Princess Margaret was thrilled with her son David’s outfit – he had a
huge white peacock headdress, which was much admired. Thank goodness
Colin had a crown or he might have been rather envious, but when Princess
Margaret crowned him ‘King of Mustique’ during the ball, it was clear he
was thoroughly enjoying himself and was glad that everybody else had
made such an effort with their outfits.
Colin organised the start of the Peacock Ball so that everybody could
make a grand entrance. Jerry Hall sashayed in wearing an almost identical
dress to mine, remarking, ‘You have the same colour as me,’ and I wanted
to say, ‘No, you have the same colour as me,’ but I didn’t.
The ball marked the grand finale of the week-long celebrations, in the
same way that the Golden Ball had been the last huzzah for Colin’s fiftieth.
The press described all the parties as ‘decadent’ and ‘louche’. It would be
hard to argue against those descriptions – Colin chartered a newly built boat
called Windstar for a week, complete with masseurs and chefs at the guests’
disposal. There was also a huge collection of pornographic films that kept
the younger ones rather too busy, and Colin got very ratty with them all for
spending so much time in their cabins.
Being on Windstar was like being on a moving island. Colin had
thought of every detail, even the clothes: we had gone to India twice to
choose the outfits. There were T-shirts made to mark the occasion and
Indian clothes for the parties, which were laid out for guests when they
arrived on board so they could pick from a vast selection.
We sailed around the islands, stopping off to have lunch or play games –
there were treasure hunts on Bequia, where Colin had gone to great lengths
to produce a collection of life-size cardboard cut-outs of various people,
including one of the Queen. He had gone off beforehand, lugging the
cardboard cuts-outs around the island, hiding them in all sorts of places.
There were shrieks when a group of guests found the Queen in a restaurant
bar, and giggles when someone exclaimed, ‘Princess Margaret’s in the
jungle!’
The real Princess Margaret was on Mustique preparing the party she
gave – a picnic on Macaroni beach. She had sent an invitation to all the
guests beforehand, but that was where the formality stopped. It was like an
extravagant summer fête, with coconut shies, a roll-top bath full of
champagne and rum punch galore. People rushed or staggered around all
afternoon playing games, with great peals of laughter, until the early hours.
As soon as one party finished, another would begin. All sense of time
and responsibility was put on pause as we floated around from one island to
the next. Raquel Welch, the American actress, threw a party with her
husband, André, on their boat, which was decked out in red velvet and
chandeliers, looking rather like a brothel. Princess Margaret was always
mildly irritated by Raquel, because royal etiquette dictates that members of
the Royal Family should always be the last to arrive, but Raquel made that
impossible for Princess Margaret because she was always late.
Everybody was so relaxed and had so much fun, as though Mustique
was just one private estate. That was one of its obvious attractions,
especially for anyone famous – it felt private. It is still known for its privacy
today. Colin was very clever in insisting that nobody could be on the island
unless they had a house or a room at the hotel. This meant that the press
couldn’t get on because, even if they arrived at the jetty, they were turned
away. The Cotton House has only twelve rooms and the houses rent for
huge sums of money, so the exclusivity and privacy has always been
maintained.
The Queen’s visits cemented the idea that Mustique was also a
playground for the aristocracy, which was probably, on balance, nearer to
the truth, simply because most of the party guests were members of my or
Colin’s family, far outweighing the rock stars. The Queen’s first visit was in
1977 with the Duke of Edinburgh, who always made me nervous – he made
everybody nervous and knew it. When Princess Margaret had told us that
the Queen was planning on visiting, we knew we should spruce up
Mustique to make it look as good as possible for her. The village people
didn’t have any smart clothes and there was nothing to buy, even on St
Vincent, so Colin rang up his mother, Pamela, and asked her to organise
clothes for the villagers – shirts for the men and dresses for the women.
The boat arrived with Pamela, who brought all the parcels of clothes
with her. Lugging them up to the house, we opened them and discovered, to
our horror, that Pamela had bought a job lot of Victorian garments.
‘What have you done?’ Colin asked his mother.
‘I thought it would be more fun for everybody.’ She was delighted with
the idea.
We gave the clothes to the villagers without admitting they were vastly
out of date. They assumed they were the proper dress for the Queen of
England’s visit. I suppose they were, just not that Queen! I helped the
women into their crinolines and the men put on their striped trousers and
top hats and, despite being very hot, they loved wearing them.
I taught the ladies how to curtsy, and the men how to bow, and they all
brought chairs down to the quay to wait for Britannia to come into view.
They had been told to stand up once the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh
came to shore, but they didn’t move. I’m not sure how impressed they were
– I think they were expecting the Queen of England to arrive in her robes
and the crown.
The first thing the Queen said to Princess Margaret was ‘I had no idea
Mustique was in a Victorian time-warp.’
The first thing the Duke of Edinburgh said to Colin when he came
ashore from Britannia was ‘I can see you’ve ruined the island.’ Colin was
dashed by the remark, especially because he had gone to such lengths to
plan the itinerary with the Duke in mind.
Fortunately the planning paid off because the Duke of Edinburgh really
enjoyed snorkelling among the sharks who were giving birth at Black Sand
Bay, while Princess Margaret delighted in showing the Queen around Les
Jolies Eaux, proud of the life she’d made on Mustique. She then had a
picnic with the Queen, who took to the water afterwards. This was
extraordinary as she very rarely swims anywhere, presumably because she
doesn’t want to be photographed. With no press on the island, she swam in
Macaroni Bay.
The Duke of Edinburgh changed his mind about the island. When he
was leaving, he turned to Colin, saying, ‘I really like your island. I really
loved my time here.’
The following week Nick Courtney, the general manager of the
Mustique Company, the island’s management company initially set up to
sell houses, was showing people around the island, and when he got to
Macaroni Bay, he said, ‘The Queen swam here last week, and we haven’t
changed the water since.’
It was certainly a radically different visit from that when Princess
Margaret had come ashore from Britannia during her honeymoon in 1960,
seventeen years before. The Queen didn’t deal with flying mice or plastic
chairs strapped to a trailer pulled by a tractor. Nor did she have to sip sorrel
cordial or be clad in striped pyjamas tied up with string to protect her from
the mosquitoes. The island had been transformed to the Paradise Colin had
known it could become.
Mustique seemed to be a hit with everybody, but I quietly resented the
parties that Colin continued to throw because of the expense – some of
them cost hundreds of thousands of pounds. There was nothing I could do
to stem that extravagance, nothing I could do to rein Colin in. The money
was haemorrhaging out. We didn’t have an endless supply, yet Colin spent
it as though we did.
Glen was also a drain on money, especially during and after the 1979 oil
crisis, by which Colin’s family bank was affected, and the bills went
through the roof. When we needed more money, Colin would simply sell a
painting or two. He always said that once he had walked past a painting
enough times he didn’t mind selling it, always being able to shut his eyes
and see it if he wanted to or go to the Tate if he really missed it. Constable’s
The Opening of Waterloo Bridge was a rather wonderful painting he sold,
just like that, when he needed to pay off a debt. Some of the paintings I
wasn’t too attached to, but I was really upset when he decided to sell Girl in
Bed, which was a portrait of my school friend Caroline Blackwood, painted
by her husband at the time Lucian Freud. Lucian was also upset: he took
offence at Colin selling his whole collection of Freud paintings, marking the
end of their friendship.
By the time that the Peacock Ball was being organised in the mid-
eighties, Colin had sold anything hugely valuable and was running out of
options. But he said it was all worth it because the parties made Mustique
famous and therefore more profitable. I think from that point of view he
was proved right: it attracted the top rock stars, from David Bowie, who
bought Mandalay Villa, to Bryan Ferry, the lead singer of the band Roxy
Music – Jerry Hall’s boyfriend before she left him for Mick Jagger – and
Bryan Adams, as well as multitudes of celebrities from all over the world.
Not only did the celebrities come, but they made it more than just a place
where they sunbathed in private, some especially so: ever since Mick
Jagger bought his house, now thirty years ago, he has made an effort to be
part of the local community, giving money for a new school and joining in
with village life by playing cricket, which Patrick Lichfield also loved
doing.
I’d quite often go into Basil’s Bar and find Mick joining in with a live
singer performing an acoustic set. One New Year we organised a skit in
which Mick was the doctor and we told everybody he was looking for
people to play patients. Of course the whole community turned up, wanting
to be cast for the part, longing for him to examine them. David Bowie, too,
was a very charming man, immediately sitting my twins on his lap the first
Easter he was there, completely at ease with everybody as though we were
all old friends.
For a place so small, it certainly has exceeded the expectations I had
when I first set foot on the island. Amazing, really, because it still hasn’t got
all the mod-cons that other places have – there is a small supermarket but
nothing major, and there is no golf-course or marina and not a single
nightclub. I think the reason it’s so popular is that it has kept Colin’s
distinctive bohemian spirit and adopted it as its own.
Still today it attracts the same sort of people as it did all those years ago,
from the Royal Family to the social elite. The Duke and Duchess of
Cambridge take their children, the newest generation of Jaggers have grown
up there, and people from the fashion world are still drawn to it: model
sisters, the socialite granddaughters of Janie Stevens, Poppy and Cara
Delevingne; Tom Ford, who named one of his pink lipsticks ‘Mustique’;
and Tommy Hilfiger, who based a fashion campaign on Basil’s Bar, flying
Basil to New York to make his signature rum punch for the launch.
I am rather relieved there are no more fancy-dress parties to organise or
go to, and I will never again cover myself with gold paint. My favourite
thing about Mustique now was my favourite thing about it then: swimming.
Colin rarely came with me because he had had a fear of being out of his
depth ever since one of his Oxford friends had drowned. When he did
appear, he would often get very anxious and start yelling for me or the
children to come back, worried we were going out too far. He preferred to
stay in the shallows, eating mangoes with the children, satisfied that all the
sticky juice could be washed off.
But while most people came to Mustique for the flamboyant parties, I
liked waking up in the morning and walking down to the beach on my own.
It’s hard to beat those beaches: there are no big concrete hotels or car parks
or anything to detract from the beauty. The waves come over the coral
making the water frothy in the shallows, so it feels like swimming in
champagne. I’ve always loved the sea and for the twelve years Colin and I
ran Mustique as a cotton estate, I had the glorious beaches to myself. Just
me – no fancy dress, no theatrics, no rum punch. Just me and the sea –
absolute bliss.
CHAPTER TWELVE
A Royal Tour
Forever Young
BY 1988, Ayear and a half after Christopher’s accident, he still had a long
journey of recovery ahead of him. So many people rallied round to help him
– the support really poured in. But for Charlie and Henry, the opposite
happened.
Nowadays mental health, drug addiction and HIV/AIDS are talked
about more openly, albeit still being among the biggest taboos in any
society. But in the 1980s, there was no such openness when it came to
mental health or addiction and therefore no such acceptance. AIDS was still
the most feared disease in the world because it was so poorly understood.
After doctors had first linked it to gay men, they realised it could be passed
to babies by infected mothers. Links had then been made with needles and
blood. The more connections were made, the more people panicked,
worrying that it could be passed to another person as easily as a common
cold.
Fear born mainly out of lack of information resulted in many young
men with AIDS being abandoned by frightened families, leaving them to
die alone. Henry bravely decided to speak out when his HIV virus turned to
AIDS, hoping he could help break the stigma. I warned him, knowing that
he would be ostracised, but his mind was made up. He told the press,
conscious that it would be up to young men like him who actually had the
disease to bare all. The press lapped up his willingness because he was one
of the first aristocrats to contract AIDS and the first who was willing to
speak out, so they saw it as a big story.
Not surprisingly, Henry’s very open admission led some of our friends
to distance themselves from us, just too afraid to socialise with us.
Although it made everything more difficult for us as a family, I can quite
understand where they were coming from: people do what they think they
need to do in order to protect themselves and their children.
I was conscious of the possible risk too, worried for our other children,
but not wanting to shun Henry. Nothing was certain like it is today, and as
the doctors were discovering things all the time, I compromised. I bought
him a new set of towels that were a different colour from everybody else’s
so I could distinguish them, washing them separately. I also served him
food with his own plates, knives and forks, but I never distanced myself
from him. Now I know that doing this was unnecessary, but I didn’t at the
time and it felt like the safest thing to do.
Princess Margaret was one of the few people whose behaviour didn’t
change at all. Not only did she continue to see Colin and me, bringing her
children to Glen as she always had, but she also visited Henry when he was
in hospital, and kept a watchful eye open in case there was anything she
could do to help. I was incredibly grateful for her loyalty and attitude. It
made me feel stronger, and without my mother there, Princess Margaret
offered a similar strength that helped me cope.
The more ill Henry got, the more difficult it became, because he had to
keep going to hospital, but only certain hospitals would take AIDS patients.
Not only that, but because he was six foot eight, none of the beds were long
enough, so I’d put a table at the bottom of his bed to make it longer. Once,
when he was very ill, and was waiting at St Mary’s, Paddington, for a bed,
poor Henry was too ill to sit, so I sat on the floor in A and E as the
previously full room emptied at the sight of him. It was as though we were
lepers but the public’s reaction only made me more determined to support
my son. I sat there, cradling him, with his head on my lap for hours and
hours. This bore a horrible similarity to all the hours I had spent cradling
Christopher, but I drew strength from those dark days, wanting to do my
best for Henry as well and, above everything, wanting him to feel that he
wasn’t alone.
Before Princess Diana went to the London Lighthouse in Notting Hill –
the first centre and hospice made especially for AIDS patients, in 1989 with
a posse of photographers in tow – Princess Margaret had helped set it up,
officially opening it in 1988. She went on to become the patron of the
Terrence Higgins Trust, the UK’s leading sexual-health charity. She didn’t
hold hands and stroke the patients, like Princess Diana did, because she
wasn’t tactile in the same way, but she made them laugh and told them
stories.
The London Lighthouse opened just in time for Henry, who by then was
rapidly declining. He was covered with purple blotches and had no hair left,
due to Kaposi’s sarcoma, a type of skin cancer. That was the problem with
AIDS: the immune system became so weak that Henry was unable to fight
even a cold, and while he got skin cancer, other people succumbed to
pneumonia.
Characteristically, Henry took it all in his stride, always trying to stop
me worrying, even though we both knew he was going to die. He managed
to find peace through being a Buddhist, and when he’d been diagnosed in
1986, he had gone straight to Japan to a Buddhist monastery. I still have the
postcard he sent me in which he wrote: ‘I’m in the monastery, looking at
Mount Fujiyama, and if I die tomorrow, I won’t mind, because I’ve been to
Paradise – I can see Heaven.’ It was consoling that the religion made Henry
feel comforted and less afraid of death.
When Christmas 1989 came, he desperately wanted to come home for
the day, but I was worried his appearance might upset his son, Euan, who
was still a toddler. The people at the London Lighthouse were fantastic and
told me not to worry when I raised my concern. Having supported many
patients in Henry’s condition, they had a special team of make-up artists for
this very reason. Henry came home wearing a turquoise hat and a lot of
foundation. Too weak to stand or even really talk, he lay in the drawing
room and we all had our Christmas lunch on trays. Euan opened his
presents around him and kept saying, ‘Daddy, come and play with me,’ and
Henry would reply, ‘Daddy’s very tired. You bring your toy to me.’ Which
Euan did. It was as lovely as it could have been.
May, not knowing what to give her brother as a present, decided on a
fun cuddly toy – a bright green frog with a red and white striped night hat,
which Henry loved, putting on the hat as he lay surrounded by us all. He
had become really close to the twins: for sixth form, they had made the joint
decision to go to different schools in order to gain some independence from
each other, but they found it very difficult. Henry made an effort to support
both of them, driving down to their schools to take them on days out. How
we all got through Christmas Day I don’t know. It was heartbreaking, but I
put on a brave face, wanting to make it as ordinary as possible.
After Christmas Day, Henry’s condition declined, and he was moved to
St Mary’s, Paddington, which had just opened a special wing for AIDS
patients. Like all of the other very ill young men, Henry was moved into a
room of his own. Most visitors would sit quietly with their loved one in
private, but Henry had asked to be surrounded by a couple of dozen of his
Buddhist friends. I found the visits increasingly difficult because each time
I went I had to clamber through a crowd of people chanting: they were so
involved in their trance that they were unaware of me. In his last weeks, I
was never alone with Henry.
On the final visit, I was opening the door, preparing to wade through the
Buddhists, when a nurse grabbed me firmly by the elbow, stopping me
entering. She said, ‘Lady Glenconner, will you come with me?’ My heart
sank. There was a special room where people went to grieve, and she was
leading me there. I knew what was coming but even knowing did nothing to
cushion the blow. She told me gently, ‘Henry has just died.’
I don’t know what I felt – a feeling of agony I can’t put into words. Not
only had my son just died, but I had missed saying goodbye to him by
minutes.
I also felt pure anger. Anger that he had been so careless. I had warned
him so many times to be careful but he just hadn’t listened. Henry died
eighteen months after he was diagnosed in January 1989. He was only
twenty-nine.
The whole family was devastated. Charlie, who had always been jealous
of Henry and had not been on good terms with him for a few years, had
made up with him just before he died and now was kicking himself for past
failings. I remember sitting in the kitchen at Hill Lodge with the twins
while Charlie cried his eyes out. I’d never seen him cry like that and soon I
was also comforting the twins, who had dissolved into tears too. They had
only just turned eighteen and, on the cusp of developing an adult friendship
with Henry, were heartbroken that they would never get the chance.
No one knew how to comfort me and the family, although both Princess
Margaret and Princess Diana had eased the shame of AIDS through
associating themselves with it and also did a lot for individual men and their
families. When Princess Diana heard that Henry had died, she made an
effort to comfort me personally by writing a letter of condolence. She had
sat with and spoken to Henry at his bedside shortly before he died. She’d
been there filming some of her meetings with the young patients on the
ward to raise awareness. At the end of the filming, she had asked the nurses
if there were any patients too ill to be there. When the nurses said there
were two, Princess Diana visited both of them on her own, without the film
crew. One of them was Henry.
‘Oh, Ma’am,’ he had said to her, smiling broadly, ‘we’ve got something
in common.’ Princess Diana had looked surprised and asked him what it
was. ‘Well,’ came Henry’s reply, ‘Barbara Barnes was my nanny before she
came to look after Prince William and Prince Harry.’
In the letter she wrote she said it had been lovely to meet Henry, even
though under sad circumstances, and said she wanted to tell me how brave
she thought he was. She wasn’t afraid to confront the situation head-on,
which was a complete contrast to a lot of people we knew, who just simply
didn’t know what to say at all. Normally I found it hard to relate to
somebody so openly emotional, so different from the mould I was used to,
but when it came to dealing with Henry’s death, she got it right.
Her acknowledgement of his bravery made me feel proud of him, which
was a comfort, especially when I was faced with so many other people
distancing themselves from us, then having to deal with the press, who
behaved like animals. Having followed his story, they swarmed to the house
after his death: Henry had become headline news. While he had wanted his
story to be shared in the hope it would have a positive impact, for us in the
direct aftermath, the reality was extremely difficult to deal with.
Every morning, a newspaper was posted through the door with Henry’s
photo and huge, normally very blunt, headlines. And the press kept coming,
the police seemingly unable to stop them, as they filled the street, ringing
the doorbell all day and all night, stooping to an all-time low of hiding in
the dustbins outside Euan’s nursery school.
Wanting to protect Euan, we asked the local clergyman to come around
wearing his cassock so that he could hide Euan under it and get him out of
the house. It worked, the press just assuming a member of the clergy had
come to comfort us, not realising Euan was being smuggled away from
them. Instead of leaving us to grieve in private, the press hounded us in our
family’s darkest hour.
Determined not to let their behaviour affect me, and desperately trying
to hold everything together for the sake of the other children, I shook it off
and busied myself with the funeral arrangements. So, while members of the
press were jumping out of dustbins and knocking at the windows and doors,
I was trying to make sure Henry’s last wishes were carried out. Because he
was so tall, his coffin was very big, and when it came to the funeral, I
couldn’t help but emit a tiny smile because, as is Buddhist custom, it was
covered with pineapples and other tropical fruit so it looked like a giant
fruit salad as it came into the crematorium.
The months after Henry’s death were very difficult. No one else could
relate to what I was going through; no one seemed to know how to deal
with me or with what had happened. Colin found it difficult, returning to
Mustique, away from the press, and I went to Norfolk to get away from it
all. When I went to the shops, the people who would normally say hello and
spark up a conversation would see me and scurry away. I think they were
terrified of saying the wrong thing or making me burst into tears. It was as
though everybody was so scared of death, and AIDS was such a feared and
reviled illness, they pretended it hadn’t happened. I was from a generation
that didn’t have endless heart-to-hearts, we didn’t share our emotions, and
for the sake of the other children, I thought it was best to put on a strong
front, get on with life and not dwell. Apart from at the funeral I don’t think
anybody saw me cry. Instead I went to church and prayed. After all, what
else could I do? Nothing was going to bring Henry back.
My close friend Margaret Vyner understood I needed support and,
knowing how devoted Henry was to Buddhism, she took me out to India to
stay with Mitch Crites, our mutual friend who had got Colin out of trouble
when he’d started a fight with an Indian shopkeeper several years before. I
was absolutely exhausted and didn’t want to go but Mitch reassured me,
telling me how healing India was. He told me, ‘Death is a part of daily life
and it isn’t uncommon to see a body being cremated on a funeral pyre
floating off on the river. The culture embraces death: they talk about it and
they see it.’
I was so grateful to Margaret and Mitch because as soon as I arrived I
knew it was the right decision – everything Mitch had said was true, and I
felt a sense of relief straight away. They took me along to different temples:
to Jain temples, which looked like they’d been made out of lace, and we
watched the monks in devotion, wearing nothing but a feather fan over their
groins. The nuns wore white garments, their bodies bundled up, so they
looked like huge white meringues.
We went into one of these temples and found a family mourning a
family member who had died, in the middle of a puja, a Hindu form of
worship. They were bunched together, clapping and chanting, moving in
rhythmic unison. Mitch went up to them and said, ‘I’ve got a lady with me
whose son has just died. He was a Buddhist. Do you mind if she watches
you?’
‘No, no, she can’t watch, she must join in!’ they said, opening their
arms to me. I felt a huge sense of release when I was swept up in their puja,
as they burned incense and chanted.
We carried on visiting more temples but I started to get worried: in
Buddhism, it is believed that when the deceased has reached a certain level
in their journey to nirvana, there has to be a Buddhist monk chanting a
prayer at the precise time in this journey to help the person reach the next
level. The process is the same for everyone and therefore, on a set day and
time, a few weeks after the death, this prayer has to happen.
On that particular day, we were driving and hadn’t found anywhere with
monks to chant the prayer. I knew the time slot was a slim one, so I began
to get anxious on behalf of Henry. We were in the middle of nowhere,
driving down a long road in the desert, when Mitch said to me, ‘Don’t
worry. I am absolutely certain we will find a monk.’
I didn’t know why Mitch was so sure, since there was nothing but
camels and palm trees, but then we saw a lone figure on the road. Mitch
said, ‘I think this is what we’ve been waiting for,’ and stopped the car.
Mitch, who spoke Hindi, explained and the monk smiled and took my
hands at once, starting the puja for Henry. I couldn’t help but feel it was a
sign that this monk, the only person we had passed on the whole journey,
was there for me, for Henry, and that Henry was all right. He was at peace.
With that, I felt so exhausted I almost collapsed. I think it was the grief,
followed by an enormous flood of relief. I got back into the car and slept for
hours. It was the most important trip of my life, which is why I think I
found it so draining and yet, at the same time, I found this amazing strength.
The strength has stayed with me and still makes me feel more able to cope
when I think about Henry.
As the eighties came to an end, my life had changed considerably. Ever
since Henry’s diagnosis, swiftly followed by Christopher’s accident, I had
revaluated my priorities and focused on being a mother, then a wife, staying
in England to be with Christopher far more than being with Colin.
Christopher was walking again, his recovery astounding. The first
proper outing he had was three years after the accident when we went to a
ball at Holkham. He wore black tie with an enormous smile, and I kept
looking at him in disbelief, although the reality was that for most of the
evening he leant on me. I didn’t mind in the slightest, but because he is very
tall and very heavy, I did wonder whether we would both suddenly find
ourselves in a pile on the floor. In the end it took five years for Christopher
to recover as much as he was going to.
During that time Mustique had changed too. The hedonistic carefree
days of the seventies and eighties had been so successful that they had
changed the island. Colin had sold more shares and slowly but surely had
less and less say in the decisions of how Mustique was run. It was no longer
possible for him to do it his way. Having clashed with so many people over
his rigid opinions and the extreme way in which he conveyed them, Colin
had left Mustique in 1987, selling The Great House to the heiress Christina
Onassis’s third husband, former KGB agent Sergei Kauzov.
Moving to St Lucia, he had invested in an undeveloped 480-acre estate
that Henry had found before he died. Selling half of the land to developers,
who built the Jalousie Plantation Resort, he kept the other half for himself,
coming up with all sorts of ideas, wanting to create somewhere else as
spectacular as Mustique.
As Henry had suspected he would, Colin fell in love with the place,
which was between the pair of volcanic spires known as the Pitons, with
land sloping to the sea, building the third and final Great House.
Unfortunately, it was the least ‘great’ of them all. Although it had a vast
main room on the top floor, with a domed roof, which was spectacular, the
bedrooms were on the ground floor and were very gloomy. With the water
tank on the terrace over the bedrooms, I was always nervous that it would
burst above my head and I’d be drowned while asleep. I was never quite so
connected to St Lucia because, over the years, Mustique had come to feel
like home.
The twins, by then in their late teens, took after their father, loving the
lifestyle the West Indies offered, as did Christopher, who craved
independence, so Colin came up with a brilliant idea. Finding a cottage in
Soufrière on St Lucia, he invited Christopher to move out there. Thrilled by
his father’s plan and desperate to start a new life, and have a bit more fun,
he left England at once.
Colin’s plan was a huge success. Christopher loved the set-up, never
realising that Colin had hired two old ladies who lived next to the cottage
Christopher was occupying, to keep an eye on him. He just thought they
cooked for him and did his laundry, but in fact they followed him at a
distance in case he fell over and made sure he had got into bed all right. It
was the perfect compromise and meant I was hugely reassured. It was
amazing to think he was able to live like that after all that he’d been
through.
A state of normality returned and, as time progressed, the sadness of
losing Henry became, very slowly, easier to bear. Although we had lost
Henry, Charlie had managed, amazingly, to stay free from heroin and,
although on prescribed methadone, was able to live a much more normal
existence. The candle-making couple, Mr and Mrs Parsons, had given
Charlie a new focus – the long and the short of it was that Charlie and Mrs
Parsons, Sheilagh, had fallen in love.
We were all thrilled when, after her divorce in 1993, Charlie and
Sheilagh got married in a London register office. Charlie, who took after
Colin in his flamboyant dress sense, wore Tennant tartan trews and a
leopard waistcoat, and drove to and from the ceremony in a bright pink
Cadillac, past Buckingham Palace on the way home. They were quite a
spectacle, especially when the traffic police assumed they were going to one
of the Queen’s garden parties. Corralled into a queue, Colin, absolutely
furious, had to get out and explain, leaving the garden-party guests in their
tea-dresses and suits with open mouths at the extraordinary car and its
occupants.
The wedding reception was held at our house and we all danced reels to
a ceilidh band. I just hoped that Charlie had many happy years in front of
him and that maybe he would be okay. When Cody, their son, was born in
1994, everyone was thrilled. Although Charlie had been disinherited and
Henry’s son Euan would inherit Glen, Cody would inherit the barony, as
well as the Caribbean assets.
For Charlie, the birth of his son changed his outlook on life entirely.
Two days after Cody was born, he said to me, ‘I have never in my life felt
so happy, and I feel like I have suddenly realised what life is about.’ To hear
those words coming from Charlie was momentous. For years, I had never
dared hope that he would get himself out of addiction, let alone become a
happily married man and a father of a wonderful son. No one had, least of
all Charlie. This was all down to Sheilagh, who had managed to keep
Charlie on the right path.
But although he had turned his life around, it was too late. Charlie’s
happiness was to be short-lived because, when Cody was still a toddler,
Charlie became ill and was diagnosed with hepatitis C, a direct result of the
years of heroin addiction. All the family were worried but Charlie played it
down. Sheilagh conveyed that it would be a rocky few months and that the
doctors had been unsure whether he would stabilise, although as time went
on, it looked increasingly unlikely.
When Amy rang him up a few weeks later to see how he was doing, he
dismissed it completely, doing the little laugh he always did, assuring his
sister that she needn’t come all the way up to Scotland to see him. Colin,
used to Charlie being up and down over the years, didn’t come back from
the West Indies so I went on my own and spent the weekend with Charlie,
Sheilagh and Cody.
We had a really lovely time feeding the ducks in Edinburgh and walking
round the garden at Holyrood, but I was in two minds about leaving, unsure
exactly how unwell Charlie was. When I discussed with Sheilagh what I
should do, she reassured me, saying Charlie might go on for a long time and
I should carry on living my life. When I explained I was supposed to be
going to Morocco on holiday with Zannah and Nicky Johnston, she said
how guilty Charlie would feel if I cancelled my plans, so I went.
None of us realised how quickly Charlie would deteriorate. Only a few
days later, while I was in Morocco, I got the devastating phone call from
Sheilagh telling me Charlie had died.
Once again, the family descended into grieving. Colin was riddled with
guilt, having become less and less sympathetic to Charlie over the years.
Christopher was distraught and May, even now, is full of regret for having
cut their last phone conversation short and postponing a visit to see him that
she and Amy had arranged.
As a mother, I hadn’t thought there could be anything worse than
burying one son until I was in the churchyard again, burying another. I’ve
never seen Colin cry the way he cried at Charlie’s funeral. It reminded me
of Charlie’s reaction when Henry died.
There were so many what-ifs with Charlie. Looking back, I question
and doubt the choices we made: the things we noticed developing in his
childhood but chose not to delve into or were unable to solve, the things we
thought would be fixed by sending him away to hospitals, clinics and, later,
to rehab. But even with the greatest help in the world, he was such a free
spirit with such presence that I don’t know if we’d ever have been able to
stop him going down the route he chose.
Once again, when we needed privacy the most, the press was intrusive,
this time because of their obsession with the old myth about ‘the Tennant
Curse’, which had been entirely made up but revolved around the notion
that family members died before their time in various dramatic ways. Now
that two sons in the family had died young, the ‘Tennant Curse’ played into
the reporters’ hands perfectly, only adding to our anguish.
On the day of the funeral, the press were surrounding the church and
appearing over the graves. There we were, mourning our sweet Charlie,
only to have them banging on the door of the church, wanting to get their
story. I suppose by then we had got used to them behaving so badly, but I
still can’t think of anything much lower than gate-crashing a funeral.
Over time, my stress levels began to lower, the sorrow eased, life turned
a corner, but it was never the same again. To this day my heart almost stops
whenever the telephone rings too late at night. I don’t know what I would
do with another death in the family. The twins had always been so proud of
being a big family and having three older brothers, but as Christopher has
had to remind us all numerous times, ‘Although they’re gone, the love
continues.’
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
BY THE MILLENNIUM, Colin had spent most of the previous forty years in the
West Indies, returning to England less and less.
In 1983, when his father died, and he inherited the title 3rd Baron
Glenconner, he became a member of the House of Lords, taking the Liberal
whip, staying true to his family’s Liberal roots. Over the years, he used his
peerage to try to support the Caribbean and its people, seeking to cross
boundaries, achieve equality and improve living standards. In 1992, he gave
his maiden speech in the House and, without notes, started talking about the
need to support the viable crops traditionally grown in the Caribbean.
Having seen sugar cane swapped for sugar beet and the cotton trade become
extinct – he pointed out that the clothes he was wearing were made from the
last of the Sea Island cotton grown on Mustique – he stressed the need to
support the dwindling banana trade. He was articulate and charismatic, and
while the Chamber had been empty when he started, by the end it was
packed. I was proud to be his wife.
When Colin was visiting England, shortly after he moved permanently
to St Lucia in the early nineties, he saw an advertisement for an elephant for
sale at Dublin Zoo and spontaneously bought it, organising its shipment to
St Lucia at once. ‘What shall we call the elephant?’ he asked the twins, as
he happened to be in the car with them on another of his trips, this time to
Brighton Pavilion. Amy happened to look out of the window as the car
passed a BUPA medical centre. Seeing ‘BUPA’ and thinking it sounded like
the trumpeting noise an elephant makes, she said, ‘What about “Boopa”,
Dad?’
‘Brilliant!’ Colin replied.
Colin and I went back to St Lucia in time for Boopa’s arrival, which
was a big event because she was the first elephant to come to the Caribbean.
Everybody flocked to the beach when she arrived on a ship importing
bricks, and I watched as she got off, interested in her new surroundings, not
startled by the huge crowd of people who had flocked excitedly to the port.
Many of the young men on the island wanted to be her keeper and were
bustling and waving to try to get Colin’s attention as he surveyed the crowd.
Among them, he saw a boy with very big ears and picked him on the spot.
‘Boopa will feel very much at home with you,’ he said. The boy was
delighted, grinning from ear to ear.
The boy’s name was Kent. He was very friendly, and immediately
bonded with Boopa, who settled in well, enjoying being allowed to walk
free, making her big personality known when she started helping the
fishermen by dragging the little fishing boats in with her trunk.
At night she was put into a wooden outhouse to keep her out of harm’s
way. Knowing that elephants need company, Colin tried to get another. He
went to Africa with Christopher and the twins to buy a pair, which were
shipped to St Lucia, only to be denied entry. Having allowed Boopa ashore,
officials had decided one elephant was enough, so the new elephants made
their way back to Africa, leaving Boopa still in need of a friend. In the end
we settled for pigs and, although it might sound like an unlikely
combination, Boopa bonded with them instantly.
The twins delighted in having a pet elephant, riding her sometimes with
Colin, and spent a great deal of time following her about. I was very fond of
her too. Suddenly there she would be, swinging her trunk through the
kitchen window, waiting for me to give her a banana.
One day, when Colin was having another of his birthday parties, this
time on a yacht called Sea Star, someone killed one of Boopa’s pig friends
for its meat. When Colin heard about this, he knew the danger Boopa might
have put herself in, because she was aggressively protective of the pigs. He
went ashore to find the culprit, hoping Boopa’s instincts hadn’t backfired on
her. The next thing I saw from the boat was a man running for his life along
the beach, with Colin chasing after him, his stick in the air. It was like a
Charlie Chaplin silent film. The man got away and Colin’s temper cooled
once he realised Boopa hadn’t come to any harm.
Colin made quite an impression on St Lucia: this tall Englishman, with
his flamboyant mood swings, who owned an elephant and strode around in
his signature white kurtas and white pyjama trousers. Having worn all sorts
of different, normally brightly coloured outfits, his fashion had changed
after my friend Margaret Vyner and I returned from a holiday in India.
Margaret and I had tried on all the beautiful women’s clothes and decided
they looked dreadful on us, so had kitted ourselves out with the men’s
things. When Colin saw us, his arms shot up and he said, ‘Exactly what I
want! Brilliant!’ And before we knew it, he had gone off to India to get a
whole new wardrobe of clothes he’d wear for the rest of his life.
As he settled into his new ventures on St Lucia, the children visited him
regularly, becoming closer to him as they grew up. In the late nineties Amy,
who was in her twenties, decided to go and live with Colin, who was
thrilled by the decision, saying to me, ‘It’s the right time for Amy. She
needs me but, more importantly, I need her!’
They had a strong relationship. Although he wasn’t tactile, he would
show his affection in subtle ways: if Amy was dressed up for something,
she would ask him, ‘Do I look all right?’ And he would invariably tweak
something or add something to her outfit before giving her the nod of
approval. He was proud of her skills as a specialist painter and gilder,
especially when she was commissioned to restore an Indian temple, and
admired her for being down to earth and easygoing. Like him, she enjoyed
engaging with the local community, often going off to cock fights with Kent
in an effort to fit in.
They also had the same quick wit. When Colin had bought a restaurant
in the middle of the two volcanic mountains known as the Pitons he asked
Amy, ‘What shall we call it?’
Without hesitation, she replied, ‘Bang Between the Pitons?’
‘Brilliant!’ Colin exclaimed, delighted by the clever name.
Colin had thrown a huge launch party for Bang Between the Pitons,
which Princess Margaret had officially opened, and she and May adorned
the cover of Hello! magazine.
Over the years, Amy came and went, as I did, and Colin became more
and more reliant on Kent for pretty much everything. Kent devoted his life
to Colin, who in return was generous, giving him two hotels and paying him
well. Occasionally, Kent would leave Colin for a few hours, having to get
away to do some shopping or something for himself, and Colin would go
berserk with anxiety. Although he had improved since the early days of our
marriage, when he used to keep me awake all night, lying in a foetal
position on the floor, crying, he still was very highly strung.
On one particular occasion, Colin became hysterical under the most
embarrassing circumstances: he had taken me and Kent to Italy and
organised an evening in Verona to see Nabucco, one of my favourite operas.
I was really touched by this because while I love the opera Colin didn’t
particularly enjoy it.
After a difficult drive there, with Colin flipping a few times, convinced
we were going the wrong way, Kent, who was mad about football, went off
to watch a match on television instead.
We arrived at our seats in the arena, which unfortunately were very
uncomfortable, and Colin quickly declared, ‘Well, I’m going to leave at
half-time. I can’t possibly sit on these seats.’
Having been so excited about the evening, I was determined to have a
good night so I went off to see if we could get slightly more comfortable
seats. After pleading that Colin was unwell, we were very kindly moved to
much better seats nearer the front, so I could finally settle down, next to
Colin, and anticipate a marvellous evening. It was going well until halfway
through the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves in the opera’s third act when, to
my absolute horror, Colin started to wail and scream beside me. ‘Colin,
what is the matter?’ I asked.
‘I wish Kent was here,’ he wailed.
‘Honestly, I don’t think Kent would enjoy it, but I am here.’
But he continued to wail, ‘No, no, I want Kent!’
By this time, more and more of the audience were turning their heads in
our direction. Seeing the rug over Colin’s knees, I grabbed it and threw it
over his head, hoping it would shut him up. To my amazement, he didn’t
tear it off and, with his wails now considerably muffled, the audience turned
their attention back to the stage. Shrinking into my seat, I hoped the saga
was over, but the worst embarrassment was yet to come. When the chorus
finally ended, the conductor turned to the audience and announced, ‘Under
the circumstances, I think we will have to have that again.’
I was utterly mortified as the chorus began again. My only solace was
that the rug had finally done the trick and Colin had calmed down –
although perhaps it would have been better if he had left at the interval.
For all of our married life, Colin felt he needed somebody on hand all
the time, to solve problems and calm him down. I had been that somebody
for decades, but after Christopher’s accident, my priorities changed and
Kent replaced me. I just wasn’t prepared to spend every minute of the day
doing things for Colin any more. It was a job, a paid job now: I no longer
felt it was my job as his wife.
Instead of looking after Colin, I stayed in England so I was not too far
from Christopher and was delighted when he fell in love. Once he had
moved back to London, still with terrible balance, he adopted a clever ploy
of asking to be assisted over the zebra crossing near his house by passers-
by. He would wait until a pretty girl came along and ask to borrow her for a
moment, so was rather disappointed when a much older woman
volunteered. Reluctantly, Christopher crossed the road and the woman
struck up a conversation, asking where he was going. When Christopher
answered, the woman told him that her daughter lived right next to him and
promptly introduced them. Her daughter, Anastasia, a half-Greek highly
intelligent lawyer, fell in love with Christopher and they got married,
having two beautiful daughters, Bella and Demetria.
But after being happily married for a time and raising a family, the
marriage had started to fail, and one day Christopher rang me up and said,
‘Anastasia’s got fed up with me and told me to leave. Can I come and stay
with you?’ So he came to stay in my farmhouse in Norfolk, neither of us
knowing how long he would be there, wondering if Anastasia would change
her mind or whether their marriage was over.
Because my house is in a small village and walking long distances can
be hard for Christopher, I got him a tricycle so he could get around. It was a
strange image seeing a grown man cycling off down the country lane on a
trike, but it meant he could get to the pub easily so he didn’t care what he
looked like. Over the years, he had become completely at ease with how he
was and took the attitude that if someone was going to give him a hard time
about it, they weren’t worth knowing.
I was worried in case he fell and couldn’t get up, but didn’t want to be
an overbearing mother of a middle-aged son, so I would just say, ‘Do come
back by half past eleven or give me a ring so I know you’re all right.’
One night half past eleven came and went and there was no sign of him.
My mind started darting around, worried he had had an accident, imagining
him stuck in the middle of the road or in the ditch, unable to get up. I got
out of bed, put a coat over my nightie and drove to the pub. When I saw his
tricycle outside I was furious, realising he must have just forgotten to phone
me. I stormed in and started yelling at him: ‘How dare you? What do you
think you’re doing? You had me so worried!’ Shocked at my entrance, he
didn’t have time to respond to my wrath as I dragged him out of the pub.
The next day when I had calmed down, he said, ‘I’m sorry I didn’t call
you. I met the most brilliant woman.’
‘But what about Anastasia and the children?’ I said.
The truth was that, although they had loved each other, their lives were
too imbalanced, too unequal. They decided to divorce, but amicably, and he
stayed a big part of their daughters’ lives. As for the brilliant woman he’d
met in the pub – he married her. Although I had been sad his first marriage
hadn’t worked out, both Colin and I were terribly glad he’d met someone
else who clearly adored him. Johanna became part of the family and
Christopher was thrilled that she got on so well with both Colin and me. He
settled down for good, conveying his absolute joy at being able to reassure
both of us that we needn’t worry about him because he had Johanna, who
would always be there to take care of him.
Suddenly, in my mid-seventies, I found myself completely independent.
With Kent looking after Colin’s every need and Johanna supporting
Christopher, the twins grown-up, and my days as a Lady in Waiting sadly
gone, I could finally relax. I had a real love of travel so I embarked on
spontaneous trips all over the world with friends, some of whom were
almost as eccentric as Colin.
One of them, Mary Anna Marten, was a remarkable lady I’d known for
years who sadly died in 2010. She would ring me out of the blue and ask if
I wanted to go on holiday. The strangest trip we ever took was to Russia.
Before we left, Mary Anna, who had a substantial figure, said, ‘The food is
simply disgusting in Russia. I’ve ordered a leg of Parma ham from Harrods
to be delivered to you. We’ll split the cost. One can always eat Parma ham,
any time of the day or night.’
Two days before we were due to leave, a Harrods van trundled up. The
delivery man rang the bell and put this enormous parcel into my arms. It
weighed an absolute ton. I don’t quite know how we got it through Customs
but we lugged it with us as we travelled to where we were staying in
Moscow. The room was boiling and tiny, so I decided to put the leg of ham
on the windowsill.
In the middle of the night, we woke up to the most dreadful noise of
whirring and beating wings. Opening the curtain, I was greeted by every
single bird in Moscow, busy devouring our Parma ham. The next day we
cut off the bits that had not been savaged, took it with us and went off to a
park, where Mary Anna had arranged to meet someone. I discovered she
was meeting a hit man, which, of course, horrified me. She had only told
me there was an ulterior motive for the trip when we were already on our
way.
Able to speak a bit of Russian, and convinced that her daughter had
inadvertently married a Russian spy, Mary Anna had arranged to talk to a
man to discuss ‘getting rid’ of her son-in-law. I sat nervously on one park
bench, while she sat with this shifty-looking man a few benches along, as I
wondered whether we would be arrested. When she came back, I said,
‘Well, what happened? Have you hired a hit man?’
Mary Anna replied, ‘Actually, I don’t think it’s going to work quite as I
hoped. There are one or two difficulties.’
I was unbelievably relieved when she gave up on the idea and even
more relieved when we left Moscow altogether. We flew south to
Samarkand, where Mary Anna wore brightly coloured kaftans and a great
deal of jewellery. People would gather round her wherever she went and we
eventually realised that everybody thought she was an incarnation of
Catherine the Great. People tried to touch her, thinking she might bring
them luck, and more people would follow suit, creating a stir. I was used to
people behaving in this manner when I had been with Princess Margaret,
although it wasn’t quite the same, but as Mary Anna walked, I followed,
brushing the arms away from her as she sailed along with all these people.
She was always full of surprises. On the way home it transpired that a
lot of people on the plane had gippy tummies. Mary Anna had just the
solution. Out of her bag came a bottle of medicine no longer available over
the counter called Dr J. Collis Brown’s Mixture, which contains morphine,
and she went up and down the aisle dispensing spoonfuls of it. By the end
of the flight everybody was knocked out. I said to her, ‘That was fortunate.
Do you always have that in your bag?’
‘Yes, darling, I do,’ she said. ‘You never know when you might need it.’
That was typical of Mary Anna. A trip with her was never short of
incident – I might have had lots of dramatic things happen to me, but I had
never considered hiring a hit man.
When I wasn’t off travelling the world with friends, I spent more and
more time in Norfolk, finding a good balance between excitement and a
more peaceful existence. I was delighted when, in 2005, May got engaged
to Anton Creasy, a friend she and Amy had both known for years.
Eddy, the Earl of Leicester, very kindly insisted that the wedding should
take place at St Withburga’s, with the reception in the state rooms at
Holkham. I was really touched by this because Holkham was such a part of
us all, and since I had got married there in 1956 I was so glad that my own
daughter was able to do the same.
I helped with the flowers, just like my mother had done for me, and
May wore my tiara and looked absolutely beautiful. Eddy gave a speech,
and then Colin stood up and, without having prepared anything formal,
spoke eloquently and affectionately, injecting his characteristic enthusiasm,
ending the speech perfectly with a humorous toast.
Shortly after they got married, May and Anton decided to move out to
St Lucia to be with Colin because by then Amy had decided to continue her
adventures, going off to the Dominican Republic. Unfortunately, when May
and Anton tried to help Colin run his businesses (not only Bang Between
the Pitons, but also a hotel), he found it hard to give the reins to Anton.
After several clashes, May and Anton decided to return to their life in
England.
In his seventies, Colin still had the same tendency to lose his rag in a
spectacular fashion. One day he was supposed to meet the minister of
tourism at a restaurant on the cliff edge in St Lucia, but the minister didn’t
appear. Colin waited and waited, and eventually the cook came out and said
that the kitchen would close after five more minutes. Colin completely lost
it and went the whole way along the cliff edge, chucking one table after
another into the sea. Then he drove straight to the airport, arrived in London
without any luggage or his keys, and knocked on the door of our house. I
hadn’t been expecting him and when I opened the front door he was
covered with what I thought was blood.
‘Colin, what’s happened? Are you all right?’ I exclaimed, imagining
he’d been in the most terrible accident.
‘Anne,’ he replied crossly. ‘It’s not blood, it’s ketchup.’
When he told me that the ketchup had spilt all over him as he had
picked up the tables and thrown them off the cliff, I couldn’t help but laugh,
which didn’t go down well but by then we had been married for over fifty
years and his short fuse no longer alarmed me.
Although Colin’s moods were often extreme, especially from an English
point of view, out in the West Indies people didn’t seem so affected by
them. They simply accepted his blend of bad temper and incredible
generosity.
Colin had always had protégés, trying to advance the careers of young
men, and Kent became Colin’s last major ‘project’ in the belief that, one
day, he could run things for him. The only problem was that Kent was
illiterate. Thinking he would be able to solve this, Colin sent Kent to
London to an adult literacy centre. After a few months, Colin got a phone
call. ‘I very seldom fail,’ said the director, ‘but I have with Kent. I’m
sending him back to St Lucia.’
Colin kept me regularly updated with everything that was going on,
talking to me on the telephone for hours when we weren’t together, telling
me all about his successes and failures when we were apart. One day in late
2009 he rang me up and asked me if I was sitting down. ‘What is it, Colin?’
I asked, dreading whatever he was about to say.
‘Marvellous news!’ he said. ‘I’ve got a new son.’
‘What are you talking about?’ I said, aghast.
‘A letter came from out of the blue and now I’ve met him: somebody
called Josh Bowler. I had a one-night stand with his mother before we were
married. He’s been married three times so I have four new grandsons,’
Colin continued, sounding delighted.
He always got frightfully overexcited about everything, but it never
lasted very long. I tried to be suitably enthusiastic and gave a house party at
Glen for Josh and his family, introducing him to everybody to make him
feel welcome. Colin opened his arms to him, taking him back to St Lucia
with him to show his new son the island he so loved.
Within about three days, he was on the telephone again. ‘I can’t stand it
any longer, Anne!’ he shouted, as if he thought I couldn’t hear him all the
way from St Lucia.
I wasn’t surprised, and found it rather difficult myself that Josh had
turned up after all that time.
By then Colin had prostate cancer but he was adamant that nobody
should find out. He always had the idea that people didn’t want to buy land
or do business with someone who looked ill or old. So, he had two face lifts
and kept his illness to himself, at first not even telling me.
I’d suspected he was ill for a while because he had lost so much weight,
but he didn’t confirm anything until he took a turn for the worse in the
summer of 2010, while in Trinidad with Charlie’s widow Sheilagh and their
son, Cody, in search of a rare bat. Sheilagh called me and I went straight out
to St Lucia to look after him and stayed for several weeks. As he recovered
slowly, we enjoyed our time together. I was glad to be looking after him and
he was relaxed and loving.
With commitments in Norfolk, I went home with the intention of
coming back to St Lucia a week or so later with Amy, who was planning to
live there permanently.
On 27 August 2010, three days after I’d left him, Colin died. When he
had called out in the night to Kent, Kent had driven him to hospital but
Colin then had a massive heart attack and was dead by the time they got
there. Kent was inconsolable when he rang to tell me.
I was left completely shocked, finding the news hard to comprehend.
Only a few nights before we had spent the evening recalling our lives
together, and Colin had been uncharacteristically loving, talking about how
he thought we had been a good team. ‘It wasn’t all bad, was it?’ he had
asked me before I left him for the last time, as though he was trying to make
amends for the harder times we had gone through.
As I flew straight back to St Lucia to organise the funeral, I found it
hard to imagine a world without him. Colin was a uniquely difficult and
brilliant man in equal measure. But somehow, despite his endless affairs
and histrionics, there was an overriding loyalty, a friendship that bound us
together, no matter what. He was right: we had made a good team and I
knew I would miss him terribly.
Christopher and the twins were devastated and it was particularly hard
for Amy. The last time she had seen Colin, he had said goodbye to her
before getting into a taxi, only to stop the vehicle and get out to give her
another hug. Perhaps he had had a premonition, especially considering it
was very unlike Colin to be tactile, but, of course, Amy hadn’t known it
would be the last goodbye. Not only had she just lost her father, but she had
also just lost her future. Instead of flying to St Lucia to start her new life,
she was flying there to attend her father’s funeral.
May, too, was heartbroken. She had often been on the receiving end of
his impatience, but their relationship had improved, and their last meeting,
in the Portobello Hotel, had been a huge success, Colin remarking how
much he had loved spending time with her.
Christopher had had perhaps the easiest relationship with his father,
whom he described as a ‘demigod’, so was devastated but, once again, he
rallied round, supporting the rest of us, reminding us that although Colin
was gone the love would continue, just like he had done when Henry and
Charlie had died.
All I could think about was when we had all been together as a family
nine months to the day before Colin had died, staying with my friend
Josephine Loewenstein. It had been Josephine’s idea to commission a statue
and she had arranged for a huge bronze to be made by the sculptor Philip
Jackson of Colin in his signature clothes, hat and cane. It was unveiled on
Mustique in recognition of all Colin had done for the island. Colin was
thrilled, and afterwards we all went to the lagoon and sat on the beach in a
line with our legs stretched out, our toes in the water. And now, less than a
year after that happy day, and less than a week after I had seen him, I was
back to bid my final goodbye.
The funeral was a spectacular St Lucian affair, far removed from the
traditional English services that I was used to. Colin would have enjoyed it.
There wasn’t a hint of black anywhere. Inside the big white church, the
atmosphere was distinctly Caribbean. There was a carnival atmosphere and
the whole thing was redolent of Colin’s endless parties. He had always
loved grand entrances and the funeral was his big exit. It had begun with his
lying in state in The Great House a few days before, after he was moved
from the Lazarus Funeral Home, and now he arrived at the church in a
beaten-up old pick-up truck, which had been crudely converted into a
hearse, complete with a neon cross on the roof.
He had chosen ‘Lord of the Dance’ as one of his sending-off hymns, but
instead of people standing stiffly and solemnly, the congregation swayed to
the music. Kent was in floods of tears so I held his hand and swayed along
with him. Outside, crowds of people had surrounded the church and were
singing too. When Bryan Adams sang ‘He Was A Friend Of Mine’ inside
the church, the congregation joined in and they raised a framed photograph
of Colin above their heads.
The heat hit us as the doors of the church opened at the end of the
service. I followed the coffin, draped with the St Lucian flag and with
Colin’s hat on top of it, as it was taken to the graveyard. I had inadvertently
picked the heaviest coffin because it had been the only one that wasn’t
decorated with gold or silver or with ghastly handles. Euan, Henry’s
incredibly tall son, who clutched a bunch of Scottish heather, had to crouch
to balance the coffin, while the rest of the pall-bearers, including Cody,
puffed and sweated, surrounded by local people in colourful fancy dress and
painted faces. They had practised earlier that morning, around the pool,
using sun-loungers, which weren’t nearly as heavy.
I stood between the tombs, next to the plot Colin had chosen. The final
party was in full swing, but this time without input from the ringmaster
himself. And then, as if this wasn’t all odd enough, suddenly, from behind
the other tombs, came all these people with their faces painted white,
wielding scythes. The grim reapers came up to me and beckoned. ‘Come,
Lady, Come, Lady, Mr Tennants’ wife. You must dance with us.’ Horrified,
I said no, but they just took me along anyway. And before I knew it, I was
weaving in and out of the tombs, half dragged, half dancing. As they
danced, they let go of dozens of black balloons, which floated up over the
sea. It was utterly bewildering and exhausting, but it was the local tradition
so I went along with it.
Eventually Colin was interred, as the local gospel choirs sang ‘Swing
Low Sweet Chariot’, and we all went back to the wake at The Great House,
which was filled with rows and rows of tiny little cakes covered with bright
pink icing – enough to mistake it for a confectionery shop. It looked more
like a birthday party than a funeral. The sound of steel bands and singing, of
banshee-like wailing, of clapping and drumming, of every note in every
octave being played in one form or another, filled the hot Caribbean air. In
the surrounding villages, while the local people sang and danced to mark
the passing of ‘Mr Tennants’ as they called him, I thought of him with love,
his death finally beginning to sink in.
I stood, clutching a vodka tonic, underneath the pink and white
streamers, making small-talk with government officials, policemen,
soldiers, magistrates and locals. Everybody from the island seemed to be
crammed into Colin’s beloved home. Only then did Kent tell me he had
wanted Colin to have a state funeral, which was not unknown for grand
people on the island, but apparently I had organised it too quickly. When I
heard that I had a flash of regret – Colin would have been disappointed that
I had inadvertently denied him a police escort.
On St Lucia it is customary for a will to be read quickly so that night I
waited for the lawyer. I was apprehensive and a little worried about it, as
Colin’s lawyer had warned me that he didn’t have the latest will, telling me:
‘I believe Lord Glenconner made a new will seven months ago with a
lawyer from Soufrière.’
My heart sank when the new lawyer turned up. There was something
shifty about him – he barely kept eye contact and was very fidgety. I stood
with my daughter-in-law, Sheilagh, whose son Cody was the heir
presumptive. The lawyer scrabbled around in his briefcase and got out a
single piece of paper. He looked down at it and then read aloud: ‘I hereby
leave everything to Kent Adonai, and I trust he will carry out my wishes
towards the family.’
I thought my heart was going to stop.
Afterwards I found Kent, who had been told by the lawyer, and as
calmly as I could, I said, ‘Well, Kent, I hope you will carry out Lord
Glenconner’s wishes to us all.’
He looked at me, shrugged his shoulders and said, ‘I don’t know what
Lord Glenconner meant.’
I knew then that my worst fears had come true and that we truly stood to
lose everything. The surreal wake was nothing compared to the feeling that
ran through my blood in that moment and afterwards.
Later that night I stood on the balcony of the house that no longer
belonged to us. Normally, in the Caribbean, the night sky is filled with stars
but that night the sky was completely black. As I stood there, my entire
married life flashed before my eyes. Fifty-four years. Five children. A
marriage filled with Colin throwing as many tantrums as he threw parties.
And now, after all I’d been through – this. This last attention-seeking gift. It
was such a terrible humiliation. And to do it to our children … I despaired.
Going against everything my mother had always taught me, I let emotion
take over and I screamed and screamed and screamed into the pitch-black
night.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Whatever Next?
IT TOOK A long time for the dust to settle. Friends were horrified by the
will and encouraged me to contest it.
In the UK, primogeniture law normally means the majority of an estate
is handed to the heir, who in this case was Cody, Charlie’s son. Incidentally,
this was the same law that had prevented me from inheriting Holkham as a
daughter. This time, it dismissed me for being a wife, but that was not what
I minded. I had accepted long ago the reality for me as a woman, but I had
expected Colin to leave me and the children the chattels and for Cody to
inherit Colin’s estate.
The only thing the family had left was Glen, which was in trust to
Henry’s son, Euan. Colin’s huge fortune had dwindled over the years but on
his death he still owned land and hotels on St Lucia, but everything that
belonged to him, whether sentimental or valuable, he had left solely to
Kent.
The reality was that Kent immediately put the contents of The Great
House up for sale, including a lot of things that belonged to me. He had
been approached by the lawyer, who had shown him outstanding bills that
needed to be paid, and when it had been suggested that an auction would
raise enough money to settle the debt and more, Kent agreed. I found this
out through a friend, who rang up shortly after the funeral and said, ‘Your
silver bed is on the front cover of Bonhams’ catalogue.’
I contacted Bonhams and told them they couldn’t sell things without the
owner’s consent. They were apologetic but reluctant to stop the sale so I
flew back to St Lucia to see what was going on. When I got to The Great
House, everything had been packed up and the people from Bonhams were
in the process of organising shipment to London for the auction.
In the end I came to an agreement with Bonhams, who assured me the
money made from the sale of items I owned would be mine.
The auction went ahead, and I was glad to see that Colin’s iconic hat
and cane were bought by the Mustique Company. Kent raised more than
enough money to pay off the debts, and I got the proceeds from the sale of
my silver bed.
Once the auction was over Cody and his mother disputed the will. In the
end it took seven years to resolve. While Kent kept a huge amount of land
and money, about half of Colin’s estate was handed to Cody.
If I think about it now, I still find it impossible to tell whether Colin
intended to leave us all with nothing. It is entirely possible that he decided
to do it on purpose, as some sort of horrible stunt, which would secure his
reputation as a memorable eccentric. It is also possible he didn’t understand
what he was doing in the last few months of his life, when he had become
frail and vulnerable. I will never know for sure. It was hard not to dwell on
this question, hard not to feel betrayed, not just for myself but for our
children.
Obsessing about this would have driven me mad so, instead, I made a
decision to move on. I was in my late seventies when Colin died and I
realised time was of the essence for me too. Determined not to be cast
down, I turned my attention to the future.
It’s now been almost ten years since Colin died and nearly twenty since
Princess Margaret died. Christopher is fifty-one and the twins are forty-
nine. No longer do I hop between a life in the West Indies, Glen and big
houses in London. I am back in my farmhouse in Norfolk, the place that
feels more like home than anywhere else. I owe a lot to my father’s sound
judgement all those years ago when he told me I should buy a house of my
own due to Colin’s flaky character. If I hadn’t bought it, I have no idea
where I would be now.
There is a family saying that the Cokes come back to Norfolk and, since
I can see the boundary wall of Holkham Hall from my window, it must be
true. Norfolk is a great draw especially because I love being by the sea.
Glen was lovely in its own way, and hills and mountains are beautiful, but I
always felt slightly closed in there and, like Mustique, I could never see the
weather coming, the unpredictability governing a sense of unease.
I surround myself with my children, grandchildren and great-
grandchildren, and my life is no longer full of endless parties, dinners at
Kensington Palace and royal tours. Although my days now might seem
rather pale in comparison, at the age of eighty-seven I am very happy, doing
whatever I feel like doing.
Instead of endless extravagant fancy-dress parties, I socialise with my
many kind friends in Norfolk who live nearby, like Patricia Rawlings, who
gives wonderful long lunches, and Tim, whom I met through my sister
Carey, and his husband Menno. I was ‘best man’ at their wedding and have
enjoyed evenings with them that go on into the night, sometimes involving
singalongs around the piano. In the summer we sit outside drinking Tim’s
world-class Bloody Marys and it was he, as well as my cousin Tom and his
wife Polly, who gave me my two eightieth-birthday parties – days when I
felt quite spoilt and completely relaxed, quietly relieved that Colin wasn’t
looking over my shoulder. I still spend time at Glen. Henry’s wife, Tessa,
sadly died in 2018, but I stay with Bill, whom she went on to marry, and
Euan with his flame-haired children William and Ruby. I visit Cody in
Edinburgh – and finally David and my darling sister Sarah, near Perth.
I still go abroad, to Mustique most years to stay with Josephine
Loewenstein and catch up with another great friend, Georgie Fanshawe. I
also love to go to Turkey to stay with Ömer Koç. Ömer is the son of one of
Turkey’s most successful businessmen, Rahmi Koç, whose former wife,
Çig˘dem Simavi, was a friend of mine and used to invite Princess Margaret
and me on her boat, Hallas, every year. There was always a small group of
us, including Rupert Everett whom I’ve known all his life, I having been his
mother’s bridesmaid, and Nicky Haslam, also a great friend. Princess
Margaret would always have the master cabin, which had a four-poster bed.
The bed was too high for her to get in and out of it so I would heave her in
at the end of each evening, leaving her with a bell. She would ring it in the
night if she needed to go to the bathroom, whereupon I would come and
help heave her back out and in again.
Ömer is the same age as Henry would have been, and when I met him,
just after Henry’s death from AIDS, he was so sympathetic and kind to me.
We struck up a close friendship, and nowadays he invites me on his yacht
every summer with a group of friends, including Christabel and Jools
Holland. Christabel and I love swimming so every day we set off together.
Ömer is so conscientious that he organises a little boat to follow us around
just in case we get into trouble.
It was through Ömer’s mother that I met Bettina Graziani, the eccentric
former supermodel, business partner of Hubert de Givenchy, and the fiancée
of Prince Aly Khan, the socialite son of the Aga Khan. A few years ago, she
invited Tim and me to stay with her in Paris. Ever since my honeymoon,
I’ve always been wary when I’m invited to Paris, but I brushed off the
absurd thought – I was almost eighty and was going without Colin.
Even in her eighties, Bettina was excessively glamorous. She had tea
ready for us when we arrived, all set out in her supremely elegant flat in the
rue de Grenelle, scented by Rigaud candles and masses of fresh flowers.
The evening started off like a Parisian dream: we drank champagne in front
of the fire before Bettina took us out to dinner at Brasserie Lipp.
Afterwards, when we had assumed we would go home, she took us to a
party given by the boyfriend of an ambassador, who was entertaining in the
ambassador’s absence.
A butler in a white coat let us into a hall lined with birdcages full of
brightly coloured finches, and on into a hot, rather dim room full of people
sitting about wrapped around one another. Briefly and languidly, they
looked us over and then looked away again.
Bettina led me and Tim through the interconnected rooms, and as we
walked, we passed some of the guests and looked at each other, appalled,
realising we were at an orgy. There were men in drag mincing around, and
women very skimpily dressed, and some people oiled up wearing nothing at
all. We passed a bedroom, and on the four-poster bed, a couple of lesbians
were writhing around. They took an interest in me, so I clung to Tim,
whispering urgently, ‘Tell them we’re married!’
I don’t think being married would have made much difference,
especially as everybody was high: the bathroom was full of bowls of
cocaine, the glass-topped table by the basin criss-crossed with lines. Tim
and I sat on a sofa, close together, rather helplessly. Meanwhile, Bettina
seemed oblivious to the difference between the first part of the evening and
the second, finally taking us home at three in the morning.
When Tim and I returned to Norfolk, we were both rather glad. I
haven’t been back to Paris.
The best trips have undoubtedly been with my friend Margaret Vyner.
Together we have gone to India many times and we always have great fun,
although we have wound up experiencing some rather unforeseen things.
Once we were at a hill station and decided to cross the Deccan desert. The
hotel owner was rather surprised when we mentioned our plan. ‘That’s very
brave. Be very careful,’ she said, her eyebrows raised, probably thinking it
rather strange to see two such adventurous old women. We set off, thinking
nothing of her concerns, focusing more on the peculiar taxi we found
ourselves in, which was decked out in red velvet and had a chandelier.
Somewhat relieved when the taxi pulled up at a wood, though surprised to
see trees in the middle of the desert, we started gathering our things. ‘No,
no,’ said the taxi driver, in no uncertain terms. ‘You stay here. Do not get
out. Bad ladies in the wood. Bad, bad ladies in the wood.’ Before we could
say anything, he jumped out of the car and disappeared among the trees.
It turned out it was a prostitute stop where all the lorry drivers came. I
suppose the taxi man thought if we got out the other men might think we
had joined the woodland prostitutes. Eventually he came back, obviously
having had a marvellous time spending the money we’d given him for the
journey on the ‘bad ladies’. Off we went again with the chandelier
swinging, but by nightfall, we still hadn’t reached the smart hotel we had
booked. It was getting late and we had no choice but to find a place to sleep
in a tiny town, not wanting to risk driving in the dark. The taxi driver took
us to the only hotel in the area, which was absolutely filthy. In all my time
in India, this was the only hotel that was so dirty we had to use the field
instead of the bathroom if we wanted to go to the loo. It had an odd
atmosphere, emphasised by a bell that kept ringing outside our room, and
every now and then somebody would bang on the door. It was while we
were discussing these peculiarities that the penny dropped: we’d gone from
an outside brothel, to an inside brothel. The men were given half an hour
with the ladies and then the bell would ring. All that was missing was the
call, ‘All change.’
It was so appalling we had to find it funny. Luckily, we always travel
with a bottle of vodka, which often turns out to be completely necessary.
Margaret tracked down the taxi driver to get a mixer and returned with a
huge jug of fresh cherry juice, which was the most delicious thing we’d
ever tasted. We put a chair under the door handle so no men would stumble
into our room and drank ourselves into a lovely stupor as the bells rang and
the doors banged around us.
The next day, we arrived at the hotel, which was frightfully smart, and
I’m sure nobody would ever have guessed where we’d been the night
before. Yet again, there I was going from one extreme to another. We
couldn’t help but laugh. After all, I’ve grown used to the unexpected, the
shocking and the peculiar.
Most of the time, though, I spend my days poking around in the garden,
and up until very recently I still enjoyed sailing from the creeks of Burnham
Overy Staithe. I still help run the boathouse. Some of the most fun I’ve ever
had is here in Norfolk – the sailing clubs celebrate all Nelson’s victories, of
which there were quite a lot. On the two-hundredth anniversary of Trafalgar
we were all told our tiny boats could fly the white ensign and the Bishop of
Lynn came down to do a blessing, throwing his ring into the water. So the
creeks were full of enthusiastic people dressed up in sailor hats.
Everyone, including me, was rather merry on Nelson’s Blood, a cocktail
of red wine and brandy. This is the traditional tot given to sailors because
when Nelson died his body was kept in a barrel of brandy to preserve him
during the voyage home, the contents drunk by his crew when they came
ashore. There is a photograph that shows just how jolly I was, with my hand
rather rudely on top of somebody’s head, clinging on for balance, as I
waved excitedly at the camera.
When I’m not on the water, I enjoy walking next to the creeks and over
the dunes, my thoughts inevitably turning to the days of building
sandcastles and having picnics with my children, and going back further in
time to when I was a child, playing with my Ogilvy cousins and with
Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. Holkham beach is still as beautiful as
ever, attracting thousands of visitors each season, and is apparently
consistently voted the most popular beach in England.
The Royal Family liked Holkham so much that my father gave them a
beach hut, although it wasn’t really like those garden sheds painted in a
pastel shade squeezed between others that dot the seafront, and was more of
a summerhouse. This one stood alone towards the far end of Holkham
beach and had a big room, a veranda all the way round it and a small
kitchen. The Queen Mother would come down to the beach hut in the
summer at teatime and bring the corgis for a walk along the dunes. Below
the hut to the far side, there was, and still is, a nudist beach.
The Queen Mother’s protection officers weren’t too happy with the
proximity of the naturists and would often be heard saying, ‘I don’t think
you should go down to the beach today, Ma’am, because there are some
nudists out there. It might be a bit embarrassing.’
To which she would reply, ‘Embarrassing? For whom? I’m longing to
see them. Perhaps the corgis will nip their bottoms.’
And off she would go with the corgis. The nudists always seemed to be
oblivious of her, the men too busy absorbed in their sport – everything
dangling about – and the big-bosomed women sitting in the dunes, knitting.
The protection officers learnt to accept that there was no question of the
Queen Mother not heading in their direction.
The nudist beach was of perennial interest. A few years ago, Prince
Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall invited me to Sandringham during the
flower show, and in the evening there was a dinner party with guests from
the world of entertainment. I had a great conversation with Dame Judi
Dench, who told me how much she loved swimming, so I invited her to the
beach for a swim. The next day, the Duchess of Cornwall and Judi Dench
arrived with some other friends and, despite the grey, windy weather,
everybody got into their swimming costumes and jumped into the sea. I
only went up to my knees but Judi Dench was intrepid, rushing into the
choppy water grinning broadly.
When everybody got out of the sea, I told them about the nudist beach,
relaying the story of the Queen Mother and her corgis. Well, of course, just
like the Queen Mother, they all peered into the fog, and at that moment a
man wearing only a towel and a rucksack came walking along the dunes.
Recognising the Duchess of Cornwall, he said hello. The Duchess struck up
a conversation with him and discovered he was a nudist (albeit partially
dressed at the time), so everybody piled in and asked him questions. Eager
to engage, he told us all about how liberating it was, how he loved being
part of the elements, close to nature. At the end of the conversation, the
Duchess asked whether he lived and worked locally. ‘Yes,’ he said happily.
‘I’m headmaster of a school nearby.’ When he left, we fell about laughing.
Being a headmaster and a nudist somehow didn’t seem to go together.
Holkham Hall still stands, rather glumly in the grey winter fog,
magnificently when the sun shines. After Eddy died in 2015, his son,
Thomas, became the 8th and current Earl of Leicester. Following tradition,
just like my father, he was commissioned into the Scots Guards after going
to Eton and became an Equerry to the Duke of Kent. He lives at Holkham
Hall with his wife Polly and their four children and, together, they continue
the Coke legacy. The estate is flourishing.
As the house is open for visitors, attracting thousands of people a year,
sometimes I slip in. Whenever I go, I see the visitors who have come from
all over the world staring up the marble staircase where I stood for my
coming-out dance in my parachute dress, and for my wedding in my
Norman Hartnell dress. On they go, busy with chatter and interest, often
talking about the film The Duchess, starring Keira Knightley and Ralph
Fiennes, because much of it was shot at Holkham.
But while they see the dark red silk damasked walls and the splendid
gold-decorated ceilings, I see Tommy Kinsman setting up his band, to the
delight of the Queen Mother, and Princess Margaret being spun around the
room by Billy Wallace. In the state bedrooms, I don’t just admire the four-
poster bed, but am reminded of Lord Stair, who always slept there. As I
walk through the corridors, I see the childlike forms of Princess Margaret
and I pedalling our trikes, hearing our laughter carry down the halls, and the
doorways where we’d jump out at the footmen. As the visitors snap away
with their camera phones, little do they know that they are capturing the
spot where the Queen used to stand as a little girl, scolding me and Princess
Margaret for getting up to mischief.
But what I love more than anything is when the house is all shut up to
visitors and when the family are away because I feel it is part of me again. I
look at the top middle window on the left-hand side – my old bedroom –
and think of my teenage self, sitting at my desk scribbling letters to my
friends or daydreaming about Heathcliff, from Emily Brontë’s Wuthering
Heights, as I looked into the park.
Recently a little note, written by Carey to me when we were children,
was found in the attic by one of Tom’s children. It was a touching reminder
of the times we shared together because, very sadly, Carey died in May
2018, aged eighty-four. I was so sad when she died, remembering so vividly
what she was like when she was a golden-haired little girl shouting,
‘Cowardy custard!’ and teasing me no end. This catchphrase was such a
huge part of our childhood that our cousin James Ogilvy mentioned it
fondly in a reading at her funeral.
No longer being able to reminisce with Carey, and with Sarah being that
much younger, my early childhood secrets and memories are wrapped up in
the house and grounds, binding me to Holkham for ever. My parents and
Carey are buried in the churchyard at St Withburga’s, which stands in the
middle of Holkham park above the lake, surrounded by a herd of fallow
deer. This was my father’s absolute favourite place in the world and when
he died, in 1976, the gamekeepers carried his coffin all the way up the hill,
from the house to the church. One day I will be buried there too.
Although my father’s death marked the end of the line for our particular
branch of the Coke family, my children and grandchildren are our legacy.
None of my direct descendants will become the next Earl of Leicester, but
my high-spirited family is alive and well, ready, like me, to cope with
whatever life throws at them.
Amy has travelled the world and settled back in East Anglia, with May
and Anton just down the road with their two daughters, Honor and Greta.
Christopher is still happily married to Johanna, who has become a
significant part of my life too, because they now live just down the road
from me.
I took Christopher to a lecture the other day and thought, God, I’m
lucky – he’s just sitting here beside me, enjoying life. There’s nothing
wrong with his brain or his mind. He’s such an asset, and I often think about
what might have happened, so relieved there is a happy ending. I don’t
think anyone can ever know how they will react under terrible
circumstances until something catastrophic happens but, thank goodness, I
didn’t listen to the doctor who told me to go home and forget about him.
While I am so proud of my three children, it’s still painful to think about
Henry and Charlie. I am now twice as old as Charlie was when he died, and
three times as old as Henry. The pain of losing your children never goes
away. But I try not to dwell on the sad things in my past, instead
concentrating on the present, trying to make the most of my life.
Fortunately, I still have great friends who share this attitude and we have
continued to travel the world on great adventures.
The eighty-seven years I’ve lived on this earth have been many things,
good and bad, but above all, extraordinary. I have had to adapt continuously
throughout my life but now I can relax and, perhaps surprisingly, I have no
regrets. I am very much at my happiest and intend to live to a hundred,
although still always wondering, ‘Whatever next?’
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I WOULD FIRST like to thank Tom Perrin for asking me to write this book
and for encouraging and helping me along the way.
Hugo Vickers has also been a source of wise advice and encouragement
– he was invaluable in finding out obscure facts about my Hardwicke
grandfather. Hugo also introduced me to Hannah Bourne-Taylor who
became indispensable, holding my hand throughout and putting in order and
sorting out my memories as we sat for hours together.
I would also like to say how much I appreciated everyone from Hodder
and Stoughton and Zuleika. Firstly, Rowena Webb: nothing was too much
trouble for her; and secondly, Juliet Brightmore, who had the difficult task
of choosing the photographs with me. I would also like to mention Lucy
Hale, Eleni Lawrence, Rebecca Mundy, Rebecca Folland, Hazel Orme and
Ian Wong. A very big thank-you to Simon Elliot who rightly insisted I
should have an agent and found me the charming and efficient Gordon
Wise.
Lastly, the two most important people in supporting me that I would like
to thank are Johanna Tennant, my daughter-in-law, who became my go-
between arriving each morning with messages, reading the first draft and
checking up that I was alright, and my best friend Tim Leese who
encouraged me and provided wonderful suppers for us through the writing
of this book. And, of course, I would also like to thank my daughters Amy
and May and my son Christopher for their invaluable contributions.
PICTURE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Inset pages 1–16
Author’s collection:
Here, here below right, here above, here, here above right/centre
right/below left, here above left and centre right, here, here above, here,
here below left, here above left and below left.
Additional sources:
Alamy: here below, here centre left. ©Armstrong Jones: here above
right. Associated Newspapers Ltd/Solo Syndication dmg media: here above
right/Daily Sketch 30th May 1953. © Daily Express/Ted Bath: here centre
right. Getty Images: here above left, here below/Slim Aarons, here above
and below/Litchfield, here below/Anwar Hussein. Trustees of the Glen
Settlement: here above left. PA Images: here below left. Shutterstock: here
centre left/Leon Schadeberg, here above left/Mike Forster/Daily Mail, here
centre right/Albanpix.
Chapter openers 1–19
Author’s collection:
Here: With my sister Carey, right. Here: Stock checking at the Holkham
Pottery. Here: Colin, in his ‘gathering of the clans’ tartans, with Rob Roy.
Here: Colin’s house on Mustique, 1980. Here: Colin with Princess
Margaret, Mustique early 70s. Here: With Christopher and twins May and
Amy, 1970. Here: Invitation to Colin’s 50th Birthday Party, Mustique,
1976. Here: With Princess Margaret, Kensington Palace. Here: With
Charlie, 1976. Here: Christopher and Charlie, 1986. Here: With Henry in
India. Here: Princess Margaret. Here: Our 50th wedding anniversary, 2006.
Additional sources:
Here: Holkham, photo Gareth Hacon. Here: On the way to the final
dress rehearsal for the Coronation, 1953/TopFoto. Here: At our engagement
reception, 1955/TopFoto. Here: Lady in Waiting to Princess Margaret,
arriving at the ballet in London,1980/Shutterstock. Here: Lady in Waiting to
Princess Margaret, Australia, 1975/Getty Images. Here. At home, 2019,
photo Hal Shinnie.
Every reasonable effort has been made to trace copyright holders, but if
there are any errors or omissions, Hodder & Stoughton will be pleased to
insert the appropriate acknowledgement in any subsequent printings or
editions.
Picture Section
Table of Contents
About the Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Prologue
1: The Greatest Disappointment
2: Hitler’s Mess
3: The Travelling Salesman
4: The Coronation
5: For Better, For Worse
6: Absolutely Furious
7: The Making of Mustique
8: A Princess in Pyjamas
9: Motherhood
10: Lady in Waiting
11: The Caribbean Spectaculars
12: A Royal Tour
13: A Year at Kensington Palace
14: The Lost Ones
15: A Nightmare and a Miracle
16: Forever Young
17: The Last Days of a Princess
18: Until Death Us Do Part
19: Whatever Next?
Acknowledgements
Picture Acknowledgements
Picture Section
The narrator's duties and aspirations during her upbringing were significantly shaped by her family legacy and expectations. Born into the prominent Coke family, known for their legal and agricultural contributions since the Tudor era, there was an implicit understanding of the family's esteemed status . Despite the restrictions of her gender preventing her from inheriting the earldom or the vast Holkham estate, the narrator was ingrained with a sense of duty towards her family's heritage. This is evidenced by her involvement in the care and eventual sale of the valuable Codex Leicester manuscript for the estate's upkeep . Her upbringing was marked by engagements with prominent figures and ceremonial duties, such as being associated with the Royal Family and participating in significant events like coronations, thus nurturing aspirations aligned with her elite social circle . Additionally, the war efforts, such as her involvement in 'war work,' highlight a sense of responsibility ingrained from family expectations . These elements combined to foster a life of duty interwoven with the aspirations derived from her aristocratic lineage.
The narrator's role as a Lady in Waiting reflected her personal development by providing her with a sense of purpose and independence, separate from her marriage. It distracted her from personal issues, such as her husband's troubles, and offered her a unique identity within the royal circle, independent of her familial and marital ties . Socially, it encapsulated broader expectations of women of her standing by integrating a public role with private friendship, blending duty with personal loyalty and support to royalty. Being a Lady in Waiting was seen as an honor and a privilege, aligning with societal norms expected from the daughters of earls, reflecting traditional gender roles of supporting and participating in the social functions of the aristocracy . The role also underscored the importance of discretion, loyalty, and adherence to royal protocols, which were crucial for women in such positions .
The emotional and psychological effects of World War II on the narrator and her family were profound, encompassing both immediate and long-term impacts. Immediately, the war created a mix of fear and disruption; childhood adventures were overshadowed by a pressing fear of conflict, such as the terror instigated by doodlebugs at her boarding school, causing her to sleep in the cellars . Separation from parents, who were away for three years, and the adaptation to new environments such as staying with cousins in Scotland, also contributed to feelings of uncertainty and dislocation . Long-term, the war led to significant changes. The narrator’s father became more anxious and was burdened with traumatic memories, affecting family dynamics and the management of the Holkham estate . The societal aftermath included economic challenges like post-war rationing and the struggle to maintain the family estate, highlighting a loss of pre-war stability . Overall, the war instilled both a sense of resilience and lasting emotional scars, shaping the family’s post-war experience and personal development.
The presence of the Royal Family significantly impacted the narrator's life and experiences during her childhood, adding both excitement and tension. During grand events like the Coronation, she felt part of something larger than herself, with millions watching worldwide, which heightened her nerves and anxiety, reflecting the immense pressure of the occasion . Such gatherings were surreal, with the narrator feeling part of a medieval tapestry and experiencing the awe of seeing the Queen's grand entrance and regal attire . Social interactions at places like Windsor Castle also highlighted the narrator's mixed feelings of anticipation and anxiety, affected by the absence and behavior of important figures like Johnnie, which influenced her mood amidst the glitter and expectations of the royal setting . Additionally, growing up alongside Princess Margaret created deep personal bonds and influenced her adult life, creating shared experiences full of historical and personal significance ."}
The narrator's identity and experiences are profoundly shaped by traditions and ceremonies, which offer a mix of glamour and practicality, deeply influencing her perception of life. For instance, her voyage on the Queen Mary symbolizes this duality by contrasting the luxury of dining in first class with her godfather and the reality of sleeping in the corridor with travelers affected by the sea . This theme of contrasting lifestyles continues with the description of transforming Glen and embracing Scottish traditions, which highlights her adaptability and passion for heritage . The strong connection to family legacy is emphasized by her role at Holkham, where involvement in family traditions, such as maintaining the Codex Leicester, underpins her sense of duty and continuity, despite being a woman in a male-dominated heritage . Additionally, societal customs like her coming-out dance, despite its facade of romance, underscore societal expectations on women, shaping her understanding of gender roles within the aristocracy . These experiences collectively demonstrate how traditions and ceremonies influence her personal development and navigation through societal structures.
The narrator's career and personal values were significantly influenced by her familial and social responsibilities. Her life was deeply embedded in social circles involving high-profile figures, which shaped her social duties and commitments, as seen in her regular associations with people like Princess Margaret and other aristocrats . Her family background, being part of the Coke family, meant that she grew up with expectations that valued tradition and heritage despite not being able to inherit the family estate due to her gender. This shaped a sense of responsibility towards preserving family legacy, as seen in her efforts to restore Glen and embrace life in Scotland , and in her reflections on the family estate, Holkham Hall, where her childhood memories mixed with her responsibility to uphold the family name . Additionally, her role as a Lady in Waiting to Princess Margaret for three decades indicates a life of considerable social obligation, which influenced her ability to maintain her personal and professional relationships within these upper echelons . These responsibilities likely instilled in her values of resilience, loyalty, and commitment as she balanced private aspirations with public duties.
In the narrator's life, personal connections often intertwined with social roles, especially through her friendships with royalty and aristocracy. She mentions her close relationship with Princess Margaret, with whom she shared personal moments, such as helping her maneuver around the yacht, indicating a mix of personal care within a social setting . Her interactions with aristocrats like Rupert Everett and Nicky Haslam further exemplify how her social circle included individuals of high status, blending personal friendships and social obligations . Similarly, she mentions her time at Holkham Hall and Glen, where her social role involved organizing and hosting numerous guests, akin to running a hotel, showing how personal and familial ties influenced her social responsibilities . Her life reflected a pattern of experiencing glamorous, significant social roles interspersed with deeply personal connections and responsibilities .
World War II significantly altered Holkham Hall's operations and atmosphere. The estate hosted a prisoner-of-war camp for Italians and Germans, with gamekeepers assisting in guarding duties. Italians became friends with local residents, and some settled in England post-war, while the Germans were more feared . The surrounding area, including Holkham beach and dunes, was repurposed for military training, affecting leisure activities such as family picnics . The war led to staffing changes, as many original staff did not return post-war, creating financial challenges for the estate's upkeep . Family roles evolved, with the father involved in military duties and the mother leading North Norfolk's Land Girls, adapting to the scarcity of employees and resources .
Princess Margaret's position within royal ceremonies and societal expectations both challenged and reaffirmed her perceptions of herself and her societal roles. Being part of the Royal Family, she was used to a life of formality and respect, where "everybody else bowed and curtsied to her and called her ‘Ma’am’" . This reinforced her royal identity, as she was often treated in a certain way due to her status, which sometimes caused tension, such as with her husband Tony, who resented these formalities . Despite this, Margaret found personal challenge and relief away from royal scrutiny and societal demands during her time in Mustique, where she could escape the press and the stress of her strained marriage . She was able to interact more casually, albeit still with a sense of entitlement, illustrated by her desire for more land for her gatehouses . Thus, her dual role in seeking both formal recognition and personal sanctuary allowed her to navigate her unique societal position and personal identity.
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