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The Mad Boy, Lord Berners, My Grandmother, and Me

Page 41

by Sofka Zinovieff


  By the time I finished my coffee in the Bell’s bay window, the fire was burning nicely and the chill in the bar was easing. At this point, I felt able to step back from my own place in the story. I hadn’t told the landlord ‘who I was’. Looking at the black wrought-iron gates to Faringdon House, I became aware of how Lord Berners, the Mad Boy, my grandmother, my mother and me are just a few elements in a long story of so many other people – those who lived and worked in the same spaces before us, and the others who were there before that, in the old Elizabethan house. Of course it doesn’t stop there either. And for many centuries of that time, the Bell was here in some guise, providing ale for locals, breakfast for travellers and a view up to the intriguing gateway of Faringdon House.

  INDEX

  The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature on your ebook reader.

  1st King’s Dragoon Guards 62–5

  Abel, Fred 313–14

  Ackerley, J. R. 68

  Acton, Harold (1904–1994)

  comments on Gerald 13, 96

  at wedding of the two Evelyns 169

  learns of She-Evelyn’s ill-health 169

  at Oxford University 190, 276

  liking for Marie Beazley 212

  believes Dr Gottfried is a quack 270

  Aesop’s fables, The Grasshopper and the Ant 191

  Agar-Robartes, Gerald, Viscount Clifden 43

  Alden, Miss (Gerald’s landlady in St Giles’) 193, 216, 240

  Amory, Mark 394

  Lord Berners: The Last Eccentric 14

  anti-Semitism 120, 121–5, 176, 331–2

  Apley Park (Shropshire) 20

  Architectural Review 90

  Armstrong, Sir Thomas 209

  Armstrong-Jones, Tony, Earl of Snowdon 318, 341

  Ashcombe house (Wiltshire) 107

  Ashton, Frederick (1904–1988)

  as visitor to Faringdon 2, 283

  provides choreography for A Wedding Bouquet 147, 153

  comment on Gerald’s ability to construct a ballet 148

  believed to be a genius 153

  as aristocratic dowager in Cecil Beaton’s book 187

  discovers splendid tranquiliser 191–2

  kindness to Jennifer 261

  provides choreography for Les Sirènes 268

  Astaire, Adele 140

  Athens 387

  Attlee, Clement 267

  Auden, W. H. ‘Wiz’ 182, 183, 205

  Audubon, John James, Birds of America 18–19

  Ayer, A. J. ‘Freddie’ 206

  Bakst, Léon 34

  Balanchine, George 39

  Baldwin, Oliver 171

  Baldwin, Stanley 159, 166, 171–2

  Ball, Des (gardener at Faringdon) 310, 311, 327, 347, 360

  Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo 182

  Ballets Russes 35, 36, 66, 147

  BBC 38

  Beaton, Cecil (1904–1980) 262

  as regular visitor to Faringdon 7, 216

  friendship with Gerald 12, 106–7, 193, 283

  learns of Gerald’s relationship with Robert 77–8

  dresses his friends in Georgian style 82

  as country-dweller 92

  stays at Madresfield 102

  character and description of 105–6

  comments on Gerald 105, 130

  dislike of Robert 106, 323–5

  passion for Peter Watson 107–8

  seduced by Doris Castlerosse 108–11

  as ‘Cecily Seymour’ in The Girls of Radcliff Hall 112–15

  seduced by Fascism 118

  meets Dalí 143

  photographs Daisy Fellowes 144, 146

  photographs Wallis Simpson in lobster-print dress 144

  comment on Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas 151

  as contributor to Horizon 205

  as close friend of Clarissa Churchill 224

  as war photographer 224

  photographs Victoria 251–2, 367

  designs costumes for Les Sirénes 268

  devoted to Dr Gottfried 270

  comment on Gerald’s health 284

  visits Clayton Manor 296

  punched by Robert 324–5

  death of 325

  photograph imitated by Leo, Vassilis and Sofka 374–5

  The Book of Beauty 106

  The Happy Years 284

  My Royal Past 107, 186–7

  Beauchamp family see under Lygon

  Beaulieu Abbey 83

  Beazley, J. D. ‘Jack’ 212

  Beazley, Marie 212–13

  Beecham, Sir Thomas 127, 286

  Bell, Vanessa 136

  Ben (boxer dog) 347, 356, 360

  Benjamin, Walter 25

  Bennitt, Colonel Ward 28, 48, 49

  Berlin, Isaiah 203, 206, 209, 211

  Berners Estates Company 41, 266, 357, 366

  Berners, Gerald Hugh Tyrwhitt (1883–1950)

  character and descriptions of 1–2, 7, 9, 11, 13–14, 16, 25–6, 43, 73, 74–5, 130–31, 190–91

  leaves Faringdon to Robert 2, 135

  ancestral portraits relegated to the orangery 4–5

  1943 photograph of 6, 7

  meets Robert at Vaynol 11–12, 71–3

  wit and humour of 12, 16, 26, 27, 36, 38, 40, 43, 48, 85, 87, 126, 128, 134–35, 219, 258, 330, 356

  disguises, superficiality and theatricality of 13, 16, 32

  birth and childhood 14–15

  family background, influence and relationships 15, 16–18, 19, 20, 47–8, 149, 241

  lack of piety 15–16, 23

  love of animals, birds and flowers 18–20, 85–6, 250

  appreciation of place and ornamentation 20–21

  passion for music 21–2, 28, 37–8, 146–8, 209

  education 23–4

  prone to misery, melancholy and depression 23–4, 25–6, 75, 131, 193, 208–9, 269–72

  male friendships 24–5, 45–7, 105–12

  health of 26, 270–72

  affinity with foreign cultures 27–8, 39

  fails Foreign Office exams 28–9

  falls in love with Henriette from afar 28

  food as significant element in his life 28, 87–9, 216–17

  death of his father and surprising re-marriage of his mother 29

  appointed honorary attaché at Embassy in Constantinople 31–2

  posted to Rome 32–5, 39

  as composer 35–9, 94–5, 209–10, 256

  helps found a ‘quartette society’ in Rome 35

  buys Faringdon for his mother and acquires a chauffeur to drive his Rolls Royce 41–3

  inherits a title and changes his surname to Tyrwhitt-Wilson 41

  legends concerning 42, 71

  lives a life of travel and luxury 42–4

  takes up painting 43

  female friendships 44–5, 99–105, 117–18, 125–9, 144, 146, 151–4, 206–8, 217

  death of his mother Julia and his stepfather 47–9

  decides to take over Faringdon 49

  reaction to seeing phantasmagoria of taxidermy at Hodnet Hall 52

  entertains Ballets Russes at the Cavendish Hotel 66

  relationship with the Mad Boy 74, 76–81, 89

  eclectic decoration of Faringdon 84–7

  daily routines 89–90, 117–18

  involved in local country life 92–4

  as painter 95–7

  as superstitious 97–8

  youthful friendships 99–112

  political views 120–4

  attend Olympia rally 122

  apparently has lunch with Hitler 123–4

  enjoys social life in London 125–6, 129

  pranks and teases 128, 129–31, 267

  builds the Folly for Robert 132–6

  friendship with Dalí 136–42

  fascination with Surrealism 141–2

  incident of the diving-suit 141, 142

  anxieties concernin
g the war 189–90, 191

  lives with Bowra in Oxford 190–91

  keeps a dream notebook 194–5

  undergoes psychoanalysis 195–6

  bizarre portrait of painted by Denton Welch 205–6

  worried about Robert’s enlistment in the Army 206

  refers to Robert as his ‘agent’ 207–8

  returns to Faringdon 209, 214, 217

  takes to wearing knitted skullcaps 212

  portraits painted by Gregorio Prieto 213

  rumours that he might marry Clarissa Churchill 217

  loyalty to old friends 220–26

  jaundiced view of Jennifer and Robert’s marriage 236–7

  accepts Jennifer as part of Faringdon household 239–40, 243

  appears to like baby Victoria 251–2, 278–9

  undergoes electric treatment with Dr Gottfried 270

  final illness and death 282–7

  ashes buried under the front lawn 315

  concert and readings given in his honour 322

  celebrations and unveiling of a blue plaque 393–6

  WORKS BY

  books

  The Château de Résenlieu 14

  A Distant Prospect 14, 24

  Dresden 14

  First Childhood 14, 24, 47–8, 90, 205

  The Camel 20, 90

  Far From the Madding War 37, 112, 192, 195, 210–11

  The Girls of Radcliff Hall 71, 112–15

  Mr Pidger 104, 131, 193, 210

  The Romance of a Nose 141–2, 210, 236

  Count Omega 210

  compositions

  ‘Le Poisson d’or’ 35–6

  Three English Songs 37–8

  Three Songs in the German Manner 37

  Fantaisie Espagnole 38

  The Triumph of Neptune 39

  ‘L’Uomo dai baffi’ 40

  Luna Park (ballet) 45, 134

  ‘A Fascist March’ 123

  A Wedding Bouquet (ballet) 146–7, 155

  Cupid and Psyche (ballet) 187, 269

  Cinderella, or There’s Many a Slipper 210, 256

  Come On Algernon’ (song for Ealing film) 256

  The Halfway House (Ealing film) 256

  Les Sirènes (ballet) 268–9

  Nicholas Nickleby (Ealing film) 268

  plays

  The Furies 234–5, 380

  poems

  ‘Surrealist Landscape’ 138–9

  ‘Portrait of a Society Hostess’ 152

  ‘The Romantic Charter’ 211–12

  Berners Trust 354, 394

  Betjeman, John (1906–1984) 66, 67

  description of 90–92

  friendship with Gerald and Robert 91, 92–3

  as editor of the Shell Guides 92, 136

  love of Englishness 92

  comment on Robert and Gerald lunching with Hitler 124

  comment on Gerald Wellesley 133

  comment on Schiaparelli’s visit to a jumble sale 144

  as friend of Cyril Conolly 182

  at Oxford University 190

  poem on St Giles’ churchyard 193

  falls for ‘Billa’ Harrod 203

  nicknames Billa ‘Turkish Delight’ 203, 243

  appointed press attaché in Dublin 204–5

  as regular visitor to Faringdon 269, 283, 317

  attends Gerald’s funeral 286

  pens an obituary of Gerald for the Listener 288

  gives readings of works by Gerald 322

  ‘The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel’ 91–2

  Ghastly Good Taste 92

  Betjeman, Penelope Chetwode (1910–1986)

  description of 90–91

  friendship with Gerald and Robert 90, 91, 283

  persuades Gerald to write overture for a mystery play 92

  religious sensibilities 92–3

  fondness for her horse Moti 93–4

  told of Robert and Gerald’s lunch with Hitler 124

  comment on Gala Dalí 137

  as friend of Cyril Conolly 182

  has mass said for Gerald at Uffington 193

  as character in one of Gerald’s books 211

  learns of Robert’s discharge from the Army 214

  Diana Mosely sends her love from prison 221

  as regular visitor to Faringdon 269, 317

  attempts to convert Gerald to Catholicism 271

  Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh 326–7

  Bilignin (France) 151–2

  Binfield, Ena 340

  The Blackbirds (jazz musicians) 147

  Blackwood, Caroline 280

  Bourchier, John 41

  Bowen, Elizabeth 63, 202, 232–3, 267, 283

  The Heat of the Day 233

  Bowles, Hamish 369

  Bowood House (Wiltshire) 377

  Bowra, Maurice (1898–1971)

  Osbert Lancaster’s drawing of 93

  description of 190

  Gerald moves in with 190, 192

  sexuality 190

  friendship with the Harrods 203, 206

  as character in one of Gerald’s books 211

  kindness to Jennifer 261

  comment on new Faringdon set-up 266

  Brain, Richard 381

  Brandt, Bill 205

  Brillat-Savarin, Jean Anthelme, The Physiology of Taste 216

  British Union of Fascists 117

  Britten, Benjamin 148

  Brooke, Jocelyn 271

  Bryars, Gavin 38

  Buckland House (Oxfordshire) 83

  Budberg, Baroness Moura 144

  Burgess, Guy 232

  Burnham, Jonathan 337–8

  Burton, Richard 313

  Burton, Robert, The Anatomy of Melancholy 209

  Buscot Park (Oxfordshire) 121, 291, 317

  Byrne, John 114–15

  Byron, Robert 169, 183

  Cadogan, Lady Primrose 308, 322–3

  Callas, Maria 299

  Canning, Bob, Faringdon Follies 394

  Capri, Agnès 202

  Caresser, Lord (Trinidadian singer – Rufus Callender) 202

  Carter, Howard 158

  Casati, Marchesa Luisa (1881–1957)

  descriptions of 34, 48–9, 223

  friendship with Gerald 34, 222

  keeps a python and other exotic animals 35, 49, 222

  accepted by Gerald’s mother 48–9

  as owner of Palazzo Venier dei Leoni in Venice 112

  depicted in a mural at Buscot Park 121

  visits the zoo with Dalí 138

  appears in Gerald’s dreams 194

  attracts new, younger set of admirers 222

  lives in reduced circumstances in London 222

  Casella, Alfredo 38, 40

  Castlerosse, Doris Delavigne, Viscountess (1901–1942)

  description of 108–9

  seduces Cecil Beaton 108–11

  friendship with Gerald 109

  as inspiration for Amanda in Private Lives 109

  sexual ability 109, 110–11

  lesbian tendencies 111–12

  as ‘Vivian Dorrick’ in The Girls of Radclyff Hall 113

  moves into the Dorchester 224–5

  commits suicide 225

  sexually involved with Robert 240

  considered a courtesan by Coote Lygon 354

  Castlerosse, Lord Valentine 111, 224–5

  Cavalcanti, Alberto 256, 268

  Cavendish, Lady Elizabeth 324

  Cecil, Lord David 206, 209, 210, 272

  Cecil, Rachel 206, 210, 272

  Cézanne, Paul 150

  Champagne Charlie (film, 1944) 256

  Charlton, Tessa 368

  Château Résenlieu (Normandy) 27

  Cheam prep school (Hampshire) 23, 26

  Chesterian music journal 38

  Chetwode, Philip, 1st Baron Chetwode 90

  Churchill, Clarissa see Eden, Clarissa

  Churchill, Clementine 213

  Churchill, Pamela Digby 224

  Churchill, Randolph 224
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  Churchill, Winston 144, 206, 213, 223, 224

  Clark, Kenneth 190

  Clayton Manor (Sussex) 295, 296, 298, 306, 358–9

  Clifford, Dorothy Meyrick, Lady de 69

  Clyde, Lady Elizabeth Wellesley 236

  Cocteau, Jean 37, 45, 67, 74, 143, 202

  Cold Blow House (Wiltshire) 172

  Colefax and Fowler 127

  Colefax, Lady Sybil ‘the Coal Box’ (1874–1950) as society hostess 125

  Harold Nicolson’s comment on 126

  as easy target for teasing 127, 128, 129

  inspiration for various writers of fiction 128

  near-calamitous party evening with Edward and Mrs Simpson 128

  lives at the Dorchester during the war 223–4

  as character in Gerald’s play The Furies 234

  Compton Beauchamp House (Oxfordshire) 144, 244

  Connolly, Cressida 182, 297, 298, 336, 359

  Connolly, Cyril (1903–1974)

  comment on post-war generation 63

  comment on homosexual trail-blazers 67

  co-founder of Horizon magazine 107, 205–6

  as regular visitor to Faringdon 156, 224, 272, 283

  at Oxford 182–3

  continues to gossip at the Cavendish 182

  friendship with Jennifer Fry 182, 255, 275

  significant friendships 182–3

  friendship with Gerald and Robert 183–4, 324

  comment on Bowra the boarer 190

  considers suicide in wartime 191

  friendship with the Harrods 204

  comment on Peter Watson 205

  friendship with the Cecil’s 206

  at the Gargoyle Club 232

  falls in love with Lys Lubbock 232–3

  compared to Eno’s liver salts by Gerald 258

  deeply gloomy about post-war England 267

  comments on death 274

  enjoys ‘masterminding’ couples 280

  vulnerability of 280

  writes jokey thank-you letter to Gerald 283–4

  his stepson’s involvement with Victoria Zinovieff 358

  death of 359

  Unquiet Grave 233

  Connolly, Lys 255, 272, 283

 

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