London was freezing, but looked lovely, as it always does at night.
I got to Dishoom early and sat at our table nursing several consecutive glasses of hot spiced chai
Bloody lovely.
It was lovely to catch up and see the photos of new house, it looks delightfully villagy
But then I’m biased
We gossiped and talked as we walked across to The Duke Of York’s just in time to see Backstairs Billy
A frothy tale of upstairs downstairs at Clarence House in 1983.
The story of head footman Billy ( nicely played by Hollywood heartthrob Luke Evans) and his relationship with the Queen Mother ( Penelope Wilton) isn’t rigorous or in anyway in depth, it shows the mutually needy banter between “ one old Queen and another”
Billy’s, job is to entertain and boost an ever growing isolated and lonely Queen Mother and she validates his camp existence by promoting him into a position of power.
On reflection both exist in a somewhat melancholy way, and it’s is a relationship, which Billy, is finally reminded, to be one sided without parity.
Wilton plays the Queen Mother with affection, giving her a certain physicality and vitality not captured by the television footage we have all grown up with. But we have plenty to smile at too , as corgis run merrily across the stage and sycophantic guests are privy to her infamous afternoon drinks party.