Evening Standard ES Magazine
Transcription
Evening Standard ES Magazine
21.10.16 FROW QUEEN Alexandra Shulman tells all RHYTHM OF THE NIGHT HOW Londoners party NOW PATERNITY TEST One man’s IVF journey Look who’s BACK! Russell Brand CONTENTS 5 5 What d’ya know? It’s Lupita Nyong’o in CAPITAL GAINS 7 Size matters in UPFRONT 9 Longchamp lets the cat out of the bag in MOST WANTED 11 Ewan McGregor keeps his kit on in FLASHBULB RUSSELL BRAND’S new revolutionary road 21 WOMEN’S STYLE with shoes and bags 23 Becks and checks in MEN’S STYLE 27 Dan Rookwood on his IVF journey 34 PERFECT PROPORTIONS for autumn 42 ALEXANDRA SHULMAN on the issues of the day 49 The new NIGHTS OUT 53 Chanel makes us blush in BEAUTY 59 GRACE AND FLAVOUR goes to Foley’s 61 It’s all totes oats in TART 63 HOMEWORK covers the full spectrum 65 We nosy around Basilicata in ESCAPE 66 MY LONDON with Ophelia Lovibond 14 COVER Russell Brand photographed by Dean Chalkley for Camera Press Here are the ES team’s top five illustrators on Instagram 1 NICOLAS BURROWS @nicolas.burrows ‘I love the loose, free-form lines and daubs of colour’ Matt Hryciw, chief sub editor ANDY REMENTER @andyrementer ‘Rementer regularly creates illustrations for The New Yorker, MTV and Urban Outfitters’ Samuel Fishwick, features writer 4 2 ELLIE FOREMAN-PECK @elliefp ‘These are astonishingly detailed line drawings, mainly rendered in monochrome’ Clara Dorrington, picture desk assistant 3 OLIMPIA ZAGNOLI @olimpiazagnoli ‘Zagnoli’s graphic, modernist images make the quotidian look extraordinary’ Joanne Kelly, deputy chief sub editor JIM STOTEN @jimtheillustrator ‘Jim’s surreal kaleidoscopic images create a wonderfully absurd world’ Lily Worcester, lifestyle assistant Visit us online: standard.co.uk/esmagazine • Follow us: @eveningstandardmagazine Editor Laura Weir Acting Editor Charlotte Ross Deputy editor Anna van Praagh Features director Alice-Azania Jarvis Art director Rasha Kahil Fashion director Nicky Yates Fashion features director Katrina Israel Commissioning editor Dipal Acharya Beauty editor Katie Service Features writer Samuel Fishwick Lifestyle assistant Lily Worcester Art editor Jessica Landon Picture editor Helen Gibson Picture desk assistant Clara Dorrington Merchandise editor Sophie Paxton Fashion editor Jenny Kennedy Fashion assistant Eniola Dare Office administrator/editor’s PA Niamh O’Keeffe Chief sub editor Matt Hryciw Deputy chief sub editor Joanne Kelly Instagram Contributing editors Lucy Carr-Ellison, Tony Chambers, James Corden, Hermione Eyre, Richard Godwin, Daisy Hoppen, Jemima Jones, Anthony Kendal, David Lane, Annabel Rivkin, Joe Scotland, Hikari Yokoyama Group client strategy director Deborah Rosenegk Head of magazines Christina Irvine ES Magazine is published weekly and is available only with the London Evening Standard. ES Magazine is published by Evening Standard Ltd, Northcliffe House, 2 Derry Street, Kensington, London W8 5TT. ES is printed web offset by Wyndeham Bicester. Paper supplied by Perlen Paper AG. Colour transparencies or any other material submitted to ES Magazine are sent at owner’s risk. Neither Evening Standard Ltd nor their agents accept any liability for loss or damage. © Evening Standard Ltd 2016. Reproduction in whole or part of any contents of ES Magazine without prior permission of the editor is strictly prohibited 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 3 CAPITAL GAINS What to do in London MOOSE KNUCKLES jacket, £1,499, at harrods. com BY SAMUEL FISHWICK 4 1 Four-stars REVIEW COLD COMFORTS Two’s company, three’s a crowd and four’s a party as all-girl indie quartet Warpaint bring the noise to the Roundhouse, with new material from Heads Up, the follow-up to their selftitled 2014 album. £19.50. 27 October (roundhouse.org.uk) Not content supplying maple syrup, Ryan Gosling and the two Justins (Trudeau and Bieber), Canada’s kitting us out with the cosiest coats south of the tundra, courtesy of Montreal outdoorsmen Moose Knuckles, launching at Harrods on Friday. (harrods.com) 5 FIRE STARTERS 2 Halla YES Rex Features; illustration by Jonathan Calugi @ Machas If you’re in search of a snug hideout this winter, Queen of Hoxton’s Skye Halla rooftop den fits the bill, with a Viking longboat bar, fire pits, driftwood sculptures, faux-fur throws and drinking horns a-plenty. (queenofhoxton.com) 3 6 Feel the burn — or rather, feed the grill — at Ben Chapman’s Kiln. From pork curry soup to lamb-andcumin skewers, the hotspot serves meat Thai-barbecue style, licked on the open wood fire of the eponymous kiln. 58 Brewer Street (kilnsoho.com) Nights at the MUSEUMS From druids dancing in the bowels of Somerset House to rebels running riot through the Houses of Parliament, the Museums at Night festival returns with a host of after-dark performances at the capital’s most iconic landmarks. 27-29 October (museumsatnight.org.uk) TAKE A BOWIE Pawn STAR Directed by Olivier Award-winning Ivo van Hove, written by Enda Walsh and the late David Bowie, Lazarus — a musical take on The Man Who Fell to Earth — lands at King’s Cross Theatre after its smashhit Broadway run. Trust us, it’s out of this world. 25 October to 22 January (lazarusmusical.com) LAST CHANCE: Priced out of the art market? Battersea’s Affordable Art Fair is a chance to check out emerging stars, with works starting at £100. Until 23 October. £8-£25 (affordableartfair.com) 7 Get your Oscar bets at the ready — Disney’s Queen of Katwe is already ahead of the pack, with the true story of a chess prodigy determined to play her way out of Ugandan slums. Lupita Nyong’o (left) stars. In cinemas 21 October. LOOK AHEAD: Lost the plot? The British Library’s enthralling exhibition, Maps and the 20th Century: Drawing the Line, will navigate major cultural changes. 4 November to 1 March (bl.uk) 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 5 UPFRONT Laura Craik on the politics of TV size, Zayn’s new fashion foray and the new ‘Freedom’ remake T Alamy; HBO here are many reliable markers that winter is coming — the rise in woolly jumper sightings, the need to buy Vicks First Defence, the urge to make thick, inedible green soup, the number of columns that incorporate the phrase ‘winter is coming’ — but none quite so reliable as the arrival of a new, bleak, lacerating drama about relationships. For what could be cheerier, as the nights draw in, than a TV series about divorce? Let’s get the biscuits in! Hygge! So excited was I about HBO’s new drama Divorce (the first TV show Sarah Jessica Parker has starred in since Sex and the City ended in 2004) that I rushed out to buy a new telly. Well, I say ‘rushed’, but really I’d been pontificating since May. It’s not an easy purchase. What size is the right size? When does a TV become a surround-sound, in-house chav cinema? 46-inch? 52-inch? 60-inch? Every time I went to someone’s house, I’d surreptitiously measure theirs. It didn’t help, namely because I was using my hands and not a measuring tape. Now that staying in is the new going out yada yada, like most people, I receive a surfeit of emails titled ‘The Art Of Hibernating’ featuring £65 log baskets and £170 throws. Yet nobody wants to tackle the vexatious issue of TV size, in spite of your television dominating your room more tyrannically than any other purchase, bar your sofa. In desperation, I emailed Panasonic. ‘Oh hiya, what size of TV are all the neurotic middle-class London women buying this year?’ I asked. ‘46- to 50-inch’, came the reply. So I bought a 42-inch, and mounted it above the fireplace. I’m joking. About the fireplace part, not about the screen size. After squinting at my phone all day, a 42-inch looks mahoosive. And now, I’m ready to hunker down and watch a harrowing Danish crime drama. Skål! Can someone please design a chic TV console? Because those bastards definitely don’t exist. NEW DIRECTION In this week’s instalment of Celebrity Career Moves We Didn’t See Coming But Probably Should Have, we focus on the unexpected news that Zayn Malik (right) is to collaborate on a Versus collection with Donatella Versace (far right). Well, if it’s good enough for JW Anderson, Anthony Vaccarello and Christopher Kane (all previous Versus collaborators) I daresay it’s good enough for Zayn. Despite dating the beautiful and loving Gigi Hadid, Zayn, I suspect, isn’t the kind of person who’ll limit himself to just one career. So while I’m a tad concerned that a person who suffers Breaking bad: SJP is back and starring in HBO’s Divorce “So excited was I about HBO’s new drama Divorce, starring Sarah Jessica Parker, that I rushed out to buy a new telly” from anxiety is choosing fashion designer as his next move, if anyone can assuage his worries, it’s the goddess Donatella. Good luck to them. ORIGINAL APPEAL George Michael’s seminal ‘Freedom! ‘90’ video has been remade with Joan Smalls, Irina Shayk and Adriana Lima strutting around Times Square looking all kinds of sexy. All kinds of sexy bar the sexy of the supermodels who starred in the original ‘Freedom’ video, that is. Soz, but 26 years later, no one’s come close to Linda Evangelista (above) writhing around in that slouchy navy jumper. Fellow fans of the five original Freedom stars (Linda, Christy, Naomi, Cindy and Tatjana) will be as stoked as I am for a new Channel 4 documentary about George Michael, which claims to interview them all together for the first time. More reason to be glad I bought a new TV (yes, I promise to go out more next week). HOT CRISPS Finally getting the recognition they deserve courtesy of HipChips, a conveyor belt café in Soho. Yussssss! NOT UROTHERAPY ‘Collect your morning wee and wipe your face with it,’ they say. ‘Your skin will glow.’ No, ta 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 7 Wilson the ragdoll kitten from ragdoll breeders angelrags.co.uk (07834 858634) THE most WANTED OUT OF THE BAG Longchamp’s PURR-FECT neutral TOTE is quite simply the cat’s MEOW LONGCHAMP Paris Premier bag, £1,295 (uk.longchamp.com) PHOTOGRAPH BY MARIE VALOGNES STYLED BY SOPHIE PAXTON 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 9 FLASHBULB! Party pictures from around town BY SAMUEL FISHWICK PHOTOGRAPHS BY JAMES PELTEKIAN Craig McGinlay Otis Ferry Amara Karan Eric Underwood Dan Caten Dean Caten Marc Quinn Jenny Bastet STAMPING GROUND Moncler, Old Bond Street Tim Blanks Moncler’s Freeze for Frieze party, in collaboration with the Royal College of Art, celebrated the opening of the luxury fashion house’s London flagship store. The cryptic postcards on display, decorated by stars from Jude Law (‘this is not a postcard’) to Rafael Nadal (a hand holding up a peace sign), left us wondering what it all meant. Answers on a... oh, just tweet us. Miles Teller Lady Mary Charteris Rosamund Pike Malaika Firth Sarah Harris Rosanna Falconer Nick Grimshaw Lady Violet Manners Olivia Grant Sam Rollinson Charlotte Wiggins Lady Alice Manners David Furnish Patrick Cox Diarist: Helena Blackstone PART AND PASTORAL Bulgari Hotel Cressida Bonas Morgane Polanski Ewan McGregor celebrated his directorial debut, an adaptation of Philip Roth’s American Pastoral, with his parents at the Bulgari Hotel. What’s Ewan’s favourite thing about being behind the camera? ‘Not having to worry about taking my clothes off as soon as I get to work,’ he says. Now that’s the naked truth. Danny Boyle and Denis Lawson GO TO EVENINGSTANDARD.CO.UK ⁄ ESMAGAZINE FOR MORE PARTY PICTURES Melissa Mills Name Name Ewan, James and Carol McGregor Marissa Montgomery 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 11 Picture credit Russell’s re-brand He’s the divisive comic who took on the establishment — and lost. Now he’s studying at SOAS and expecting his first child. Elaine Lipworth is granted unprecedented access to the world of Russell Brand... ‘D ILLUSTRATIONS BY MAYA WILD o you want a cuddle?’ asks Russell Brand, fixing me with his enormous brown eyes, smiling and wrapping his long arms around me. It’s certainly an unusual situation in which to find yourself, mid-interview. We are sitting in a sunny office at DreamWorks Animation Studios in Glendale, California, and are supposed to be discussing the 41-year-old comic, actor, and sometime activist’s role in the animated blockbuster Trolls. But then, perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised — with Brand, I learn it’s best to expect the unexpected. The cuddle is intended as an apology. The usually loquacious star has lost his voice. ‘I’ve got a bad cold and can’t talk much,’ he whispers. Bearded, wearing blackleather trousers and a tie-dyed sweater, this is the first UK interview he’s given for 18 months. He’s kept a low profile ever since that controversial interview at his London home with former Labour leader Ed Miliband, prior to last year’s general election. Brand had urged his 12 million Twitter followers not to vote, called for the dismantling of the political system — or ‘revolution’ as his 2014 book was called — only, at the 11th hour, to endorse Labour after the deadline for voter registration was up. Blamed by many when the party lost, he stepped back from Twitter and took a break from his hugely popular current affairs-themed YouTube channel, The Trews, though he returned last week with an episode on Donald Trump. ‘What I was looking at was much too limiting,’ he says. ‘What I learned is that I was right in the first place; the system will preserve itself. Now I’m focused on what’s best for human beings.’ Now Brand — who was expelled from several schools, never took A levels and was asked to leave the Italia Conti stage school for drug use and poor attendance — is now focusing on education and has enrolled at SOAS, London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies, to study Religion in Global Politics. ‘I am very interested in the role that religion and spirituality will play in the further formulation of world events and how secular societies are held together,’ he says. ‘The old idea [about politics] is dead and people don’t know what’s replacing it yet, so I’m spending some time discovering what it is. I’d like to understand what the deep truths are of Islam, Bahá’ísm, Christianity; I want to know more.’ It’s not the only change in his life. Together with fiancée Laura Gallacher, 27, sister of TV presenter Kirsty, Brand left London last year and bought a house in Henley-on-Thames. ‘It is very calm. I look at the chickens, they hatch some eggs. Basically I’m like a village idiot — just looking at livestock.’ The couple are expecting their first child imminently. ‘I feel lit up by the idea,’ he says. It’s quite a transformation. Brand has a longstanding reputation as a womaniser, having been linked to a string of high-profile women including Kate Moss and Courtney Love. There was also a short-lived marriage to the American pop star Katy Perry, whom he met in 2009 when she filmed a cameo for his film Get Him to the Greek and married in 2010 in an extravagant Hindu ceremony in Rajasthan (they divorced the following year with Brand citing irreconcilable differences) and a relationship with Jemima Khan. When I ask what’s different now, he complains that journalists ‘intuitively try to place the organic experience I am having into an existing, predetermined template’. He throws out a ‘typical’ example of a headline he says would be misleading, to illustrate his point: ‘It all changed for Russell when he met his Laura’. He says the relationship hasn’t changed him — his internal transformation has made him ‘more available’ for a lasting partnership, ‘because I am no longer looking to the external world to resolve my problems. If I feel connected spiritually, then I find that I am happy and I am a good boyfriend’. Still, he says: ‘There is constant conflict between the primal drives: the drive to procreate, the drive to survive, 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 15 and the drive to have status. But I am no longer deluded as to what may provide happiness.’ His rural retreat suits him: ‘I’m so much happier over the course of the day to see one or two people and a few chickens, that’s a good way of living.’ S Brand new: right, with Laura Gallacher uddenly, he takes my Cath Kidston notebook, rips out a page, and starts doodling: hearts and stars. ‘One can tell from your flowery notebook that you are a sweet person,’ he says. I grab the book back. ‘You’re protective of your notebook?’ I say he’s trying to distract me; people still want to hear his views; they are interested in him. ‘People are interested in pornography…’ he flings back. ‘We’ve got an obligation to talk about things that are relevant.’ He argues that it is ridiculous that observers describe his critique of capitalism — in Revolution and elsewhere — as hypocritical, claiming that his personal wealth and lifestyle have nothing to do with his populist views. ‘I’m not going to let other people tie me down with hard and fast rules of whether I’m allowed to have Nike shoes. I don’t remember saying everyone should become a monk.’ Long before dabbling in politics, Brand was a provocateur. He started out in standup, then became an MTV presenter — only to be fired after coming to work dressed as Osama bin Laden on the day after the September 11 attacks and bringing his drug dealer to the studios. Yet he continued to surprise, producing two acclaimed memoirs: My Booky Wook and My Booky Wook 2, chronicling his difficult childhood growing up in Grays, Essex, with his mother Barbara and his battles with addiction. He developed a successful career as a stand-up comic but 16 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 he alienated many fans in the notorious 2008 ‘Sachsgate’, when Brand and Jonathan Ross left obscene messages on Fawlty Towers star Andrew Sachs’s answering machine. He has since apologised for the prank. These days, he says, he’s focusing on ‘being kind to people, being loving’. Last March, he announced he would use money from Revolution to open the Trew Era Café on Hackney’s New Era housing estate employing recovering drug addicts. The project has just been donated to rehab charity RAPt (the Rehabilitation for Addicted Prisoners Trust) where Brand is a patron. ‘I recognise that I feel happier when I do things that have a positive impact on other people,’ he says, before telling me that he has to end the interview because ‘I’ve only got about nine syllables left in my little throat’. We’ve been together for 45 minutes. I return to DreamWorks to continue our discussion the following morning and find that Brand is still hoarse, but feeling better. There’s another hug. Around us, the walls are decorated with posters for Trolls. Inspired by the cute/ugly naked dolls with rainbow-coloured hair, the film explores the nature of happiness. The ridiculously cheerful singing and dancing trolls live in a forest utopia, led by Princess Poppy (Anna Kendrick). Their sworn enemies, the Bergens, are miserable monsters (led by John Cleese) who hunt down trolls and eat them at their ritualistic feast day, Trollstice. “It’s very calm — I look at the chickens, they hatch some eggs. I’m like a village idiot” Justin Timberlake is the film’s executive music producer and also voices the character Branch. It’s highly entertaining — and Brand is funny playing Creek, a troll. ‘Whoever does casting at DreamWorks is very skilful,’ he laughs. Brand was attracted to the positive theme. ‘If you make a decision to be positive like the Trolls, life will be more abundant than if you zombie around in Bergen Town cannibalising adorable trolls,’ he muses. One of the appealing characteristics of the Trolls is that they wear flower watches that light up on the hour, reminding them to hug regularly. ‘Hugging releases oxytocins, a self-manufactured chemical,’ says Brand. ‘If we hug each other more and love each other more, then we’re making a commitment to move closer to one another — it’s an essentially optimistic act.’ Twenty minutes in, Brand has to leave again, but his manager Nik assures me that I will have more time with him when his voice returns. A few weeks later, back in London, I’m summoned to meet him at Electric House in Notting Hill, where I wait in a book-lined room. Brand doesn’t appear. Forty-five minutes pass and I get a text informing me that he is now at The Mitre, a pub in Holland Park. It takes 20 minutes to find a taxi; the traffic is gridlocked. Frazzled, I arrive " % # % # &!& %# &# '% &%& "# &" (" % ' &%& % #" #" & to find Brand, yoga-teacher serene in white-cotton trousers, a grey T-shirt, silky gold scarf, wooden beads and Nikes, his hair tied in two buns, languidly chatting to the woman behind the bar. ‘Elaine, I’ve been waiting all afternoon, where have you been?’ he exclaims in mock fury. Waiting for you at the Electric. ‘That’s not the sort of place I’d go to,’ he deadpans… and so it goes on. E xasperating? Yes. But Brand wins you over. Waxing lyrical about the pleasures of country life, ‘walking by the river’ with his fiancée, their cats, Morrissey and Jericho, and his German shepherd, Bear, he’s charismatic and charming company. ‘I felt very peaceful. I’m enjoying rural life because there’s less stimulation.’ He hasn’t abandoned London, he insists. ‘Sometimes I am here for work, I go to watch West Ham. I go to the National [Theatre], I saw The Caretaker (the recent production of Harold Pinter’s play with Timothy Spall) at the Old Vic.’ Sober for 13 years, Brand’s writing a book about addiction to be published next September. ‘Addiction is about the way you relate to the outside world. If you’re lucky, you’ll get a substance misuse problem, which drills it right down. If you’re not lucky, you’ll have a food, sex or spending issue; those things are insidious because they’re culturally endorsed, they’re habitual.’ Addiction should, he argues ‘be regarded like autism’. He says: ‘Everybody is somewhere on the spectrum. If you look at your own life, what is it you do that isn’t good for you and you can’t stop doing, even if it is seemingly innocuous, like the way you watch TV.’ “I’m very excited about becoming a dad and I’m preparing myself” For the past seven years, Brand has meditated twice daily, a practice he was introduced to by director David Lynch, who runs a global Transcendental Meditation foundation. ‘I commune with the inner world relatively frequently or else I get a bit barmy.’ He takes my notebook again and doodles: ‘Hearts then a bit of a spiral, then a staircase...’ he says as he does it. Does he believe in God? ‘Yes, but I haven’t devoted myself to any specific “thing” [religion] or teacher,’ he says before, 20 minutes in, suddenly breaking off again and announcing that he has to leave for his next appointment. But not before promising yet another interview. Our final encounter is on the phone a month later. He sounds buoyant. ‘I’m very excited about becoming a dad and I’m preparing myself. I am just getting ready to be with a new little person and see what it is they want.’ He doesn’t know the baby’s sex: ‘I might never find out. I may never look!’ He says Laura is busy ‘decorating the nursery. Notoriety: (top, from left) Brand and Jonathan Ross; The Trews with Ed Miliband. Above, in The Bill in 1994. Left, with Jemima Khan, and far left, ex-wife Katy Perry. Below, with his mum Around domestic issues, my vote is often secondary... Or the vote of my gender at least, so I will just wait to see what is determined’. As a child, he says, he was ‘a very solitary, mischievous, unremarkable little boy. The first time that I performed when I was 14 was the happiest moment in my life, in a school play (Bugsy Malone), and I didn’t want to do anything else ever again’. When he was eight, his mother contracted uterine cancer and then breast cancer. His father — who took him on a ‘sex tourism’ holiday in the Far East when he was 17 — was largely absent and his relationship with his stepfather was strained. These days he takes a philosophical view of his upbringing. ‘I always had this tremendous sense that I could do whatever I wanted, probably from a combination of my mother’s devotion and my father’s sense of “can-do” individualism.’ He remains close to his mother. ‘She’s very well and she’s so excited to become a grandmother. She’s a beautiful, kind woman who taught me through example that it’s really important to be compassionate, loving and understanding, to put other people before yourself.’ Will it be difficult not to spoil their child, who unlike him, will enjoy a privileged upbringing? ‘I’m just going to be really loving and giving; I will do what my parents did, which was their best. It seems the thing that is important is that children know that they can trust you and be open with you.’ Our interview over, Brand says he hopes I have enough material. ‘It’s hilarious,’ he laughs, ‘I’ve never been so in touch [with a journalist] in my f**king life. You’ve got enough for a four-hour documentary, the definitive biography. This has been a thorough, coruscating, CAT scan of a man’s soul, an MRI of a man’s identity.’ He chuckles again. ‘It is all going to be all right, you know?’ My article or life in general? ‘Both; life more importantly.’ And with a friendly farewell in lieu of a hug, the intriguing Russell Brand hangs up. ‘Trolls’ is in cinemas on Friday. 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 19 VALEXTRA large Iside bag, £2,350 (valextra.com) STYLE NOTES What we love now SARAH & SEBASTIAN earrings, £350, at net-aporter.com EDITED BY KATRINA ISRAEL Add to BASKET HANDI WORK Valextra, the Milanese accessory brand that has collaborated with design world greats from Peter Saville to Martino Gamper on its graphic bags, has opened its first UK flagship on Mayfair’s Mount Street. Mark Monday 24 October in your diary — Moda Operandi is hosting an online trunk show allowing you to pre-order new London-based shoe brand Neous’ debut collection. The brainchild of exKirkwood staffer Alan Buanne and stylist Vanissa Antonious, the brand’s architectural approach and bold use of block colour stopped us in our tracks at the SS17 shows. Until 6 November (modaoperandi.com) FACETIME Net-a-porter has launched a demi-fine jewellery category featuring artful Australian brand Sarah & Sebastian, which first drew our gaze on fellow antipodean Kym Ellery’s Parisian catwalks. (net-a-porter.com) NEOUS mules, £415, at moda operandi.com Rich PICKINGS PAUL SMITH shirt, £205 (paulsmith. co.uk) London-based artist, designer and illustrator Kyle Bean makes models that crack big ideas with unexpected materials. THOMAS TAIT jacket, £1,255, at matchesfashion.com Catwalking.com; Tobi Jenkins @kylejbean JOSEPH AW16 InSTARglam CHRISTOPHER KANE AW16 Society snapper Slim Aarons’ seductive photography of the leisure class at play is legendary. This new cinematic tome is entirely dedicated to his favourite leading (and lunching) ladies. ‘Slim Aarons: Woman’, £55 (abramsbooks.com) ECLECTIC FASTENINGS Got a penchant for nosing about the haberdashery department? So do London’s design guns J W Anderson, Thomas Tait, Christopher Kane and Paul Smith, who collectively dipped into the odd button bin for winter. Take their lead and spruce up a plain white shirt or last year’s winter coat with an excursion to Liberty’s third floor for a ceramic, wood or metal button fix. LIBERTY brown button, £1.95 (libertylondon. com) LIBERTY wooden zebra button, £3 (libertylondon.com) Follow us at @eveningstandardmagazine J W ANDERSON trousers, £600, at brownsfashion.com CÉLINE shoes, £497 (0207 491 8200) 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 21 MEN’S STYLE What to buy now BIG BEN’S bit on the side BY ANISH PATEL A TALE OF TWO MEN Ben Machell embeds himself with some American tourists H&M X KENZO H&M Modern Essentials As we march into winter, H&M’s menswear offering heats up with the launch of David Beckham’s second Modern Essentials instalment, followed by a spirited Kenzo collaboration on 3 November. Expect chic classics from the former and a high-octane urban uniform of military-inspired outerwear from the latter. Whatever your style, they’ve got it covered. AQUASCUTUM X SUPREME Filey raincoat, £598; scarf, £98; waistcoat, £228 (aqua scutum.com) Check MATES Josh Shinner; illustration by Jonathan Calugi @ Machas AQUASCUTUM X SUPREME track jacket, £328 (aquascutum.com) ECHO FRIENDLY Its iconic club check has been worn by leaders from Sir Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher. Now Aquascutum, the British rainwear heavyweight, has joined forces with skate brand Supreme in a collection that sees its signature prints plastered over waterproof utility vests, club jackets and flannel shirts. Grab one quickly and, er, ‘rain’ supreme in the style stakes. Available from Friday (aquascutum.com) Although voice assistants have been on our phones for years, they’re unreliable and often no quicker than typing or tapping — sorry Siri. But Amazon’s new wireless speaker, with its built-in virtual assistant ‘Alexa’, is different. Download the in-house app and connect to wifi to set alarms, play music or check the football scores and weather — all by calling out a command. Easy. Amazon Echo, £150 (amazon.co.uk) My mum is originally from New York but met my dad on a trip to the UK, promptly fell in love and then relocated to Leeds. It takes a certain sort of woman to survey 1970s New York City, observe the thrilling mishmash of culture — Warhol, Studio 54, CBGB, the birth of hip-hop — and then think: ‘Nah, I actually quite fancy moving to a post-industrial city in the North of England where I’ll spend the first five years sporadically crying about the food and worrying about the Yorkshire Ripper’. Anyway, that’s what she did, which is why I’m here today. “I felt embarrassed for not acknowledging that Americans are some of the finest goddamn tourists this city could wish for” The upshot, however, is that I have lots of American family. Since moving to London, they have been particularly enthusiastic about coming to visit, which is how I came to spend last week poking around the city with an aunt and uncle from Chicago. Now, in the past, I have been guilty of a certain amount of snobbery towards American tourists, mainly because of their gigantic trainers, their propensity to cross roads in suicidal waves and their use of the word ‘classy’ to describe pretty much everything from St Paul’s Cathedral to telephone boxes, not to mention eating in Aberdeen Angus Steakhouses (although on that count, I’m basically just jealous). So it was an odd sensation to suddenly find myself embedded with some bona fide Yankee sightseers. I was like Elijah Wood in Green Street. Only in reverse. And with no football violence. And as I toured London with them, I felt embarrassed. Embarrassed at myself for having spent so long refusing to acknowledge the truth, which is that Americans are some of the finest goddamn tourists this city could wish for. They are enthusiastic, gracious and genuinely curious about everything around them. They were more interested in London than I had ever been, which I suppose is what happens when you travel 4,000 miles to visit somewhere, and they politely put up with a succession of gormless Brits asking if they were going to vote for Trump, their response essentially being: ‘Um hello, we’re literally paying to visit a foreign country and exposing ourselves to its culture so draw your own conclusions.’ The only thing I found disappointing was that at no point did they insist on eating in a central London steakhouse. They might come back next year, though. So fingers crossed. 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 23 FATHERLAND Dan Rookwood never thought it would be so hard to conceive. From miscarriage to IVF, he charts his long — and often heartbreaking — journey to becoming a dad PHOTOGRAPHS BY BILL GENTLE Baby daddy: new father Dan Rookwood welcomed twin girls into the world in May 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 27 Four’s company: Rookwood and his wife, Sam, with Rose and Indigo S o this isn’t exactly how I’d imagined becoming a father. It’s 7.30am and I’m sitting in a lounge area, pretending to read some dog-eared celebrity gossip rag while I wait restlessly for my name to be called. I furtively scan the room, which is filling up with other men all there for exactly the same reason: to masturbate into a sterile cup before work. And then to my horror I spot someone I think I recognise. Of all the places! When he looks up, the penny drops: he’s the guy that grunts in the free-weights room at my gym. We both look away and I return to whom People magazine deems the sexiest men alive. A nurse with a clipboard calls out a name. Then she makes another attempt, only louder. Oh, it’s ‘Rookwood’ she is mispronouncing comically. I jump to my feet and scuttle after her, cheeks flushing. In the next room I am handed a vast legal disclaimer to read and sign. I then initial my details on two stickers that will ensure my sperm is not mixed up with anyone else’s. They verify this twice. Then I am given a screw-cap cup and ushered into a windowless cubicle. A surgical paper sheet covers a wipe-clean fauxleather La-Z-Boy chair. ‘Please wash your hands!’ says a laminated clip-art sign. There are some hospital tissues on a table, a jumble of well-thumbed pornography magazines in a drawer. Wincing, I jab a finger at the Apple TV remote and the screen pings to life with a selection of adult movies. This feels all wrong. If I must do it this way, it very much matters to me that the only person I think about is my wife, Sam. 28 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 “WINCING, I JAB A FINGER AT THE TV REMOTE AND THE SCREEN PINGS TO LIFE WITH A SELECTION OF ADULT MOVIES. THIS FEELS ALL WRONG” Having attended to the matter in hand, I pause before the hatch where I am to leave my offering. In this most unholy of places, I say a little a prayer. And then, head bowed, I scurry off to work. As a priapic young man, you never imagine such fertility struggles. You blithely presume that when you want to start trying for a family you can just flick the switch and wham, bam, thank you ma’am! But sometimes nature’s course can be tortuously circuitous with breakdowns and dead ends en route. A little part of us died over Christmas 2012. Sam had come off the pill when we went to India on honeymoon in December 2009 and we had been trying to get pregnant, with gradually increasing intensity, for three years. Then finally, it happened. I remember feeling more relieved than excited. That’s male pride for you. We told Sam’s mum’s family when we saw them for dinner on Christmas Eve, my family as we sat down to lunch on Christmas Day, and then Sam’s dad’s family when we went over there on Boxing Day. It was supposed to be a much-needed happy ending to what had otherwise been a rough year following the loss of my mother from cancer that June — 40 days from diagnosis to death. But even as we clinked celebratory champagne that Sam couldn’t drink, she knew something didn’t feel right. Because she couldn’t feel anything. On 27 December, we drove to a hospital in Blackpool — and believe me, there are few more depressing places than Blackpool in December drizzle — for confi rmation of what we feared. A miscarriage. I have a triptych of freeze-frame memories: the festive tinsel in the doctor’s hair when she shook her head; the horrible sound of my emotionally shattered dad weeping down the phone as I called him in the corridor; the rain-soaked parking ticket waiting for us in the hospital car park. “SAM STARTED GOING TO ACUPUNCTURE AND REIKI. SHE EVEN PUT WEIRD PINK CRYSTALS AROUND OUR BED. NOTHING WORKED” Back in London, Sam had to have the dead foetus scraped from her uterus. If that sounds brutal, that’s because it was. Things were not quite the same after that. What had started out as fun — all the sex, all the optimism, all the discussions about potential names — had become tinged with sadness, worry, doubt. Despite this being the social-media age of #oversharing, a stigma around miscarriage and infertility remains. Maybe it is not in British culture to talk openly about such things. However, if Sam and I had realised then how statistically common miscarriage was — an estimated one in five pregnancies fails — or known how many of our friends had experienced that same secret heartache, we might not have got so stuck in a counter-productive vortex of internalised despair. Sources: NHS England, HFEA and Fertility Network UK T he longer this process took, the more it became an exacting science. Work trips and social events were organised primarily around Sam’s menstrual cycle. Text messages would arrive via pregnancy apps telling us when conditions for copulation were optimal. But month after bloody month brought disappointment, a different kind of period pain. Remember before Trump and Brexit, when Facebook was just an endless carousel of photographs of other people’s children? You force a smile when parents say how much they envy your carefree, childfree life. It got to the point when we began to resent friends succeeding with apparent ease where we continued to fail. Two of our best friends took us for dinner to tell us their happy news and my eyes pricked with tears. ‘You guys!’ I exclaimed. But inside I was screaming, ‘Not you guys too!’ When you’re a couple in your 30s and you’ve been together a while, people often ask: ‘So when are you two going to have kids?’ It’s a well-meaning enough question but an insensitive one for it assumes a) you want children (and not everyone does), and b) that you can have children (and not everyone can). My response was often to grasp the nettle — and thrust it in their face. ‘Actually we’ve been trying for ages,’ I would reply. Then I’d let them squirm for a second or two. ‘And we’ve been trying just about everything.’ The longer we tried, the more I was prepared to set aside eye-rolling cynicism to give just about anything a go: supplements, special diets, Transcendental Meditation. Giving up alcohol was tough because everyone then assumed we were already expecting. Sam started going to acupuncture and reiki. She even put weird pink crystals around our bed. Nothing worked. We were also seeking professional help. ‘Well you conceived once so there’s clearly no major problem. Keep trying and come back in six months,’ said our GP, the NHS’s face-palming equivalent of, ‘Have you tried turning it off and on again?’ So we paid £500 for a ‘Fertility MOT’ at a private clinic in Wimbledon and discovered ours was a frustrating case of ‘unexplained infertility’. ‘Try to relax; it’s most likely stress,’ the consultant said. ‘The more anxious you get, the less likely it is to happen.’ Nothing stresses you out more than someone who can’t give you any definitive answers telling you not to stress out. For years, we tiptoed around the white elephant of infertility. Medically it is defined as ‘the inability to conceive a pregnancy after 12 months of unprotected sexual intercourse’. These days we can get whatever we want delivered whenever we want it at the swipe of a touchscreen. But not babies. One in seven UK couples of reproductive age struggles to conceive, according to the NHS. And it’s a trend on the rise: in 10 years, infertility is IVF IN BRITAIN For every 100 couples trying to conceive naturally, 84 will conceive in one year, 92 within two years and 93 within three years. ACCORDING TO NHS ENGLAND, ABOUT ONE IN SEVEN UK COUPLES WILL EXPERIENCE DIFFICULTIES CONCEIVING. Common causes of infertility in women are irregular ovulation, blocked Fallopian tubes, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). In men, the most common cause is poor quality of semen. UNEXPLAINED INFERTILITY AFFECTS 25 PER CENT OF COUPLES WHO ARE TRYING TO BECOME PREGNANT WITHOUT SUCCESS. The numbers of women seeking IVF and DI continues to rise. The most recent statistics show two thirds of those women were aged 37 and under. IVF FAILS 75 PER CENT OF THE TIME In 2012, 2.2 per cent of all babies born in the UK were conceived through IVF. In 2013, one third of the UK clinics offering IVF and DI were based in London and the South-East. 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 31 expected to affect one in three couples, partly because we’re all determined to live our own lives before creating another. Yet we didn’t play fast and loose with our family planning — Sam was 30 when she stopped taking the pill, I was 32. Plenty of people leave it later. Once you hit your mid- to late-30s, it seems like everyone has children. We bought a two-bedroom house in family-friendly Richmond in anticipation of our own. There was a playground so close we could hear toddlers cry when they fell off the swings. In early 2014 we relocated to New York for work, a move made much easier, ironically, because we didn’t have kids. The NHS has a great many virtues and rightly remains the envy of the world, but one of the first things we realised once we got set up in the States is that it can be shambolic. The US health system is far from perfect, but we made more progress in our first 30-minute consultation than we had in the preceding two years. After that appointment we fell into each other’s arms and wept. Suddenly there was renewed hope. O ur doctor immediately drew up a plan with a timeline. We did three rounds of IUI — intrauterine insemination— all of which failed. So we ended up at the IVF clinic. ‘Test-tube babies’ are increasingly common these days: one in 50 births is the result of IVF, with the number rising every year. The proportion is higher in cities where careerists leave starting a family until later in life. When you know what to look for — a double buggy being pushed by older-looking parents, for example — you can spot it a mile off. On the same day that I produced the goods into a plastic cup, Sam underwent general anaesthetic to have her eggs retrieved. There followed a nervous 24 hours while we awaited news of how many had been fertilised, if any. Encouragingly we had six and we returned to the clinic three days later for the embryo transfer. ‘One egg or two?’ It’s a question I’ve been asked a 32 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 thousand times at breakfast but when you’re sitting in a fertility clinic, it’s one of the biggest decisions of your life. We couldn’t bear the thought of this not working so we decided to double our chances of success — and make twins more likely — by transferring two embryos. We paid to freeze the remaining four for use down the track, if necessary. And then for the next 21 nights I injected a 1.5inch long syringe of the hormone progesterone into one or other of Sam’s buttocks. When we finally saw those two blue lines on the pregnancy test, we couldn’t believe it. For weeks Sam kept buying tests kits to check again. This time we didn’t tell anyone. We were expecting... something to go wrong. Twins! We stared in disbelief at our grainy ultrasound scans. ‘Do twins run in the family?’ is the second question everyone asks. (The first is: ‘Are they identical?’ All IVF twins are non-identical.) I have no qualms about being honest. When commissioned to write this article, I asked Sam if she was OK with it. I asked myself the same thing. The process has dredged up some painful memories but I believe we should be able to talk about miscarriage, infertility and the emotional tumult that is IVF. And people should be careful how they ask sensitive questions of couples without children. “‘ONE EGG OR TWO?’ IT’S A QUESTION I’VE BEEN ASKED A THOUSAND TIMES AT BREAKFAST BUT THIS WAS A BIG LIFE DECISION” Sam’s wasn’t a straightforward pregnancy. She ticked all the high-risk boxes because of her age (over 35), her history of miscarriage, but mainly because all the past procedures had left her with a weakened cervix that our doctor was worried might not be able to support two babies full-term. At four months, there was some bleeding. Oh no, please no, not again. Sam was put on indefinite bed rest and we cancelled our babymoon. She managed to keep the babies. But we dropped down to one salary sooner than anticipated and that then meant we missed out on the apartment we were on the cusp of buying. At every stage, I tried to take as much anxiety away from Sam as I could but I’d never felt so stressed in my life. At times it felt like the odds were against us but we marked off every milestone during the pregnancy and gradually we allowed ourselves to believe. Some people go through several rounds of financially and emotionally draining IVF without success. We know how lucky we are: it worked the first time for us. On 10 May this year we welcomed Rose Hope and Indigo Grace into our lives. Our yearning and our gratitude became their middle names. They are perfect. The fee for this article is being donated to Fertility Network UK (infertilitynetworkuk.com) KENZO dress, £800 (020 7491 8469). MARNI shoes, £570 (020 7245 9520). SONIA RYKIEL earring, £225 (soniarykiel.com) VIOLET TENDENCIES Cascading ruffles and elongated sleeves update a classic shirtwaister in the loveliest shade of lilac 34 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 CROWN JEWELS Alexander McQueen’s hair adornments bring sparkle to Simone Rocha’s sheer romance Glass WARRIORS Right now it’s all about making an impact. Corset belts, dramatic frills and fierce hair embellishments — here’s how to slay with a statement piece PHOTOGRAPHS BY LUKE STEPHENSON STYLED BY JENNY KENNEDY SIMONE ROCHA top, £495 (0207 629 6317). WILLIAM AND SON earrings, £14,900 (williamandson.com). ALEXANDER MCQUEEN chandelier hair pin, £245; star hair pin, £245; eye hair pin, £215; snake gold earrings, £315 (all alexandermcqueen.com) 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 35 MARC JACOBS coat, POA (marcjacobs.com). LOUIS VUITTON earrings, £415 (louisvuitton.com) CALL OF THE WILD Coloured fur flourishes finish heritage tailoring with a tactile twist at Marc Jacobs PRADA hat, £225; coat, £2,230; bustier, £590; sandals, £790; belt, £280; agenda book, £305 (prada.com) WHAT A WAIST Rein in winter’s military resurgence with Mrs Prada’s coveted corset belt 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 37 PUMP IT UP Eighties shoulder pads are back and wider than ever with Jacquemus leading the charge JACQUEMUS jacket, £640; boots, £810 (jacquemus.com) 38 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 BALENCIAGA dress, £7,450; and boots, £2,595 (balanciaga.com) Hair by Mirka Mysicka at Saint Luke using Bumble & Bumble. Make-up by Kristina Ralph Andrews at Saint Luke using Givenchy. Model: Rosie Amanda @ Select Model Management. Fashion assistant: Eniola Dare. Casting by Lock Studios EX MACHINA Demna Gvasalia ups the cocktail-hour ante with elaborately encrusted boots that extend his Balenciaga sheath 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 39 She’s got it COVERED As she publishes her brilliantly candid memoir, British Vogue editor Alexandra Shulman gives Charlotte Edwardes the lowdown on what it’s like to work with everyone you’ve ever heard of, and why she’s standing by Philip Green… O ne of my absolute favourite excerpts from Alexandra Shulman’s diary of Vogue’s 100th year (and there are many) is when she can’t find anything to wear in the racks of designer clothes at Selfridges. ‘I’m the editor of Vogue,’ she declares, ‘surely this should not be happening.’ So she goes to Jigsaw instead and finds lots of ‘really good, well-priced, easy clothes’. She says she’d love to wear Preen, but would look like a ‘bag lady’, and later buys her mother, the writer and former magazine editor, Drusilla Beyfus, a nice, safe Liberty print wallet for her 90th birthday. So when I sit down in her light, bright kitchen in Queen’s Park, I’m surprised to find she’s in Erdem and Dolce & Gabbana. ‘This is just for the pictures,’ she corrects. ‘This is not me.’ What is her is the chicken carcass in a Le Creuset pan — roast chicken is her ‘favourite’ — and the endless cups of coffee she provides from a moka pot. There’s a ribbing exchange with her son, Sam Spike, 21, who lives with her and her boyfriend, the writer David Jenkins. 42 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 Sam accuses her of being dismissive of his view of ‘contemporary feminism’ and says Jenkins agrees with him. She replies — somewhat dismissively — that they are just ‘ganging up’. The first thing to say about Inside Vogue the book is that it is everything the BBC2 documentary Absolutely Fashion: Inside British Vogue was not. Shulman, 58, says writing was ‘therapy, really’: ‘I thought, “I’ll put it all down. I’ve got to be careful not to edit”. So in the end there’s more than I thought.’ Even without the piquant observations — Karl Lagerfeld is a ‘benevolent Bond villain’; Mick Jagger is ‘soft shoes and Mount Rushmore face’; the late Zaha Hadid ‘just like Big Bird’ in an enormous ostrich cape — Fab four: Alexa Chung, Pixie Geldof, Kendall Jenner and Alexandra Shulman on the Topshop Unique FROW it’s eye-popping. She faithfully reports Sophie Hunter telling her how she met Benedict Cumberbatch in a loo, Ben Goldsmith calling Sadiq Khan a ‘smug little f***er’, David Bailey comparing himself to Picasso and then asking Vogue’s fashion director, Lucinda Chambers, why she hasn’t had Botox. Tracey Emin cancels expensive shoots at a moment’s notice, as does Naomi Campbell. Shulman relates how Campbell calls in a cold fury that she won’t be included in the centenary issue because she didn’t turn up to a shoot, adding, ‘threateningly, “It’s not going to look good in the press if I’m not there”’. The shoot is rearranged and Campbell sends ‘a sweet text with lots of emojis I can’t interpret’. Charles Saatchi is ‘weird, u ndoubte d ly’ for stoppi n g Shulman in the hall as she leaves a dinner party to check her ears for plastic-surgery scars. And I cringed reading that Kate Moss put her arm around Shulman’s son, Sam, ‘like a cat with a baby mouse. (The next day Sam says he has her hair extensions in his jacket pocket.)’ My God, is she worried about causing offence? ‘It’s not in my nature to offend,’ she says. ‘But I decided to do this so I have to be Getty Images PHOTOGRAPHS BY JONNY COCHRANE 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 43 “You can say someone is a serial killer and they won’t be offended. But say they wore a red tie, and they really mind” Keeping up: Shulman with Kim Kardashian prepared that some people might be upset. My main thing was it had to be honest.’ What shatters ego in her world is, anyway, hard to judge. ‘You can say someone is a serial killer and they won’t be offended. But say they wore a red tie and they never wear a red tie, and they really mind.’ The main thing is that it’s an antidote to the dull thud of the documentary. ‘That wasn’t me,’ she says. ‘The book is.’ Certainly I was nervous to meet her after reading it — not just because of her waspishness but the number of times she is ‘cross’, ‘grumpy’, ‘irritated’, ‘mildly annoyed’ or ‘snaps’ at an assistant, hair colourist or driver. In person, though, she is warm and droll. The only time she gets exercised in our hour together is over pubic hair, and the notion that women are waxing themselves bald for men. ‘It’s absolutely appalling for women to have to feel that they have to be different from the way that they’re created,’ she says. ‘Women have pubic hair, they should have pubic hair. The idea that they feel they can’t have pubic hair because their generation of men will think they’re less attractive, I find absolutely repellent. It really makes me quite distressed.’ She waxes her legs, she concedes, ‘so on one level there’s something I’m changing’. But not her arms. ‘Lots of people would wax their arms if they had as much hair as I’ve always had.’ She gives it a stroke. Rather than be drawn into condemning the march of skeletal models down the catwalk (‘I’d like to say, “And I’ve changed the world!” But I haven’t’), Shulman believes the way to confront the issue of Size Zero is by providing heroines who are not in fashion or fashion thin. One ‘bug bear’ is designers who won’t lend clothes for them to shoot, say, the head of pathology in a hospital. ‘If you want teenage girls to be something other than Kim Kardashian or Holly Willoughby or Keira Knightley, well I suppose Keira is an actress, if you want them to aspire to be in the professions — lawyers, doctors, economists, engineers — you’ve got to also encourage them to think they can have all the fun of glamour, too.’ P erhaps it’s no surprise, then, that one person she’d love to shoot for Vogue is Theresa May: ‘Absolutely love to. I love the way that she clearly enjoys her clothes, and that she’s this very hard- hitting, tough-seeming person. She holds her own in a man’s world and she doesn’t want to be granted any favours because she’s a woman. But at the same time she had really great red nail polish on when she opened the Tory party conference, and lipstick. And she likes her jewellery. Obviously she likes her shoes, and she has great legs — it’s a huge help when you are going to wear trousers.’ Of course, Shulman’s big coup was getting the Duchess of Cambridge to pose for the centenary cover of Vogue this year. How does she differ from the late Diana, Princess of Wales? ‘Diana was more interested in that high-voltage celebrity, that was something she really embraced. One of the things I’ve learned in this job is how much celebrity is a decision. ‘The Duchess of Cambridge is prepared to do her bit, but it’s not one of the things that she most cares about. She loves her kids and the countryside. Dressing up, that’s a professional side to her. It’s a sort of uniform, all those lovely couture costumes.’ Shulman describes the Duchess as very amenable. ‘She’s incredibly likeable, she really is. She wants to do what she’s doing well, and she’s very professional. That’s the point with the royal family. It’s when they stop being professional that things go wrong. ‘We want them to be pros, to get everything right, to be on message and look great. We don’t want them to have off days.’ Shulman is dark and pretty, yet her lack of vanity is striking. She can’t be bothered with the fiddle-faddle of a blow-dry — ‘one of my least favourite activities’ — and the idea of having hair and make up done daily is ‘unbearable’. Actually, she’s happy to change into eveningwear in the office loo and will slug a glass of wine at 9am if it helps her overcome her fear of flying. She cheerfully admits to scarfing two croissants in a binge of disappointment after Alber Elbaz fails to Vogue’s COVER HIGHLIGHTS Getty Images April 2008 January 2002 December 1991 October 2001 January 1990 October 2000 May 2003 December 2005 June 2016 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 45 turn up to breakfast with her in Paris, and trying on a dress one day, she remarks she looks like a ‘sequin sausage’. ‘My diary has appointments on the half-hour every hour,’ she reflects. ‘That sounds as if it would make one thinner, but not in my case.’ While ‘The Saintly Audrey’, as she calls her yoga teacher, comes regularly and she runs in nearby ‘Dog Poo Park’, she also smokes ‘between two and four roll-ups’ every night with a glass of wine (‘I always drink on my own’). A childhood habit of waiting for her father, Milton Shulman, the former Evening Standard theatre critic, to get home before having supper means that she can’t eat before 8.30pm at the very earliest. ‘I’m terribly unhealthy. I do everything the wrong way round: eat, drink, smoke and sleep.’ It’s more Bridget Jones than Anna Wintour. Like Wintour’s father (Charles), Shulman’s father worked on the Standard. Both women attended high-achieving, competitive London girls’ schools — Shulman St Paul’s, Wintour North London Collegiate. There the similarity ends. She ‘hugely’ admires American Vogue. Are they friends? ‘We don’t “hang out”,’ she says, ‘but we have had supper together and we have mutual friends.’ Her good friends are people she’s known forever, such as her neighbour Jane Bonham Carter, the Lib Dem peer. She’s also ‘loyal to Philip Green’, whose appearance in front of the Select Committee over the BHS sale and subsequent fall-out over pensions is chronicled in her diary. As the press mounts against him, Shulman is firm that he is a friend of British fashion. When I ask what she thinks of his tax avoidance, she says: ‘There are all kinds of other people who pay no taxes at all, companies or whatever. How great do we feel about that?’ She concedes, ‘[Green] hasn’t handled it brilliantly. I’ve spoken to him about it. I know his arguments. But clearly it was a bad decision to sell.’ Should he pay back the money? ‘It’s difficult for me to say what somebody like him should do, but he should do something that makes people feel better about him, yup.’ Shulman is, understandably, patriotic about British fashion. It annoys her that Stella McCartney shows in Paris instead of London, for example. ‘I really wish all the 46 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 “I have appointments every hour. That sounds as if it would make one thinner, but not in my case” British designers would show in London: Stella McCartney, Sarah Burton and McQueen, Victoria Beckham. It would be so fantastic and I don’t really understand why they don’t.’ She’s had this conversation with Victoria Beckham, she says. And? ‘People normally say it’s about the market.’ Is she firm? ‘Listen, I can’t tell people what to do with their businesses.’ I don’t doubt she tries. Actually she’s funny about ‘Brand Beckham’, as she calls it. ‘That’s a strong-worked image and as I say in the book they all contribute. It’s unbelievable. It’s like the royal family: it’s a machine isn’t it? They’re all in there. Even Harper is now adding to the lustre of the Beckhams. She’s only four.’ After 24 years at Vogue (before that she was editor of GQ), she’s fairly cynical Kate Middleton with Shulman at the Vogue 100 exhibition about fame. She was thrilled when Kim Kardashian and Kanye West came to the Vogue Festival, although she was openly clueless about Keeping Up With The Kardashians. When they asked for security she observed: ‘No such thing as a free celeb.’ Despite the pragmatism and the dry wit, Shulman is brilliant at writing female anxiety, especially her own. When she meets the ‘still’, ‘rooted’ Duchess of Cambridge, she says: ‘I compared myself, looking beyond hideous with swivelling eyes and hands waving all over the place.’ Anxiety has hovered on the fringes since she was 21, and after several ‘episodes of very bad anxiety’ she took medication. Today she always carries an emergency Xanax, although ‘I haven’t used it for quite a long time’. She says: ‘Lots of people feel bad about admitting [to anxiety]. Drugs to treat anxiety and depression are absolutely invaluable. Anybody who thinks it is wrong is not giving themselves a chance.’ She doesn’t know what will come next in her life. ‘I never thought I would do anything I did, so I’m open to seeing what happens. I certainly don’t want to stop working,’ she says. ‘My mum is still working and she’s 90. My dad worked until he was 87. I’m not genetically predisposed to stop working.’ She doesn’t rule out moving to New York but would need a good job because ‘to not be successful in New York would be terrible’. Meanwhile, she’s rented a flat on the seafront in Aldeburgh. ‘I’m looking forward to having somewhere different to be, to doing things that aren’t anything to do with Vogue, like spending a lot of time in pubs. Yes pub lunches.’ How fabulously un-Vogue. With David ‘Inside Vogue: A Diary of My 100th Bailey at Year’ by Alexandra Shulman, out GQ’s 25th anniversary on 27 October (Fig Tree) party Getty Images; Rex Features En Vogue: Shulman with deputy editor Emily Sheffield, centre, and fashion features director Sarah Harris, at Anya Hindmarch SS15; far right, Shulman with her son, Sam Clockwise from above, MNKY HSE’s secret corridor, artfully presented octopus starter, bespoke cocktails and opulent top floor. Far right, Adwoa Aboah and Georgia May Jagger at Park Chinois. Below, Jourdan Dunn arriving at Coya ALL night LONG D Getty Images One-dimensional clubs are out, replaced by one-stop party palaces where you can dine, drink and dance. Claire Coleman on how Londoners are living it up now eep underground in a dimly lit, opulently decorated domed vault in Mayfair, dinner is drawing to a close. Accompanied by laid-back ambient house emanating from the DJ booth, you and your friends have polished off plates of ceviche, tacos, tortillas and black cod, washing them down with pisco- and mescal-based cocktails. It’s been perfect, and you’d be happy to linger. Indeed, as the next part of the evening calls — a move to a club or a bar — your heart sinks. The thought of corralling everyone together, collecting coats and bags, arranging transport for 10 of you to get to a club, then the inevitable queue… If only you didn’t have to move, if only someone could just, well, bring the club to you… Then, it happens — the lights get a bit lower, the music gets a bit louder and more upbeat. A few people get up and they’re dancing, but the people who don’t want to dance are just sitting round the table, drinking and chatting. No Ubers, night buses or rain-sodden treks across town needed. This isn’t some utopian future, this is MNKY HSE (pronounced Monkey House and no, I don’t know what happened to the vowels either), the new venture on the site of Dover Street Wine Bar that puts all the elements of a good night out — bar, restaurant, nightclub — under a single roof. ‘It isn’t just a restaurant that does music, or a bar that does food. We wanted to create somewhere that was strong on all three fronts,’ explains Yann Chevris, the general manager. He’s spent more than 20 years in the industry working with names such as Alain Ducasse, Joel Robuchon and Nobu Matsuhisa, but describes MNKY HSE as a totally new proposition. ‘We’ve flown in an amazing chef [Pablo Peñalosa Nájera, formerly of the Four Seasons in Bogotà and the acclaimed Morimoto in Mexico City] to oversee an innovative Latin American menu, we’ve got a bar serving up some really impressive cocktails, and a schedule of international and resident DJs taking charge of the music.’ It’s already played host to a post-Frieze crowd including Jay Jopling, Andre Balazs and Dallas Austin. ‘The feedback so far has been fantastic. There’s a really good vibe all night and people like the fact that once they’re through the door, we can just take care of their whole night.’ It is far from the only place in town taking this approach. From Albert’s in Kensington, a new private members club founded by the people behind Boujis and Raffles, to Coya, the Peruvian restaurant and member’s club in Mayfair that has plans 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 49 Katie Hillier, Edie Campbell, Derek Blasberg and Alexa Chung at Park Chinois to open a second London site later this y e a r, a n d n e x t month’s hottest opening Sumosan Twiga, a three-floor edifice on Sloane Street serving a fusion of Japanese and Italian food alongside DJs and dancing until 2am — it’s all about the all-in-one experience, catering to Londoners who want a big night out but without the hassle. ‘If you’re hopping between several venues, you lose the rhythm of an evening,’ says Sanjay Dwivedi of the Coya group. ‘People come for drinks, but don’t stay for dinner, or decide they don’t want to stand in the cold for half an hour waiting to get into a club.’ A nd, as nightlife impresario Nick House (of the American-themed cabaret bar and restaurant Steam and Rye near Bank and Park Lane’s Drama nightclub) points out, booking a table for dinner doesn’t just cut out queuing in the cold, it also guarantees you entry. ‘You see this a lot at high-end places in the South of France and Ibiza where people who don’t want to be at the mercy of the whims of the door bitch circumnavigate the issue by getting in there early for dinner.’ Downstairs flair: the basement at Park Chinois. Left, Rafferty Law parties with a friend at Albert’s uered floor at the other end of the bar. Voodoo Rays on Kingsland Road is a pizza restaurant that in reality operates like a club: on a Saturday night it’s a cross-section of people eating pizza, slurping Margaritas and dancing around the tall tables. And Hackney Wick’s Night Tales residency was the roaring success of the summer, a sprawling network of food stalls, cocktail bars and micro dance floors. It had your whole night covered. So what’s behind this seismic change on the club scene? ‘The 2003 Licensing Act relaxed things,’ says Charlie Gilkes, a founder of royal favourite Bunga Bunga, the “LONDON’S DEVELOPED A REAL BAR SCENE, AND PEOPLE HAVE STARTED TO WONDER WHY THEY’RE GOING TO A CLUB WHEN THEY’D RATHER CARRY ON SITTING AND TALKING” But even those who could be guaranteed entry to pretty much anywhere in London are fans of one-stop-shop socialising. When Marc Jacobs threw a party to celebrate the launch of his beauty range at London Fashion Week earlier this year, he didn’t want to shepherd the likes of Naomi Campbell, Georgia May Jagger, Beth Ditto and Alexa Chung from dinner at Nobu to dancing at Mahiki. Instead he booked them all into Park Chinois in Mayfair, where a Chinese banquet can melt into cabaret and clubbing until dawn. High-end establishments do not have the monopoly on the trend. Ridley Road Market Bar in Dalston looks like a makeshift workers’ canteen, but it’s running a slick operation: the bar is catered by local legends the Slice Girls, who cook £5 pizzas in a vast wood-fired oven, while dishabille Hackney kids dance till the small hours on the cheq- 50 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 bar-cum-pizzeria-cum-nightclub that was at the vanguard of this growing trend, and this autumn is set to expand with a huge new Bunga Bunga in Covent Garden. ‘Before that pubs would close at 11pm and the only option to continue your night was a nightclub. Since then, London’s developed a real bar scene, and people have started to wonder why they’re going to a club, and paying to get in when actually they’d rather carry on sitting and talking. These all-in-one venues give them the best of all worlds.’ You might expect operators to miss the Peruvian restaurant and members’ club, Coya traditional nightclub door charge, but that’s offset by longer opening hours, and it’s easier to get a licence for places that serve food as well as booze, so this sort of set-up even keeps London’s licensing authorities happy. ‘They far prefer it when a venue is serving food rather than just alcohol,’ says Sumosan Twiga’s general manager, Massimo Montone. ‘If people are sitting down, capacity is smaller, so there are fewer people going into and out of a venue for its size. As a result, the impact on the surrounding area is diminished.’ It’s basically a win-win-win scenario. But isn’t there something a bit lacking in glamour about dancing around dirty plates with the smell of steak — or whatever — lingering in the air? Gilkes says it’s easier when a venue has more than one floor, and that it’s about reading the crowd and using lights and music to move people mentally from a restaurant to a club space. ‘You have to take people on a journey throughout the evening — and even throughout the week. On a Monday night Bunga Bunga feels like a local neighbourhood pizzeria, whereas on Friday it’s more of a raucous, buzzy bar that serves pizzas.’ He thinks we’re only really at the start of one-stop-shop socialising and is predicting that the next wave of venues will incorporate entertainment. And not just any entertainment. ‘People want immersive theatre — look at the success of You Me Bum Bum Train and Punchdrunk,’ he says. ‘In London people always want more. They want something they can share on social media that’s different to the cookie-cutter, copycat norm. And when the news is depressing, they want escapism.’ Drinks, dinner, dancing and escapism all under one roof — we’ve seen the future of Saturday nights, and we’re excited. BEAUTY BY KATIE SERVICE CHANEL Calligraphie de Chanel eyeliner in hyperblack, £46; Joues Contraste powder blush in hyperfresh, £31, from 4 November (chanel.com) WHAT A CHEEK! Pair punky eyeliner with sugary blusher for a look that’s naughty and nice PHOTOGRAPH BY XAVIER MAS 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 53 BEAUTY HAIR IN A HURRY Insta-Lights at Edward James, SW11 T Having your roots done no longer means being stuck in a salon chair for three hours. Here, James and his team will blend away outgrown roots on highlighted hair and hide any greys. It is not a full colour change but as maintenance goes, it can’t be beaten. And if you thought that speed means sacrificing the condition of your hair, think again: the salon is an Aveda concept, so it only uses hair-friendly natural colourants. Insta-Lights colour application, processing and rough dry, £35, Edward James, 18 Northcote Road (edwardjameslondon.com) 15 MIN PREEN IN 15 Fix up fast with these short and sweet treatments WORDS BY KATIE SERVICE THE SKIN SAVER The Spot Zapper at Skin Matters, W8 Woken up on the day of a big meeting to find Mount Vesuvius erupting on your forehead? Call these skin-saving therapists, who will shrink it with salicylic or glycolic acid, or even syringe it if needs be. Next, an enzymatic mask will accelerate the formation of new skin cells, followed by a blast of blue LED light to kill any lingering bacteria. Money well spent in a crisis. The Spot Zapper, £60 (skin-matters.co.uk) THE PICK-ME-UP Express LED Rejuvenation Facial at Cowshed, Selfridges, W1 Can’t squeeze a full facial into your lunch break? Sit back as an 11-minute blast of rejuvenating light is shone over your face. Choose from a yellow light that hydrates and plumps fine lines or a blue one that has deep cleansing and antibacterial properties — a great option for calming flare-ups. Express LED Rejuvenation Facial, 15 minutes, £35 (selfridges.com) 54 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 THE BODY BLAST Fifteen-minute training at The Clock, W1 EPIONCE Lytic Gel Cleanser, £27.50, epionce. co.uk At the elegant Wimpole Street branch of this private members’ club and gym, founder Zana Morris (the woman behind FROW favourite, The Library) will design a bespoke training regime based on high-intensity training that only takes a quarter of an hour. The premise is that this blast of intensity burns body fat without prompting the release of stress hormone cortisol, which is linked to fat storage and can be triggered by long workouts. Each session takes place on clever ‘Timepiece’ weights machines, which allows you to move between exercises in the shortest possible time while focusing on a different part of your body — thighs and calves, arms and shoulders or back and chest. Memberships start from £345 per month (theclock.com) BEAUTY You beauty! ON THE SOAPBOX Thanks to the contouring trend, sponges are all over Instagram. KATIE SERVICE on which to use for what S ponges have fallen in with a bad crowd. Once the choice of tools of fashion make-up artists (Kevyn Aucoin and François Nars to name two), in the past couple of years they have become synonymous with OTT contouring videos. But don’t write them off — there are sponges, when used correctly, that can give a more natural look than a brush. Remember to pat with your sponge — not smear, swipe or rub. And use them to apply a little product at a time. Here are my picks... 1. Real Techniques Finish Miracle Sculpting Sponge Dubbed the ‘miracle sponge’, the flat edge can slide cream bronzer under the cheekbones, while the tip fits in nooks and crannies and the round curve is great for blending foundation. (£5.99; boots.com) 2. Barely Prep Blot & Blend Sponge Did you know that you can apply moisturiser 2 and prep the skin with a sponge too? These are really handy for freshening up day old make-up — just pat over cheeks and temples. (£6; thisisbeautymart.com) 3. Beauty Blender Blotterazzi These beat blotting papers hands down. Dab them over your T-zone and they soak up excess shine instantly. Plus, you can just wash them with cleanser and they come 3 out as good as new. (£16; net-a-porter.com) 4. Beauty Blender Micro Mini Duo Small but mighty, these tiny quail egg-sized sponges are really effective for patting in under-eye concealer. Any dragging motions will be too aggressive for the fragile eye area. (£13.50; beautybay.com) 4 1 A Annabel Rivkin tries sweatproof mascara Josh Shinner; Tobi Jenkins HEADSPACE Is your favourite thing in the world having your hair washed and massaged at the hairdresser? This Friday, spend your lunch break enjoying the Fusio Dose hair and scalp treatment — 10 minutes of seratonin-filled chill-out time in the basin. (Kérastase Fusio Dose Treatment, £15 at Daniel Galvin, Selfridges; danielgalvin.com) question about your disgustingness: when (if) you go to the gym at lunchtime or before work or going out to dinner or whatever — do you ever just dry the sweat out of your hair rather than washing it? There are good reasons to do this. Firstly, because it’s just easier. And secondly, because a little fresh sweat can give hair some quite intriguing muscle. It’s a secret shame but it happens. Similarly, if you work up a proper sweat, can you occasionally not be arsed to re-do your make-up start-to-finish before you make the deranged dash to wherever you need to be next? If this repulses, then I apologise (while simultaneously finding you a little judgmental). But if it chimes at all, then welcome to Eyeko Sport Waterproof Mascara. I’m quite late to the Eyeko party, which is ironic considering I am oppressively punctual in real life. Can’t seem to help it. But despite hearing the insider whispers for years, I have only just stumbled upon Eyeko and it’s a mascara specialist. Name your mood, name your look; Eyeko will manifest it for you in lash form. I’m almost tempted to build a ‘mascara wardrobe’ and that is a phrase I never thought I’d write without a sneer. Its Sport variety simply does not budge. Waterproof mascara can be a bit clunky and weirdly formulated, but this stuff is smooth and irreproachable. You can beast yourself at the gym, sweat buckets, do a tropical trek (not for me), get drunk and pass out before cleansing (the horror), have steamy sex; whatever rings your bell — and your lashes, my beauties, will not tell tales on you. Eyeko Sport Waterproof Mascara (£18; spacenk.com) READ YOUR STARS BY SHELLEY VON STRUNCKEL AT STANDARD.CO.UK ⁄ HOROSCOPES ⁄TODAY 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 57 FEAST GRACE & FLAVOUR Grace Dent longs for largesse at buzzing Foley’s “Autumn is made for sit-up counter eating. Spare your home-heating bills and warm your cockles on the nervous stress of a sous-chef ” AMBIENCE FOOD Jonny Cochrane; illustration by Jonathan Calugi @ Machas T he space between late summer and mid-December is the most wonderful time of the year for Grace & Flavour. Tons of new spots to try, all the summer openings starting to take root plus the chance to wear opaque tights, a frock with sleeves and leave the house after dark to eat supper like a grown-up. British restaurants make most sense in autumn when they’re buzzing, warm, nurturing and when the annoying clots in your party of four stop strong-arming you to eat on an outdoor terrace in clouds of wasps. Autumn is made for sit-up counter eating. Spare your own homeheating bills; eat dinner six feet south of a smoker oven, warming your cockles on the nervous stress of a sous-chef. With this sort of stance in mind, I popped to Foley’s, recently opened on Foley Street in Fitzrovia. Foley’s is headed up by Mitz Vora who was sous-chef at The Palomar in Soho. If eating Middle Eastern-influenced food in flatteringly lit places playing music nicely intrusive enough to dance to is your thing, then you probably have a lot of time for The Palomar. Menu-wise, Foley’s casts the net a lot wider, terming itself ‘modern-world’ cuisine and namechecking the Spice Trail, but still there’s many of The Palomar’s spores present. Yes, you can avail yourself of a proper table, but the best seats are possibly ones overlooking the basement kitchen amongst all the shouting, peeling, tonging and kitchen chat. Yes, there’s titivated aubergine, grilled cauliflower and lamb rump with dukkha on offer — so far so Berber-influenced — but also ceviche, sticky beef with daikon and cucumber som tam, and Korean BBQ chicken burnt ends. FOLEY’S 23 Foley St, Fitzrovia, W1 (020 3137 1302; foleysrestaurant.co.uk) 1 Aubergine £8 1 Cauliflower £6.50 1 Market salad £8 1 Sweet potato fritters £6 1 Charcoal grilled chicken £6 1 Sticky beef £9 1 Lamb rump £12 1 Glass of Negroni £9 1 Perrier-Jouët Brut NV £12 2 Glasses of Malbec TOTAL £18 £94.50 One residing difference with Foley’s is a confident amount of chilli heat seeping through several dishes, even the innocent-sounding affairs such as sweet-potato fritters on a saffron coconut curry or a grilled half aubergine with pomegranate, dates, chilli-lime yogurt and puffed quinoa. Even these would make a chicken korma fan snivel. The potato fritters, I should add, were nicely crisp, daintily light, and possibly a star of the show. The aubergine was squidgy, cake-like and not wholly a success but I have been spoiled for a lifetime by the actually lifeenhancing roasted aubergine ‘Sharabik’ at The Barbary in Neals Yard. Let’s be honest: The Barbary is the quiet, trunk-hoisting, all-crushing elephant in the room for everyone in chef’s whites hoping to impress a London audience with Middle Eastern cooking. Even at its sister restaurant The Palomar nowadays. Because there are very few misses or even ‘I’m-not-100-per-cent in-love’ moments on The Barbary’s menu. The super greens salad at Foley’s, on the other hand, wasn’t much more captivating than an M&S lunch pot. The chicken burnt ends were fatty lumps with no discernable sear, blackening or texture. Inoffensive albeit wobbly. The grilled cauliflower is delicious, rich with cumin and littered with smoked peanuts, but a plate of lamb with hummus was oddly something or nothing. There is a lack of largesse in the food here. There isn’t the smearing, oozing, glistening and wiping-up with breads one might expect from this genre. Still, stuff me, Foley’s is a hit with its clientele. They’re clearly doing something right. The kitchen bar was jammed with earnest chinstroking foodie types and I hear only good things about group outings to the basement alcoves. Mac & Wild, across the way, is seemingly doing nicely as well with the two restaurants firing each other’s overfill in opposite directions. Brexit schmexit, I shall believe the financial meltdown has truly taken grip when London millennials stop paying £8 for a quarter of a cauliflower. 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 59 FEAST TART LONDON Neither too hot nor too cold, Lucy Carr-Ellison and Jemima Jones serve up bowls of porridge that are just right GNOCCH ‘N’ ROLL Great balls of carbs! Here’s Lucy learning how to make gnocchi on a recent trip to the US Jemima Jones (left) and Lucy Carr-Ellison Josh Shinner W hen we were young, the thought of porridge — a lumpy grey bowl of horror — filled us with fear. Since then, it’s had a fashionable makeover along with its summery cousin, bircher muesli, and has now become a staple from healthfood blogs to classic cookbooks. Porridge comes into its own at this time of year when you crave a warm, hearty breakfast but nothing as heavy-going as a Full English ahead of a weekday commute. Porridge has a low GI (glycaemic index) which means it is slowly absorbed into the bloodstream, giving a gradual release of energy and keeping hunger at bay until lunchtime. Apparently Bear Grylls is a long-time fan — and if it’s good enough for him, then it’s good enough for us. On a crisp autumn morning, just the waking thought of a bowl of creamy porridge topped with crunchy nuts, honey or fruit porridge is a moodenhancer. It’s an indulgent way to start the day, but you don’t have to feel guilty about it — we have been experimenting with lighter styles than the classic milk-based concoction to which more cream, or even butter, might be added. Nut milks are now widely available from most supermarkets. For the hazelnut version, we usually pick up the Rude Health label as it doesn’t have added sugar and is actually ‘hazelnutty’ (dreamy in a coffee), but if you can’t find it, then use almond milk. COCONUT AND CARDAMOM PORRIDGE HAZELNUT, APPLE AND CHOCOLATE PORRIDGE 50g whole rolled porridge oats 3 bruised cardamom pods (or a half tsp of ground cardamom) 200ml almond milk 100ml water 1 tbs desiccated coconut Maple syrup, to taste Toasted coconut and flaked almonds Berries, or fruit of choice 50g gluten-free oats 300ml hazelnut milk ¼ tsp ground cinnamon 1 drop of vanilla extract 1 apple, grated 1 square of dark chocolate, broken up 1 handful of roasted hazelnuts, chopped METHOD Put the almond milk and water in a pot over a medium heat with the bashed cardamom and allow to infuse, simmering for five minutes, then put through a sieve. Mix the oats, coconut and cardamom-infused milk, pour into the pot and cook over a medium heat for five minutes, stirring. Serve at once, adding your toasted coconut and almonds and any fruit you may want. This is delicious with maple syrup. METHOD Put 50g of oats in a small saucepan, then pour in 300ml of hazelnut milk. Simmer for four to five minutes (or 10 minutes if using regular porridge oats), stirring constantly. Add the cinnamon, vanilla and the grated apple and stir. Sprinkle the chocolate and chopped hazelnuts over the top and serve immediately. 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 61 HOMEWORK Wallet by Comme des Garçons, £129, at doverstreetmarket.com BY LILY WORCESTER Headphones by Frends, £140, at net-a-porter.com Mirror by Fritz Hansen, £510, at skandium.com Wine glass, £45 for four (lsa-international.com) Pendant lamp by Lyngard Ceramics, £300, at conranshop. co.uk Sunglasses by KREWE, £265, at net-aporter.com Cutlery set, from £5.99 (zarahome.com) GLEAM ON HOUSE OF HOLLAND AW16 Warp vase, £200 (tomdixon.net) You know that iridescent glaze you see in oily puddles and giant soapy bubbles? Combine that sheen with a touch of intergalactic glam, and you’ve got yourself autumn’s latest interiors trend. The ‘Prismania’ chair by Dutch designer Elise Luttik, which combines Studio 54 reflectives with sleek angular shapes, was one of the star pieces at Milan’s Salone del Mobile furniture fair. Since then, shimmering, reflective pieces have cropped up across both designer and high-street brands. Look to Lyngard Ceramics for striking pendant lamps or inject a little zing into cocktail hour with Urban Outfitters’ Electro shaker. We’ll drink to that. Prismania chair by Elise Luttik, POA, at noon furniture.com Tote by Bao Bao Issey Miyake, £600, at matches fashion.com Coffee table by Patricia Urquilo, £1,532, at chaplins. co.uk Pen by Hay, £5, at libertylondon.com Oyster Mosaic Freshwater Pearl, £18.30 per tile (firedearth.com) Nail varnish in primrose street, £15 (nailsinc.com) Cocktail set, £28 (urban outfitters.com) Phone case, £14 (skinnydip london. com) 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 63 ESCAPE The ancient dwellings of Matera EDITED BY DIPAL ACHARYA WHERE TO EAT Huge plates of antipasti are the order of the day, as well as Matera’s famed orecchiette pasta (meaning little ears) and fava-bean purée. If you want to try the best of what the town has to offer, dine at the RISTORANTE FRANCESCA on Vico Bruno Buozzi — its terrace is hard to beat both for food and ambience. But it’s LA GATTA BUIA (90 Via delle Beccherie) that wins plaudits for its local wine list. Italian antipasti ANCIENT WONDER The city of Matera in Basilicata, in the arch of Italy’s ‘boot’, is steeped in history. Teetering on the side of the Gravina Gorge, the town is home to the famous Sassi cave dwellings, a designated Unesco World Heritage Site, which date back more than 9,000 years. Cobbled streets and labyrinthine alleyways twist and turn to reveal centuries-old limestone grottoes containing churches and homes. In summer, the weather can make the city unbearably hot but it’s perfect for an autumn break. Nicole Mowbray Le Grotte della Civita WHAT TO SEE The CASA GROTTA DI VICO SOLITARIO museum is a must-see if you want to understand how life used to be in Matera, as is the rock-hewn MADONNA DI IDRIS cave church in the centre of the Sassi. For a contemporary afternoon, visit the MUSMA sculpture museum on Via San Giacomo, housed in caves once used for storing wine. WHERE TO STAY Alamy The best and most evocative place in Matera is LE GROTTE DELLA CIVITA, which teeters on the edge of the GRAVINA gorge. Formerly abandoned caves, all rooms are housed deep in the tufa limestone and lit almost entirely by candlelight. With freestanding baths, no televisions and awe-inspiring views unchanged for thousands of years, there are few locations more romantic than this. Rooms start at £150 (legrottedellacivita. sextantio.it) WHAT TO DO WHERE TO SHOP Into your Italian food? Make sure you visit the SAPORI DEI SASSI to pick up supplies for a picnic with a view. This gourmet grocery store sells everything from local olives and wine to truffle-infused cheeses from the region, alongside indecently good focaccia. Nearby I VIZI DEGLI ANGELI (36 Via Domenico Ridola) is a gelato ‘laboratory’ purported to make some of the smoothest ice cream in Italy with outof-this-world flavours. Casa Grotta di Vico Solitario WHERE TO DRINK Matera is not car-friendly but it’s compact enough to explore on foot. Spread across the Murgia plateau, the deep gorge running around Matera provides the backdrop for the famed Sassi — a complex network of ancient cave dwellings and prehistoric rock churches linked by higgledy-piggledy streets, archways and terraces. But for a glimpse of what life was like in the Paleolithic Period, explore the SASSO BARISANO and the uninhabited rawness of the SASSO CAVEOSO neighbourhood, where you can wander through empty caves. If you have a whole evening to spare, start at PIAZZA VITTORIO VENETO in the middle of the historical centre. From early evening this square, with its array of open-air cafés and gelato kiosks, is the meeting place for people beginning their night out. AREA 8, on Via Casalnuovo, offers fantastic aperitivo accompanied by live jazz. And while good coffee is never hard to come by in Italy, ALTERENO (Via Madonna delle Virtu) is a must for fans of potent espresso. Madonna di Idris GETTING THERE Cocktails at Area 8 British Airways flies to BARI, an hour’s drive from Matera. Prices start at £56 each way. (britishairways.com) 21.10.16 ES MAGAZINE 65 MY LONDON OPHELIA LOVIBOND AS TOLD TO SAMUEL FISHWICK Where is home? Hornsey. I live in a beautiful Victorian flat with all the typical lovely things that come with it — fireplaces and all that jazz. Building you’d like to be locked in? The Natural History Museum (right). And yes, I do think everything there comes to life at night. Where do you let your hair down? Trisha’s in Soho. It’s a tiny little subterranean bar which mostly plays rockabilly and Motown. Favourite Pub? The Camel in Bethnal Green (below). It does great pies and very good Guinness. Last play you saw? Faith Healer at the Donmar Warehouse. Brian Friel’s writing is inherently funny. He’s got the gift of the gab. Most romantic thing someone’s done for you? An ex used to insist on walking closest to the road if it was raining. If a car came by, it would splash him, not me. Best place for a first date? Tate Modern. It’s such a great building, you’ll never be stuck for things to say. What would you do as Mayor? Paint big red crosses on all the unoccupied buildings in London to show how many people could be living in them. Your best meal? My dad took me to the park and bought me pork pies, Scotch eggs, prawn cocktail crisps and 66 ES MAGAZINE 21.10.16 The Shepherd’s Bush-born actress gets the Notting Hill Carnival police dancing with her and goes to Bethnal Green for Guinness Coca-Cola when I was nine. What do you collect? Portuguese bowls and plates that look like cabbage leaves. Who’s you hero? Diane Keaton (left). First thing you do when you get back to London? Go for a curry. A tarka dhal at Rajput in Shepherd’s Bush is my favourite. Earliest memory? My mum, Simona, taking my sister, Letitia, and me to the Ravenscourt Park paddling pool in the summer when I was very little. We had funny Minnie Mouse costumes from Woolworths. Last album you bought? John Grant’s Pale Green Ghosts. It gets into your bones. Best thing a cabby has said? ‘A fiver will do.’ That was for a much bigger fare. Biggest extravagance? I do love my Le Labo perfume (right). I find it intoxicating. Best place for a nightcap? Experimental Cocktail Club in Chinatown. They do the best whiskey sours. Ever had a run-in with a policeman? I make them dance with me at Notting Hill Carnival every year. They just stand there looking grumpy otherwise. Who do you call when you want to have fun? Caroline Flack. She’s always the greatest company. Best advice you’ve been given? My mum told me to always shoot for the stars, because you’ll regret what could have been more than failure. What are you currently up to? Playing in The Libertine, with Dominic Cooper at his debauched best. ‘The Libertine’ runs at Theatre Royal Haymarket until 3 December (thelibertineonstage.com) Getty Images; Alamy Favourite shops? Liberty for great gifts; & Other Stories for dresses with unusual European cuts; Beyond Retro, because I never know what’ll be in there; Portobello Market (above), where you can always find great vinyl records.
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