Autumn Phillips, ex-wife of Princess Anne’s son Peter, appeared to be humming the song Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better) yesterday.
Just days after her ex proudly showed off his new girlfriend, Harriet Sperling, introducing her to Queen Camilla, Autumn, 46, made it a point to publicly hug her super-rich boyfriend, Irish property magnate Donal Mulryan, 54 years.
And emphasizing that she’s still part of Peter’s family, Autumn joked around in a golf cart with her sister, Zara Tindall, and Anne’s maid of honor, Dolly Maude.
Autumn Phillips, ex-wife of Princess Anne’s son Peter, made it a point to publicly hug her super-rich boyfriend, Irish property magnate Donal Mulryan, 54.
Peter Phillips with his new girlfriend, Harriet Sperling. Autumn’s ex proudly showed off his new girlfriend, Harriet Sperling, introducing her to Queen Camilla.
Autumn is still part of Peter’s family, and was having fun on a golf cart with her sister, Zara Tindall, and Anne’s maid of honor, Dolly Maude.
They were competing in the ISPS Handa Mike Tindall Celebrity Golf Classic in the Midlands.
Peter and Autumn have two daughters, Savannah, 13, who was Queen Elizabeth’s first great-granddaughter, and Isla, 12. They separated in 2019 after 11 years of marriage.
A month after her divorce was finalized, I revealed that Autumn was dating Donal, who was still married to socialite Louise.
The past year has been a challenging one for California’s best-known couples, particularly since a Spotify executive summed them up as ‘damn scammers’ after the audio platform canceled their $20 million contract.
But Prince Harry and Meghan can take solace in knowing that, with their fingers stuck in many pies, they can still put bread and jam (homemade, of course) on the table at their Montecito mansion.
Prince Harry and Meghan can take comfort in knowing that, with their fingers in many pies, they can still put bread and jam (homemade, of course) on the table in their Montecito mansion.
But can the same be said for his most ardent fan, Omid Scobie? Newly filed accounts for the author’s publishing business, MeYou, report that he had just £359 in capital and reserves, down from £35,400 the previous year. The title of his latest book is, of course, Endgame.
£4m battle over judge’s will
He witnessed a catastrophic defeat from an intimate perspective as John Major’s personal assistant when, in 1997, he led the Conservatives to an electoral defeat.
Now Dame Arabella Warburton has found herself embroiled in a battle over her godfather’s £6million fortune.
John Deby, a judge who died in 2022 aged 90, appointed Dame Arabella as one of his executors and bequeathed £40,000 and £20,000 to the antiquarian Wynyard Wilkinson. He also left £1 million to Jozef Gejdos, with whom he had formed a civil partnership in 2016.
Wilkinson, who was also executor of the will, has now brought a High Court claim for more than £4 million, naming Gejdos, Dame Arabella and a third executor as defendants.
Dame Arabella’s lawyer tells me she is “acting neutrally” in a “dispute between (Gejdos) and (Wilkinson).”
He’s proven he’s ready to dominate the oche at the age of 17, and now darts sensation Luke Littler could take the dance floor by storm.
Strictly Come Dancing judge Craig Revel Horwood has revealed he is desperate to hit the mark with the contestant list for the next series of the hit BBC show.
He’s proven he’s ready to dominate the oche at the age of 17, and now darts sensation Luke Littler could take the dance floor by storm.
“We haven’t had any darts champions,” the choreographer tells me at the Spring Ball benefiting the Style for Stroke and Melissa Bell foundations in London.
“There are still a lot of communities that we haven’t investigated yet that are available.” Revel Horwood says there are some special guests waiting. —Yes, there are, but I have been sworn to secrecy, darling, and I am very talkative, so I have to be careful.
(Very) modern manners
Society is about to descend on a corner of west London for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, but Jim Carter, the butler Carson in Downton Abbey, suggests we are no longer a country with green fingers.
“The British are meant to be a nation of gardeners, but if you looked out a train window you’d think we’d become a nation of trampolinists,” the actor says, referring to the proliferation of children’s play equipment. Carter wants children to know the joys of gardening. “Now in schools we need more green time and less screen time.”
Society is about to descend on a corner of west London for the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, but Jim Carter, the butler Carson in Downton Abbey, suggests we are no longer a country with green fingers.
Dizzying riches have allowed the Rothschilds to accumulate incomparable treasures. But I can now reveal that Kate de Rothschild, 74, who, along with her siblings Nicholas, Lionel and Charlotte, inherited Exbury House in Hampshire from her father, Edmund, in 2009, is putting the contents of her library up for sale.
Last year, the French branch of the family auctioned a host of worldly goods at Christie’s in New York and were rewarded with £50 million. But Kate and her brothers are entrusting the Exbury volumes (many of which were acquired in the 19th century) to a much more modest firm, Rowley’s in Ely, Suffolk. Its CEO, Roddy Lloyd, declines to comment. No comment emerges from Exbury either.