Tuesday, 3 March 2026

At an undignified age?

Pete Tong, once the Pied Piper of the rave generation, is now 65 and still doing it. And DJ isn’t the only job it’s tricky to be old and wizened in, as these celebs have learned:

Tamara Beckwith: it girl
Being quite pretty, reasonably posh and going to parties isn’t the most solid basis for a career, and Tamara’s has gone off the boil somewhat at the age of 55. Could she have a second coming as a glamorous elder advertising Saga holidays, walk-in baths and bedside commodes to the Met Bar set, or will the All Saints steal those jobs?

Pete Tong: DJ
Clubbing is inherently a young person’s activity, due to the lateness and Ministry of Sound not doing ‘pie and a pint’ nights. Pete seems to be coping but you know as he spins the latest Afro house tune that inwardly he’s muttering ‘in my day music had a bloody tune you could whistle, like DJ Misjah & DJ Tim’s Access’.

Harrison Ford: action hero
Action roles are a problem for geriatrics, and Harrison neglected to cultivate a long-running role where he moves around sedately like Patrick Stewart as Professor X. He broke a leg filming The Force Awakens and tore a shoulder muscle in the last Indiana Jones, and in both films the expression on his face made it abundantly clear it was not worth it.

Pamela Anderson: Baywatch babe
Sex symbol is a tough career post-menopause. The media loves to shame female celebs who refused to halt the ageing process almost as much as those who did. Pammie’s brief, fake relationship with Liam Neeson was treated with the same condescension as when eldsters shack up in the nursing home. Not great when you’re only 58.

James Brown: lad guru
Loaded editor James Brown was central to laddism in the 90s. Now he’s forced to constantly relive those years in every single interview, like some hellish Groundhog Day where he has to talk about trainers, football and Jo Guest in an unending loop.

John Lydon: punk
Ideally punks die young like Sid Vicious or Johnny Thunders, because the alternatives are becoming a sellout with a mortgage or continually trying to shock others at an undignified age. John chose the latter, but is supporting Brexit and Trump shocking from an old white man? The only thing stopping him becoming a golf club bore are his fucking stupid clothes.

Zoe Ball: ladette
Zoe was dubbed a ‘ladette’ in the 90s and to this day the media refer to it constantly despite her now being mumsier than your mum. Unfair to expect a 55-year-old to lead a party lifestyle when hangovers do not seem survivable and the entire bill at Glastonbury is less alluring than your own soft bed.

The Daily Mash

Of course.

Monday, 2 March 2026

Daft Monday

Sigh. Monday again.

It's been a relaxing weekend. Indeed, Saturday's drizzly, windy weather meant we hardly got much done in the garden (nor indoors, for that matter). Yesterday, we finally got to see the V&A's latest landmark exhibition Marie Antoinette Style [more on that later, no doubt]. Then boom! It's all over.

Never mind, eh? Life's always good when on a Tacky Music Monday I can share a little something I have discovered, by way of a wake-up call! It's a slice of video genius, combined with an old fave from a lounge-music-cover aficionado:

Such profound lyrics. Such a superb video.

Have a good week, dear reader.

Sunday, 1 March 2026

Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus!


The lovely "Tete-a-Tete" daffs in the extensive gardens here at Dolores Delargo Towers never fail to cheer us up

Happy St David's Day, dear reader!

Who better to celebrate it with than not one, but two, of Wales' greatest vocal sons, Bryn Terfel and the ever-lovely Tom Jones, reminiscing about their (our) shared homeland?

Aw, there's lovely, innit?

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Sweet as candy

Among such luminaries as Bernadette Peters, Stephanie Beacham, Sir Stanley Baker, Vincente Minnelli, Harry H. Corbett, Cindy Wilson, Barry McGuigan, Ainsley Harriott, Robin Cook, Mike Figgis, Brian Jones, Sir Stephen Spender and the very lovely Tommy Tune...

...it would have been the 80th birthday today of the music-missed Syreeta Wright, one-time Mrs Stevie Wonder, and chart-topping duettist with Billy Preston. Of her hits, however, this is my favourite:

Oh, for the days when a flame orange maxi-dress with medieval sleeves was in fashion...

Friday, 27 February 2026

Takes me to a brighter day

And so, farewell, another 1970s legend...

Mr Neil Sedaka, one of the most unlikely of pop stars - definitely no heartthrob - yet one of the most talented hitmakers of his generation, has tinkled his last ivories and joined a growing rosta of talent gracing "The Crooners' Stage" at the Fabulon Tiki Lounge.

His dominance of the music scene in the 50s, 60s and 70s was a phenomenon. As a songwriter (of the "Brill Building" school), he gave Captain & Tennille their signature tune Love Will Keep Us Together, he wrote Solitaire for The Carpenters (a hit here for Andy Williams), (Is This the Way to) Amarillo that was a huge hit for Tony Christie, Connie Francis's Stupid Cupid and her iconic "gay standard" Where the Boys Are, Eruption's One Way Ticket, and the English-language lyrics for Abba's first hit Ring Ring.

Among his own classic hits were Oh! Carol, Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen, Breaking Up Is Hard to Do, Calendar Girl...

...and these:

We had the great pleasure of seeing him hold the 40,000-strong crowd at Proms in the Park in the palm of his hand back in 2010, and enjoyed every moment.

He's a great loss.

RIP, Neil Sedaka (13th March 1939 – 27th February 2026)

I danced my blues away


Go, Joanie, go!

Almost there...

As a hopefully sunny weekend is looming ever closer, it's to time to plan the party to celebrate.

To get us in a suitable mood, let's kit ourselves out in the most outlandish matching purple suits with contrast piping, twirl along with The Trammps, and Thank Disco It's Friday!

Have a good one, dear reader.

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Of manners, a national treasure, academia, fossil teeth, phallic bread, ingenious money-saving and Murder, He Says


RIP, Drusilla Beyfus, journalist and doyenne of etiquette writing, who has departed for Fabulon (to educate its denizens on using a fish knife and how to properly address Royalty, no doubt), a few days short of her 99th birthday.

It's another snippets post, dear reader:

  • Icon news: "Auntie Beeb" is planning a series of programmes to mark the centenary in May 2026 of that most beloved of all national treasures Sir David Attenborough. No more than he deserves, I say!
  • Academic milestone news: London’s first and largest university, University College London (UCL) has launched a year-long celebration for its 200th anniversary, including a landmark exhibition Two Centuries Here.

  • Primeval grin news: Speaking of old fossils, a pebble that looks like a pair of horrific ancient false teeth, discovered by a beachcomber in Northumbria, turned out to be parts of a 350-million-year-old crinoid (a relative of modern sea urchins). So, not a Ken Dodd tribute, after all.
  • Assessing the quality of phallic objects news: Six lucky Parisians are getting the chance - in a random ballot - to join the jury of the Grand Prix de la baguette 2026, the annual competition to award the prize of "best baguette in Paris" (and the winner gets to supply their produce to the Elysee Palace for the year)! I judged quite a few "baguettes" when I first went to Paris back in the 1990s, and none were found wanting...
  • Beat the system news: In a clever move, a Ryanair passenger from Cardiff refused to stump up the airline's extortionate £30 fee for a second cabin bag on an internal flight from Bristol to Glasgow, so instead she packaged up a month's worth of clothing into a bag and used the InPost courier service, which collects from a locker and deposits it at another at the destination city, which cost her the grand total of £2.59! I imagine she spent the £27.41 she saved in a Glaswegian Wetherspoons, by way of a celebration. I would.
  • And finally: Sharing the day with the likes of Fanny Cradock, Fats Domino, Sandie Shaw, Margaret Leighton, Johnny Cash, Erykah Badu, Tex Avery, Josephine Tewson, Corinne Bailey Rae, Max Martin, Emma Kirkby, Jackie Gleason, Tony Randall and Michael-bloody-Bolton, it would have been the 105th anniversary today of the birth of the magnificent Miss Betty Hutton! All hail.

And the weather? After yesterday's gloriously Spring-like sunny day, today has been grey and breezy - but there's more sun yet to come, according to the forecast...