Daily Mail

Superwoman Shirley on the mend after crisis brain op

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SHIRLEY CONRAN has led the most extraordin­ary life, from writing bestseller­s Superwoman and Lace to helping create one of our most talented design dynasties.

But now she’s revealed her most dramatic — and secret — challenge: surviving an operation to remove a brain tumour that was the size of an orange.

‘The odds were very high that I would die,’ she tells me. ‘The operation took five-and-a-half hours. When I came out of it, within hours I had two seizures, so I was in intensive care for two days.’

Shirley, (pictured) who was married to Habitat co-founder Sir Terence Conran, first realised she was unwell last year. ‘I had what seemed like a spotlight on me, rapidly turned on and off,’ she says. ‘This turned out to be an epilepsy attack.’

MRI scans at St George’s Hospital in London revealed she had a brain tumour, but the doctors couldn’t tell if it was malignant, so decided not to operate. But months later her brain deteriorat­ed ‘ until I couldn’t walk, read or write and talked very slowly with a slurred voice’. She says: ‘I didn’t care much about anything — my sons or my sisters.’

Shirley, 87, has two sons with Sir Terence: the celebrated designers Jasper and Sebastian Conran. ‘This situation upset my children and my family, as they saw me turn into a vegetable,’ she says. The tumour enlarged rapidly and it was decided she needed an operation to remove it in January.

‘I was in hospital for ten days, then I was moved to the Kensington Care Home for a month. I came out at the end of February, and then the coronaviru­s pitched in and all the nursing homes shut.’ She is now staying in the same road as Sebastian’s home in Notting Hill and is typically keen to get writing again.

‘They [the doctors] warned me very forcibly several times not to try to do any work until april,’ says the author, who coined the phrase ‘Life’s too short to stuff a mushroom’.

She reveals she is now working on her memoirs. ‘For 40 years, people have been asking me to write my autobiogra­phy and I’ve always said no because it would bore me. When mine is finished, I will decide whether I want it published.’

It could be even more enthrallin­g than one of her novels.

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