The Daily Telegraph

Michael Constantin­idi

Genial adman and traditiona­l sports enthusiast who helped to widen the appeal of Eton Fives

-

MICHAEL CONSTANTIN­IDI, who has died aged 90, was the son of a Greek diplomat yet became a pillar of England’s most celebrated sporting institutio­ns, helping to revive the game of Eton Fives and marrying a beauty celebrated in verse by John Betjeman.

Michael Dukes Constantin­idi was born with his twin brother George on June 28 1928. Their father, Spiro, had arrived in London as a counsellor at the Greek embassy in 1924, having previously represente­d his country at the signing of the Treaty of Versailles. His mother, Ariadne, was from a Greek family which had fled to London from Chios after the massacre of 1822.

Michael arrived at Eton in 1941, quickly proving himself a highly accomplish­ed player of Fives – the handball game played by teams of two – which would continue to be a passion throughout his life. He became Keeper of Fives.

After National Service with the 5th Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, serving in Osnabrück, he returned to Christ Church, Oxford, to read Law.

But it was in advertisin­g that he made his mark. While at his first firm, Armstrong Warden, he met Joan Price. She also worked as a beautician, wrote for The Queen (later Harper’s & Queen) and opened two fashionabl­e beauty salons in Chelsea called Joan Price’s Face Place.

The couple married in 1956 in the Grosvenor Chapel and it was there, later, that Betjeman spotted “the most beautiful creature … I didn’t even know her name.” The poet’s daughter, Candida Lycett Green, identified Joan Constantin­idi as the subject of “Lenten Thoughts of a High Anglican”, whose last line describes her as “a hint of the Unknown God”.

Michael Constantin­idi, meanwhile, had moved to SH Benson, where he worked on, among others, the celebrated Guinness account. In 1963 he had a walk-on role in the Cold War when, with superpower relations improving after the near-catastroph­e of the Cuban missile crisis, he organised a delegation of British advertiser­s to visit the USSR.

The trip included a contingent from The Sunday Times, whose owner, Roy Thomson (Lord Thomson of Fleet), boarded the plane to Moscow with the foreign correspond­ent Tom Stacey. Hearing of the delegation, Nikita Khrushchev invited Thomson and Stacey to an interview while Constantin­idi entertaine­d potential clients outside with lashings of caviar.

After SH Benson merged with Ogilvy & Mather in 1971, Constantin­idi left to form his own agency, BCB, with two colleagues. He remained there until the early 1990s.

Retirement, however, was only the spur to extend his sporting interests, and he took up real tennis, playing at Queen’s and at Lord’s, where he had been a member since 1955. In 1996, when the post of chairman of the Eton Fives Associatio­n (EFA) became vacant, it was suggested that he run against Tony Hughes, a fine former player burdened with a divisive reputation. Constantin­idi was duly elected and displayed typical charm in smoothing all acrimony from the race.

He then deployed his great energy and business acumen in putting the EFA on a more profession­al footing and was also a key figure in the constructi­on of four new Fives courts – the first built for the public since the 1930s – at the Westway Sports Centre, west London. The courts opened in 2001 with the express aim of widening participat­ion in the game and they remain a pivotal developmen­t for Fives.

Michael Constantin­idi was engaging, voluble company and an irrepressi­ble enthusiast. He and Joan had no children, but they gathered their many friends at Sunday lunches over a menu (roast beef, chocolate and apple tarts) that remained unchanged for decades.

She survives him, as does his twin and sometime Fives team-mate George, whom Michael continued, jokingly, to blame for their defeat in Eton’s House Fives competitio­n well into their eighties.

Michael Constantin­idi, born June 28 1928, died February 7 2019

 ??  ?? Constantin­idi with his wife Joan, identified as the young woman admired from a distance in John Betjeman’s ‘Lenten Thoughts of a High Anglican’. Right, a game of Eton Fives in progress
Constantin­idi with his wife Joan, identified as the young woman admired from a distance in John Betjeman’s ‘Lenten Thoughts of a High Anglican’. Right, a game of Eton Fives in progress
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom