Wales On Sunday

Often with the original Changing Rooms it was like, ‘it looks good ...but don’t lean on it because it’s like a Crossroads set’

As the long-awaited reboot of Changing Rooms arrives, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen talks to DANIELLE DE WOLFE, and proves that being diplomatic is really not his style

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LAURENCE LLEWELYN-BOWEN is known for his bold design choices but his thoughts on how the Prime Minister and his wife should decorate their Downing Street flat might still raise eyebrows.

The nation’s “foremost residence” should be unashamedl­y “quirky” the interior designer asserts.

“Let’s get a bit more Brit-popular again,” he says, “put a bit of paisley on the front door, for sure.”

Speaking in the run up to the return of cult interior design show Changing Rooms – which will see Laurence back as a designer and will this time be helmed by Anna Richardson – the 56-year-old likes the idea of making strong interior choices for Boris and Carrie Johnson’s flat.

“I would much rather our leader presented a vision of British interior, British craft, that was incredibly relevant and that was very much about leading the pack, that was very inspiratio­nal, rather than just being off the shelf from John Lewis or out of the tin from Farrow & Ball.”

It’s clear Laurence is as fond of flamboyant style as he ever was. But when Changing Rooms comes back to our screens there will be some changes to the show, he promises. Newly acquired by Channel 4, the cult programme which ran between 1996 and 2004, will mark 25 years since the first episode was aired on September 4.

“That is a very, very long time,” says Laurence, noting the “big changes” to the forthcomin­g series are “the things that I’ve always wanted to change”. “We’re still doing two days, we’re still swapping neighbours, we don’t know anything about our client, but we’ve got really very serious, decent budgets.

“So often with the original series, the designs were great – but they just never ended up being that wellbuilt. With the best will in the world, it was kind of like, ‘it looks good but don’t lean on it because it’s like a Crossroads set’. That comment instantly conjures memories of the now infamous incident involving designer Linda Barker, a floating shelving unit and the decimation of Caroline Hicks’ £6,000 teapot collection. Laurence says lessons have most definitely been learned.

Despite presenter Davina McCall initially being billed as the replacemen­t for original Changing Rooms host Carol Smiley, the onset of Covid and multiple filming delays saw clashes arise between the reboot and her existing commitment­s as part of ITV’s The Masked Dancer.

“I felt like Davina was born to do Changing Rooms,” declares Laurence.

Praising Davina’s ability to be “sweet and sharp at the same time”, he mockingly declares that “she left me for Jonathan Ross”.

Describing the presenter’s decision to “watch celebritie­s with a traffic cone on their heads dancing” rather than joining the reboot, the designer triumphant­ly declares: “You know what, Davina? You could have had me in my leather trousers.”

With Naked Attraction’s Anna Richardson stepping in to save the day, Laurence says working with her has been a “delight” and describes her as having a “rather starchy, Home Counties feel” with something “quite nurselike” about her.

“She sort of gets you through Naked Attraction, you know? She’s got that ability to say, ‘Right, OK, now put it back in your trousers’.”

As for why 2021 proved the perfect time for him to return to the show – noting the project has “been in the air for about three or four years” – Laurence says that age and perspectiv­e both have a large role to play.

“I was in danger of getting a bit too grand,” he confesses. “I think that’s the problem.”

“When you do shows in Asia and you’ve got 130 million viewers and all these awards, every time you get off the plane, there are 30 people standing there with clipboards all wanting to know what kind of sushi you want. You get used to that.

You know what, Davina? You could have had me in my leather trousers. Laurence on Davina McCall dropping out as host

“The idea of getting back on to the Changing Rooms bus – and there literally was a bus, you know – staying in Premier Inns and all of these things, it was like having done all these stadium gigs all over the world and then, suddenly, I’m doing live and acoustic above the pub again. “And actually, it’s been wonderful. It’s been absolutely wonderful.”

Over the years Laurence has become as well known for his divisive design choices as he has his striking attire.

“I think people always assumed it would be a lot worse, which I rather like,” he says. “When it wasn’t a tart’s boudoir with a rubber ceiling and large cows’ udders arranged as seating, they kind of went ‘Oh my god, I really like this’. So, in a way, I think the reputation that preceded me really used to do me quite a few favours.”

Changing Rooms starts on Wednesday at 8pm on Channel 4 and All 4

 ??  ?? Davina McCall
ROOM MATES: Laurence, left, with the original Changing Rooms team of Andy Kane, Linda Barker, Graham Wynne, Carol Smilie and Anna Ryder Richardson
Davina McCall ROOM MATES: Laurence, left, with the original Changing Rooms team of Andy Kane, Linda Barker, Graham Wynne, Carol Smilie and Anna Ryder Richardson
 ??  ?? PERFECT 10: Laurence has style advice for Boris and Carrie Johnson
PERFECT 10: Laurence has style advice for Boris and Carrie Johnson

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