Deccan Chronicle

Alcohol is the perfect cure for deafness

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Abusy ten days, or nights rather, with some heroic drinking thrown in for good measure. Hangovers discrimina­te against the old nowadays, but no one is doing anything about it — not in Washington, not in New York, not in London. Our former chairman Algy Cluff’s dinner party at a gentleman’s club, followed by an extremely funny speech given by him, started me boozing and things didn’t let up. One drinks to enhance an enjoyable evening, never to relieve boredom. Also, one drinks when one can’t hear, as in extremely noisy New York restaurant­s.

I made a big mistake recently, when I had Prince and Princess Pavlos of Greece and Michael and Victoria Wolff for dinner at Avra, a Greek restaurant on the Upper East Side that I thought might be a quiet tavern like the ones you find below the Acropolis back home. The place turned out to be larger than Grand Central and noisier than when Krupp’s Big Bertha was firing off shells against the allies. When my wife rang to make the reservatio­n, they took down my name and assured her that the best table would be available for little ole me “and my important guests”. Great, I thought, they must have heard of me, and prepared in my mind the questions I had for Michael Wolff, whose book on Trump was a runaway bestseller. Nothing could have been further from the truth. It was an old Bagel trick — to make people feel important so that you get their custom.

Funny how the Bagel is crawling with restaurant­s, but a good intimate place to eat is hard to find. Minetta Tavern, owned by my old buddy Keith McNally, a Brit, is such a place, but it’s a long way downtown and the traffic is horrific. Robin Birley is opening a place uptown, though, and that should solve my dining problems. Minetta Tavern, in the meat-packing district, was a hangout for Papa Hemingway when he was slumming downtown. E.E. Cummings and Ezra Pound used to join him and reminisce about the old days in Paris. Papa would be appalled with downtown today. The place is full of tourists looking to make a statement, dressed in the contrived dishevelme­nt they think is cool.

The man you should be going after is the King of Siam, King Maha Vajiralong­korn, who has four beautiful wives — his last one is a former flight attendant — but who dismissed a consort, Sineenat Wongvajira­pakdi, for overt ambition and acting like a queen. I like the king because, unlike most monarchs nowadays, he has about 30 billion big ones and has spent much of his time in Germany with women who like him for many reasons. He also designates women as consorts (not to be confused with wives and other such female labels). Thai women are among the most beautiful creatures on earth, and the last time I was there, 47 years or so ago, I fell for a waitress who brought me breakfast at the Dusit Thani Hotel. I was on my way to Nam and swore to her I’d be back to get her and take her West with me. It never happened and by now she must be a very old lady while I’m sort of set in my ways. Reading about the king’s consorts brought back memories. I should have made her my consort, but I was young and stupid back then. Girls, go after King Maha. Harvey has spent all his moolah on lawyers.

By arrangemen­t with

the Spectator

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