Scottish Daily Mail

Stephen Fry: I snorted cocaine at the Palace

- By Sam Creighton s.creighton@dailymail.co.uk

STEPHEN Fry has claimed he took cocaine at Buckingham Palace.

Opening up about a 15-year addiction to the Class A drug, the comedian details dozens of respected institutio­ns where he says he took it.

The list includes the House of Lords, the House of Commons and BBC Television Centre – but Fry, 57, fails to elaborate further.

The claims come in a new autobiogra­hy, More Fool Me, published yesterday.

Fry writes: ‘I take this opportunit­y to apologise unreserved­ly, to the owners, managers or representa­tives of the noble and ignoble premises and to the hundreds of private homes, offices, car dashboards, tables, mantelpiec­es and available polished services that could so easily have been added to this list of shame.

‘You may wish to have me struck off, banned, black balled or in any other way punished for past crimes; surely now is the time to reach for the phone, the police or the club secretary.’

Following on from 2010’s The Fry Chronicles, which touched on his drug use in its closing pages, his new book sees the presenter speak in detail about the habit that cost him hundreds of thousands of pounds.

It also reveals his brushes with the law and how he narrowly escaped drug charges after being stopped by police while in possession of cocaine.

This third instalment of his autobiogra­phy f ollows Fry through the 1980s and 90s after he had found fame through shows such as A Bit of Fry and Laurie, Blackadder and Jeeves and Wooster.

He recalls the ‘ momentous night’ in 1986 when he first took cocaine with an unnamed actor friend and admits that he never saw himself as an addict as his dependency spiralled out of control. Fry doesn’t detail the year he believed he became addicted or when he kicked the habit.

He writes: ‘How can I explain the extraordin­ary waste of time and money that went into my 15-year habit? Tens if not hundreds of thousands of pounds, and as many hours, sniffing, snorting and tooting away time

‘I really, really

liked it’

that could have been employed writing, performing, thinking, exercising, living.’

The actor, who suffers from bipolar disorder, also explained his simple motivation­s behind taking cocaine: ‘I didn’t take coke because I was depressed or under pressure. I didn’t take it because I was unhappy (at least I don’t think so). I took it because I really, really liked it.’

While he assures readers that he was always too ‘squeamish’ to try harder drugs such as heroin or crystal meth, his cocaine consumptio­n could be insatiable.

His need for drugs was so great that he built up a network of dealers to ensure he would always have a steady supply. He explained how he built up this web across London after his first £240 drug buy. He talks about ‘Mitch’ introducin­g him to ‘Nando’ who passed him on to ‘Midge’ and then ‘Nonny’ – who had ‘ACharlie’ for actors, comics, musicians and supermodel­s.

He r ecalls how he was stopped by police for driving his motorbike while drunk, with three grams of cocaine in his possession.

Scared that he would be charged with intent to supply, he tried to surreptiti­ously leave the cocaine, which was stored in a small holder, in the police van as it drove him to London’s West End Central Station on Savile Row.

He was charged with drunk driving but allowed to go until his court date. However, as he was leaving, a police officer came running after him with the unopened holder, unknowingl­y returning the drugs to Fry which he went on to take that same night.

Fry also recounts how he gave Tony Blair advice on how to dress when he was invited to a dinner at Chequers soon after Labour took power in 1997.

The dress code was stated as ‘informal’ – but Fry was surprised to find the prime minister in a denim shirt and chinos. He explained to the PM that ‘in the strange British world of etiquette’, informal meant ‘ not black tie’ and that many guests would wear dark lounge suits. ‘There was much confabulat­ion before the PM hared upstairs to change,’ Fry writes.

 ??  ?? Royal guest: Fry at Buckingham Palace earlier this year
Royal guest: Fry at Buckingham Palace earlier this year
 ??  ?? At the Palace: Stephen Fry with the Queen earlier this year
At the Palace: Stephen Fry with the Queen earlier this year

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