Scottish Daily Mail

JOIN THE MARBELLA CLUB!

The rich and famous loved this Spanish honeypot —and it still has panache,

- says Mark Palmer

Flamenco is an acquired taste. But if you meander up towards the church in old town marbella on a Saturday night and pop into a dishevelle­d little hostelry called ana maria, conversion awaits. There are a few tables and chairs scattered about — and along one wall sit six Spaniards of varying shapes and sizes, two of whom are tuning their acoustic guitars.

Then a woman serving drinks shouts something or other in a conversati­onal sort of way and the lead guitarist responds nonchalant­ly — at first.

a voluptuous woman starts clapping; others join in, deliberate­ly missing the beat just enough to create a scatter gun of sound that grows louder and louder.

The two guitarists begin strumming feverishly, but in perfect control. Then a dark-haired woman in a long red skirt and frilly blouse starts to dance as if she has the whole world at her feet.

She stamps; she clips the ground delicately; swings her arms, twists her body, all the time keeping her back ironrod straight.

We had intended to stay only ten minutes or so, but an hour-and-a-half later we’re still there, fumbling in our pockets to find €10 for a cD we’ll never play at home and hoping for one final dance.

It’s not the only surprise in marbella’s exquisite old town. We had expected it to be medallion city but it’s nothing of the kind. There are meant to be more RollsRoyce­s along this stretch of the costa del Sol than in london, but not in the historic quarter.

and there’s nothing flashy about the colourful squares, independen­t little shops, countless tapas bars.

We’re so taken by it all that when a proselytis­ing waiter carrying a large menu greets us in the main square and promises ‘ very much good dishes’ we find ourselves lured to one of his tables and ordering a round of ‘ very much’ lethal cocktails.

marbella is real. Which is to say that you know skulldugge­ry lurks just beneath the gilded surface. certainly, it did in the nineties when Jesus Gil y Gil became mayor and set about resurfacin­g roads, chasing away the drug dealers and planting palm trees on the seafront.

Gil didn’t belong to any particular party. He was like a sheriff in the Wild West who believed in doing what you have to do — although where the money was coming from for his clean-up was unclear.

at one point, his plans included creating a whi t e mar b l e

promenade from Marbella to Peurto Banus. As it is, there’s a dusty track pretty much linking these two hotspots, where locals jog and walk off the excesses. About a mile or so along this track from Marbella is the seafront entrance to the Marbella Club, which founded in 1954 by playboy

Prince Alfonso, still exudes a glamour of old but with just a hint of no carbs before Marbs’ bling.

Prince Alfonso, who died in 2003, was a godson of the Spanish monarch Alfonso XIII. Let’s just say he was connected: Princess , Grace Audrey Hepburn, Bob Richard Burton, Hope Brigitte Bardot, Roger Moore and Bruce Forayth have all been regulars — and there are hundreds of photo-graphs in reception to prove it. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor loved staying here. I like the story of the Duke turning up for drinks in the bar wearing a suit when everyone else was wearing Hawaiian shirts. Quickly, he slipped away to change into something more casual. But by the time he returned, everyone else had slipped away to put on jackets and ties.

The sub-tropical gardens are beautiful and immaculate. Dotted about our tasteful l ow- l ying buildings offering suites and rooms; villas with their own pools; and a discreet kids’ club.

The main outdoor restaurant, where you sit under huge pine t r ees with dripping candles balancing on the lower branches, is romance on a plate.

During the day, the Beach Club (where I notice the sea is far cleaner than it was only a few years ago) gives new meaning to the word buffet. It’s near the fabulous spa built into the rocks, with its own huge hydrothera­py pool. One lunchtime, we wander ten minutes along the beach for lunch at the Marbella Club’s sister hotel, Puente Romano. You should do the same. It’s as if the sisters try to outdo each other in the race for buffet perfection — but it’s us punters who are the winners.

My wife and I play a game on holiday. We think out loud who among our friends would like such and such a place. The names here keep coming. In fact, we can’t muster one single potential dissenter.

TRAVEL FACTS

DOUBLE rooms at the Marbella Club (0034 95 282 2211, marbellacl­ub.com) cost from £460 per night. EasyJet ( easyjet.com) flies to Marbella from £54 return. Meet & Greet parking at Gatwick Airport with APH ( aph.com) costs from £69.50.

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 ??  ?? Sunshine coast: The shimmering pools at the Marbella Club, which was founded in 1954 by the jetset playboy Prince Alfonso Glamorous guest: Brigitte Bardot, who stayed at the Marbella Club, pictured in her prime
Sunshine coast: The shimmering pools at the Marbella Club, which was founded in 1954 by the jetset playboy Prince Alfonso Glamorous guest: Brigitte Bardot, who stayed at the Marbella Club, pictured in her prime

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