Scottish Daily Mail

Felicity: The agony of nearly losing my husband to Covid

- By Richard Eden

FELICITY Kendal has revealed her partner Michael Rudman survived coronaviru­s.

She said the theatre director, 82, was treated for two weeks on an intensive care ventilator.

The Good Life star, 74, said: ‘I think I can speak for a lot of people about the fear being huge, and the frustratio­n being a real hardship.

‘That feeling that you don’t know what state your loved one is in, and knowing you still can’t go and see them – it’s not like anything you’ve experience­d before. It was just such a scary time.’

Miss Kendal was married to Mr Rudman for seven years until their divorce in 1990 and they have one son. They were reunited as a couple eight years later. She said the experience of a loved one being treated for coronaviru­s was made even worse by the fact that patients must remain isolated in hospital.

‘The thing that gets you through family sadnesses and illness is that you can bind together,’ she added.

‘You go out together and have a coffee after bad news. You chatter. If you have a sick child, one of you will take in the ice cream and the other one will go round the next day with a balloon.

‘People will cross the world to be with somebody for one last hour, because that’s what we do. But all that support system has been taken away, and I just feel for people going through it.’

Mr Rudman, who won a prestigiou­s Tony award for one of his theatre production­s on Broadway, has now recovered after his treatment in October.

Miss Kendal also tested positive for the virus but her symptoms were very mild.

‘I’ve been in the [operating] theatre, and could tell the hospital staff were at their wits’ end,’ she told the Camden New Journal. ‘It’s not just going the extra mile – they are running a marathon every day.’

Mr Rudman’s daughter, Amanda, who is still suffering from ‘long Covid’ symptoms after a mild case of the disease last March, has set up a charity called Feed The Frontline, that is providing meals for staff at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead, North London, where her father was treated.

Miss Kendal said: ‘She used to run marathons like there’s no tomorrow, now she can’t do two miles. I am now one of the people involved in getting food to the staff at the hospital.’

Miss Kendal added that she does not like the ‘blame’ culture that has emerged in response to the pandemic.

‘Why are we always looking for who’s to blame? We have to hold on to the fact that we have the vaccine going out. It is brilliantl­y organised,’ she said. ‘It’s like the Titanic: you see the best and the worst, but there are many more heroes than not.’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Hardship: Felicity Kendal with Mr Rudman and his daughter Amanda
Hardship: Felicity Kendal with Mr Rudman and his daughter Amanda

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom