San Antonio Express-News

In London, a Platinum Jubilee and ‘Bridgerton’ events await visitors

- By Amy Tara Koch

London is springing back to life. Heathrow Airport reports that March 2022 was its busiest month since the start of the pandemic, with passenger travel from North America, in particular, increasing by more than 60 percent from January 2022.

The uptick is linked to the British government’s recent eliminatio­n of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, a welcome move for many travelers eager for their fill of British culture, including once-in-a-lifetime Platinum Jubilee events and experience­s based on “Bridgerton,” the heady hit show from Netflix.

“We love ‘Bridgerton’ and all things royal,” said Tasha Gelling, a Chicago-based teacher who with her daughter Ruth, 16, booked an afternoon tea during their six-day trip to Britain this month. The duo also toured the Tower of London and Hyde Park, and spent an afternoon in Bath.

Even with new coronaviru­s variants brewing and a war raging in Ukraine, many other U.S. travelers are planning trips to the British capital.

“London has remained the second-most popular internatio­nal travel destinatio­n for Americans — only behind Cancún — for recent holiday travel periods,” said Jen Moyse, vice president of product for Tripit, a travel-organizing app with 19 million users. The volume of flight bookings to London, she said, increased 300 percent when comparing Tripit’s reservatio­n data over the four-month period from April to July to December to March.

Some city stalwarts closed their doors during the pandemic. Among them: Cafe de Paris, a cabaret venue in the West End since 1924; Le Caprice in St James’s, once a favorite spot of Princess Diana; and the physical locations of Debenham’s, the 242-year-old department store. But throughout London, other cafes and shops bustle, scads of new bars and restaurant­s have opened and city squares teem with everyday life. Many of the Royal Parks are ablaze in daffodils and brimming with picnickers, while live theater is back in the West End. The return of in-person events lends to the buoyancy of the Platinum Jubilee “Central Weekend” in June, when public celebratio­ns will mark Queen Elizabeth’s 70-year reign.

Here’s more on what is new and noteworthy in London.

The latest in restaurant­s

It’s a testament to London’s vitality that new restaurant­s managed to open and even thrive during the pandemic. One of the buzziest spots is

Sessions Arts Club in Clerkenwel­l, a reimagined 18th-century courthouse where artwork and crumbling, dramatic décor lend a fanciful patina to fare from chef Florence Knight. Dishes like sea bream with parsley and eel with crème fraîche are delightful­ly British, with whiffs of France and Italy (entrées range from 10 to 25 pounds, or around $13 to $32).

Another new hit is KOL, Britain’s first Michelin-starred Mexican restaurant, where chef Santiago Lastra turns out items like pork belly carnitas with cabbage puree. On the ground level is The Mezcaleria, which serves kicky, mezcal-focused cocktails (six- or nine-course tasting menus cost 90 and 125 pounds, without wine or mezcal pairings; cocktails at Mezclaria are 15 pounds).

Vegans and meat-eaters alike might be delighted with the restaurant Gauthier Soho’s pivot from classic French gastronomy to plant-based fine dining. One dish, rice with truffle “cream,” delivers the richness of dairy through a potato-and-lentil starch combinatio­n (the tasting menu starts at 50 pounds, without wine pairings).

When Leroy in Shoreditch adopted rotisserie chicken takeaway as a pandemic survival maneuver, the Michelin-starred restaurant might not have imagined the side hustle would evolve into a stand-alone eatery. Now, Royale sells whole or half cornfed Anjou chicken, sides like leeks vinaigrett­e and a hazelnut parfait dessert (whole chickens cost 30 pounds, sides about 10 pounds).

New cocktails

At his 1970s-inspired, Thames-facing bar Lyaness, bartender Ryan Chetiyawar­dana crafts cocktails around offbeat ingredient­s. A spring drink called the 21st Daisy blends vodka, passion fruit and crystalliz­ed verbena with a homemade “Green Sauce Liqueur”

(14.5 pounds), but this South Bank location also serves a weekend “Spirited Tea” (55 pounds for the full tea selection, paired cocktails, cakes and sandwiches).

Brown’s clocks in as the oldest hotel in London, opening its doors in 1837, but bartender Salvatore Calabrese devises fresh ways to revisit the property’s history through cocktails. The First Call honors Alexander Graham Bell (who famously made the first phone call from Brown’s) with Elephant gin, pistachio pesto, verjus, coconut syrup, egg white and white port (23 pounds). Another drink, the Winston — as in Churchill — is whisky based and spiked with coriander, lime juice and a swirl of smokiness (25 pounds).

New hotels and lodging

In Covent Garden, the New York-based design company Roman and Williams has transforme­d a 19th-century Magistrate’s Court into the first European Nomad Hotel. The selected art and textured materials imbue spaces with a contempora­ry edge and the restaurant is housed within a three-story glass atrium (rates from 409 pounds).

Two interconne­cted Georgian homes are now the 14-suite Beaverbroo­k Town House in Chelsea, where interiors designed by Nicola Harding offer

vibrant color combinatio­ns, lively prints and tassel-fringed upholstery inspired by London’s grand theaters (rates from 495 pounds). Hotel guests can access the leafy, residents-only Cadogan Gardens as well as enjoy “Bridgerton”-themed experience­s with the sister property Beaverbroo­k Estate in Surrey.

Kingsland Locke has unveiled 124 sleek apartment-style rooms in East London’s Dalston neighborho­od, with a coffee shop, microbrewe­ry and kebab restaurant on the ground floor (rates from 123 pounds).

West End offerings

Lights are back on in the West End with blockbuste­r musicals like “Moulin Rouge! The Musical” and “Six,” a modern chronicle of the fate of Henry VIII’S wives. For those seeking plays, there is “Much Ado About Nothing” at The Shakespear­e Globe (through Oct. 23) and the West End openings include “The Glass Menagerie” starring Amy Adams (from May 23 to Aug. 27) and “Prima Facie” with Jodie Comer of “Killing Eve” fame (through June 18).

Ticket prices range for various shows, from 5 pounds (standing room only) to around 90 pounds, and may be sold out for popular shows. Weeknight tickets and matinees are cheaper and the TKTS booth in Leicester Square offers discounted day-of tickets. Note that some theaters have their own vaccine requiremen­ts, so double check to see what documentat­ion is required for entry.

Museum exhibits

At the Victoria & Albert Museum, the “Fashioning Masculinit­ies: The Art of Menswear” exhibition brings together historical and contempora­ry ensembles to highlight the concept of gender fluidity. Expect to see 18th-century frock coats and suits worn by the Beatles to gowns sported by the singer Harry Styles and the drag performer Bimini Bon-boulash (admission to the museum is free and there’s no timed entry; “Fashioning Masculinit­ies” runs through November).

“Surrealism Beyond Borders” at the Tate Modern explores the global reach of the surrealist movement with works by lesser-known artists from Osaka, Japan, and Bogotá, Colombia, juxtaposed with paintings by Dali, Miro and Magritte (free and ticketed admission to the museum and advance bookings are recommende­d; “Surrealism Beyond Borders” runs through August).

In King’s Cross, Britain’s first museum dedicated to LGBTQ individual­s, Queer Britain, opened this week with a display of paintings, photograph­s and paintings assembled by Matthew Storey, the art, design and LGBTQ history curator for Historic Royal Palaces.

Platinum Jubilee and more

Britain is celebratin­g the Platinum Jubilee, marking Queen Elizabeth II as the first British monarch to spend 70 years on the throne, all year. But from June 2-5, events like “Trooping the Color,” a ceremonial parade featuring 1,400 soldiers, 200 horses and 400 musicians, will be held. The parade will march from Buckingham Palace down the Mall with members of the royal family; among the other festivitie­s that weekend are a concert at Buckingham Palace and a series of street parties.

Hotels are also celebratin­g. The Jubilee edition of the Berkeley’s “Prêt-à-portea” features Her Majesty’s most iconic looks in petit fours and other pastries (79 pounds per person, available from May 30 to June 12) and on June 5, the Connaught will throw a Jubilee street party, with an English brass band, bunting and family-style tables offering tea sandwiches.

Other nonroyal, high-profile events welcoming spectators once again are the Chelsea Flower Show, (May 24-28); the Royal Ascot horse racing (June 14 to 18), and Wimbledon (June

27 to July 10).

 ?? Photos by Joanna Yee / New York Times ?? Royal culture, historic sites and traditiona­l British experience­s are catnip to Americans who have missed traveling across the pond.
Photos by Joanna Yee / New York Times Royal culture, historic sites and traditiona­l British experience­s are catnip to Americans who have missed traveling across the pond.
 ?? ?? The 14-suite Beaverbroo­k Town House in Chelsea features interiors designed by Nicola Harding that offer vibrant color combinatio­ns and luxurious style.
The 14-suite Beaverbroo­k Town House in Chelsea features interiors designed by Nicola Harding that offer vibrant color combinatio­ns and luxurious style.
 ?? ?? Grilled octopus awaits adventurou­s diners at KOL, Britain’s first Michelin-starred Mexican restaurant.
Grilled octopus awaits adventurou­s diners at KOL, Britain’s first Michelin-starred Mexican restaurant.

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