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Three Times a Countess: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Raine Spencer

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She looked much the same, well into her eighties. She never had “work” on her face but slathered it with jojoba oil three times a day and always kept out of the sun. (She told one host who offered lunch on the terrace, “I don’t do outside”.) Her hairdresser reported that she had “unbelievable breasts”, like a girl’s, and she told him it was because she had never worn a bra. It was only when she was 86 that she suddenly lost weight and started to look frail. “I’ve got a little cancer, dear and it’s spread to the bones,” she confided to a friend. She died at home on October 21 2016.

Of course, I love the tasty bits of gossip, I’m sure most people do, but this book shows you so much more. Raine Spencer was not just a very pretty face.

First night reviews

To her friends, Raine was shrewd, intelligent, witty and loyal; to her enemies, pushy, overly flamboyant and ruthless. From a career spanning local politics to dealing with the fortunes of Althorp; from taking on the Spencer family estate to her final role as a board member at Harrods, Raine’s life was, by any standards, a success . Yet she could not sway the powerful media narrative which pitted her as ‘the evil stepmother’ at every turn. Then one day she found herself on a historic buildings committee with Johnnie Spencer, heir to Althorp. Before he met Raine, Johnnie was rumoured to be “the gloomiest man in London”. His wife Frances had bolted and he couldn’t get over it. But Raine made it her business to cheer him up. “Raine loved men and she loved sex,” according to a friend, and they were always stopping the car in lay-bys. On one occasion, they gave a lift to a friend but then popped into a budget hotel by a filling station, and left the friend waiting with the chauffeur in the Rolls. They married in 1976. The Telegraph values your comments but kindly requests all posts are on topic, constructive and respectful. Please review our When Johnny did eventually die, poor Raine was shunted out of Althorp within 24 hours and even refused suitcases to put her clothes in… she left with car loads of bin liners.

Notwithstanding, she was a perfect lady, not revengeful, and always polite, charming and popular. She made a new life for herself, worked as a Director at Harrods, and found a new husband, but no one could replace Johnny, and her last marriage to a French Count did not last very long. Marc writes (main picture): I specifically focused on the South Africa captain Siya Kolisi, far left, as he sung the national anthem, Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika, as he sings with so much passion and emotion. And suddenly she was friends with Princess Diana. Diana made the first move, inviting her to lunch, and soon they were phoning each other every day and calling each other “darling”. Raine was one of the first people to learn of Diana’s death. The BBC announced that Dodi Al Fayed had been killed in the Paris car crash, but Diana was in hospital with minor injuries. Michael Cole, who worked for Mohammed Al Fayed, had been frantically phoning the Salpetriere Hospital to ask for news but the hospital refused to tell him anything because he wasn’t family. Then he remembered that his good friend Raine was family, and got her to ring the hospital, who told her Diana was dead. From a career spanning local politics to dealing with the fortunes of Althorp; from taking on the Spencer family estate to her final role as a board member at Harrods, Raine’s life was, by any standards, a success . Raine, then the Comtesse de Chambrun (left), with her stepdaughter, Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997Raine Spencer leaving The Connaught hotel after lunch with Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997 Antony Jones/Getty Images She was indeed an extraordinary woman, whose life is told here with great panache by Tina Gaudoin, a former magazine editor. Gaudoin occasionally goes into little rants about how Raine was always under-estimated because she was a woman, but they only add to the fun. This is a sparkling biography of a fascinating woman. Welcome to Belgravia Books > Browse the shop > Products > Nonfiction > Biography & Memoir > Three Times a Countess When using any of our marketplaces – e.g. jobs, courses, energy comparison etc. We may receive money from third parties who are listed on our marketplaces e.g. an employer paying to advertise a job, or a course or energy provider paying a commission to us.

To her friends, Raine was shrewd, intelligent, witty and loyal; to her enemies, pushy, overly flamboyant and ruthless. We are experiencing delays with deliveries to many countries, but in most cases local services have now resumed. For more details, please consult the latest information provided by Royal Mail's International Incident Bulletin. Gaudoin's book is revealing and hugely entertaining. Highly recommended. * Daily Mail, *Royal Books of the Year* *Tina Gaudoin sets out to rehabilitate Raine as a far more nuanced woman, an insouciant, sexy survivor uncredited for her many achievements . . . A colourful life. * The Times * Meanwhile, Johnnie had inherited Althorp on his father’s death. But it desperately needed repairs and the money was all entailed to the children. So he and Raine set about selling some of Althorp’s treasures to fund the renovation. Johnnie’s children, of course, resented this and there was a terrible scene when Diana pushed Raine downstairs, screaming “I hate you so much”. Then, two years into the marriage, Johnnie suffered a massive stroke which kept him in hospital for eight months. Raine stayed by his side, willing him to live, but she would not allow his children to visit him because she said they upset him. No wonder they called her Acid Raine. Acid Raine“ was the somewhat unkind name coined by Princess Diana for her stepmother Countess Raine Spencer. Before I read this book – Three Times A Countess – I am ashamed to say I had completely preconceived opinions of Raine Spencer, no doubt fuelled by my guilty secret of sometimes reading the Daily Mail. Carey’s new thriller, the sequel to last year’s excellent Widowland, has acquired unexpected resonance by being published shortly after the Queen’s death, but it remains exciting and provocative dystopian fiction. In an alternative postwar Britain living under a Nazi “protectorate”, Hitler has been assassinated by the book’s protagonist, Rose Ransom, and the country has plunged into paranoia and reprisals. As rumours swirl that the usurped Princess Elizabeth will return to Britain, Rose finds herself alongside an unlikely ally, none other than Queen Wallis Simpson. Nina Simone’s Gum Equity release may impact the size of your estate and it could affect your entitlement to current and future means-tested benefits.

Nobody reads anything. What really matters is how I look': Raine Spencer (then Mrs Gerald Legge) in London, 1953 Equity release may involve a lifetime mortgage or a home reversion plan. To understand the features and risks, ask for a personalised illustration.When Lady Diana Spencer was 15, she and her siblings discovered their father had secretly married the woman they called Acid Raine by reading it in the Daily Express. He hadn’t dared to tell them. A furious Diana was sent in “to sort him out”, a confrontation that ended up, according to the princess, with her slapping him round the face. But who was the real Raine? What was hidden behind the immaculately manicured public facade and her overwhelmingly negative tabloid image? To her friends, Raine was shrewd, intelligent, witty and loyal; to her enemies, pushy, overly flamboyant and ruthless. From a career spanning local politics to dealing with the fortunes of Althorp; from taking on the Spencer family estate to her final role as a board member at Harrods, Raine's life was, by any standards, a success . Yet she could not sway the powerful media narrative which pitted her as 'the evil stepmother' at every turn.

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