As the ultimate umpire for the City where rules have been blurred and conduct has been dubious
August 17, 2010 by admin
Filed under Entertainment
As the ultimate umpire for the City, where rules have been blurred and conduct has been dubious, he is likely to introduce a rigorous regime that some will find uncomfortable.. Britain’s oldest hospital, St Bartholomew’s, will be saved, Labour MPs said last night after receiving assurances from senior Cabinet sources that a review would rescue the hospital from closure. He and his wife give parties which are famous for their complicated parlour games, and he is a good cricketer. He once pondered a political career from himself, but was easily dissuaded by his wife. He will fit neatly into Tony Blair’s new establishment: like the Prime Minister, Davies is an enthusiastic father to sports-mad boys and is married to a career woman.Above all though, he is energetic, driven, hard to deflect, in work or play. At times it has seemed that wherever public, official Britain touches the world of commerce at a high level, Howard Davies is near at hand.Despite his closeness to Thatcherite politicians in the Eighties, Davies is not ideological. He became director general of the CBI, then deputy governor of the Bank of England.
He is a graduate of many of the institutions of modern Britain. After Oxford, he went to the Foreign Office and Treasury, where he was a special adviser to Nigel Lawson. He joined the management consultants McKinsey & Co, whose influence made them a key part of the new establishment during the Tory years.
Mr Davies first became a public name when he ran the Audit Commission, dealing adroitly with extremely difficult financial crises – notably the Hammersmith Council speculation scandal. He is sporty, classless and informal – and, for an Englishman, ruthlessly disciplined. Howard Davies is the very model of a modern public servant, a man who has depressed his friends for years by compulsively over-achieving. These crossover gigs, however, do need a sympathetic soundcrew – the recent WOMAD event at the Barbican was marred by similarly cloth-eared technicians.Martin Gordon.
But then she opens up with a phrase like “No, I don’t want to die!” and you really don’t know where the extra juice comes from Except that it does A really promising talent closing in on fulfilment. As is Patrick Denniston, the American Des Grieux, very much of the newer, leaner and hungrier breed of tenor. The voice took a while to open to the music’s enticements, the elegance of the phrasing was initially not matched in the sound. But he cuts a fine agile figure and the intensity of the delivery is unstinting The supporting cast were all good.