Saturday, April 28th, 2012

He simply looked blank as if he did not know what I was

August 28, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

He simply looked blank, as if he did not know what I was talking about, perhaps ashamed of his humble beginnings. Yet I know it to be true, not just because it is a matter of public record, but because our choir sang at his wedding and I remember him well.Writing novels has been a brilliant method for making money from his duplicitous fantasies. Half of the 14 short stories that made up his last book were about deceptions, frauds or petty confidence tricks, all of them successful. Until his recent conviction, it was possible to interpret them simply as veiled accounts of his father Today we know that it is a case of “like father, like son”.

Jeffrey Archer is not just a fantasist, he is a confidence trickster.. The law has finally caught up with Jeffrey Archer. This slipperiest of subjects has been nailed, and now jailed It is all over. Or is it? Away from the din of the denouncements that inevitably followed, a small group of people believes there will, at the very least, be an epilogue

The law has finally caught up with Jeffrey Archer. This slipperiest of subjects has been nailed, and now jailed It is all over. Or is it? Away from the din of the denouncements that inevitably followed, a small group of people believes there will, at the very least, be an epilogue.Jonathan Aitken – another disgraced Conservative whose lies landed him in jail – referred to “the three Fs: faith, family and friends” They had saved him, he said.

Now they will save Archer.The former deputy chairman of the Conservatives may have thrown parties for thousands. But this morning only a few people are willing to call him a friend: Gilbert Gray, the top QC; Sir John Lacey, a former Tory adviser; Frank Marshall, a Hollywood film producer; Adrian Metcalfe, an Olympic silver medallist in athletics; literary agent Jonathan Lloyd; and perhaps Archer’s closest friend, art gallery owner Chris Beetles.By contrast, the great and the good who chinked crystal across his living room, the celebrities who had chattered in corridors, and the aspiring media types who had proudly displayed his invitations on their mantelpieces, were strangely silent.Baroness Thatcher, who had backed him in his bid to be London mayor, issued a “no comment” via her office when he was sentenced. William Hague, who had used Archer’s private gym to practise judo with Sebastian Coe, did the same. Michael Portillo, who used to brag about receiving Archer’s invitations, had retired from front-line politics just in time to stay silent. Only John Major had a kind word for the man he made a life peer. His parties had been attended by newspaper editors and senior journalists, but few defended him now.The boxer Henry Cooper had backed Archer’s bid to be mayor, and his sidekick Frank Bruno had been a guest of the peer at a Conservative ball. Other regulars at his parties were the novelists Fay Weldon and Frederick Forsyth, actor Nigel Havers, comedians Barry Humph- ries and Jim Davidson, and broadcasters Clive James, Selina Scott, Ann Diamond, Sir David Frost and John Humphrys.Some of Archer’s former friends managed to say a few well-chosen words.

The columnist Matthew Parris said he was “something more of a rascal, more of a scallywag than an evil person”. And TV presenter Giles Brandreth, an ex-Tory MP, maintained that Archer was “very likeable”, before saying: “He has this fatal flaw, this difficulty with the truth Maybe he has it to a worse degree than most people. He’s certainly paying for it now.”Only a brave few have kept faith with Archer the man. They are the ones who will be helping to put him back on the road, though they would rather not be named just at the moment. One said: “I think those people who continued to see him over the past few months are real friends, and will remain so. He has got a core of genuine friends who will no doubt will go and visit him.”Another said: “He brought an excitement into politics, which has now been lost I think that’s sad. The good that he has done, albeit sometimes contrived and selfish, should help compensate, should help us balance our opinion of him.”Some of Archer’s closest friends gave evidence at his trial, including Michael Beloff QC, the president of Trinity College, Oxford, who met the Archers in the 1960s and described his old friend as “intensely loyal”.

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