Journey to Calcutta

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© Noel Rands 2022

I had been invited to lunch in Bombay by the actor Sashi Kapoor. We chatted I mentioned that I stayed always at the Oberoi Grand Hotel in Calcutta. He suggested I try the Fairlawn Hotel where he and his late wife Jennifer, the sister of the actress Felicity Kendall, had stayed on their honeymoon. It was very much a relic of the Raj and was run by the formidable Violet Smith, whose mother was Armenian and whose husband was British and had worked for a British Engineering company. I told my London colleague on the India desk that I would stay there on my next banking visit. Later I got a call back to say that a visiting Indian banker had said it was in an area notorious for drug addicts and prostitutes; what did I think. I said that nothing but nothing would stop me staying there.
 
This was September 1987 and I had just appeared in an Indian TV series, Raj Se Swaraj, about freedom fighters. I invited friends, visiting from London, to the official launch and one of them, Michael Bennett, said I hadn’t seen India properly unless I went on a train journey.
I booked the train to Calcutta, with Michael, and took the 36 hour journey. I did jot a note on that and it is for another time. We were met at the station by the local Thomas Cook Manager, Brendan Brown who took us to the hotel. At the time Midland Bank owned Thomas Cook (they had bought it for the travellers cheque business, fancying themselves as a competitor to American Express; how times change!) and I was their Director on the Indian board. They had looked for premises in Calcutta, after recruiting Brendan, and on a visit I was introduced to the remarkable Kitty Brinnand; another Armenian. We got on like a house on fire and she agreed that Thomas Cook could rent her premises.
 
Brendan took us to the hotel for a welcome room and shower. It was a backpackers hotel and was wonderful. The waiters seemed to be retired Gurkhas and the plates were grabbed as you finished a course and the next course plonked in front of you. The only other hotel I stayed in like this was the Windermere in Darjeeling. We did the tour of Calcutta, including the incredible Victoria Memorial which is like a British Taj Mahal and Michael remarked that all we needed now was to meet Mother Teresa. Brendan asked when we would like to see her. Kitty was an old friend of hers and had been her bookkeeper; she arranged the visit and the piece that follows describes this.
 
What I didn’t say was that Kitty had cut her the top of head and when we sat down Mother Teresa asked how it was. As Kitty leant over to show her I remarked “Yes, Mother. The doctor said it was like stitching concrete!” Mother Teresa gazed at me thoughtfully as if to say “I think this man is trying to make a joke. How strange, Nobody tries to joke with me.”
 
Afterwards it took another turn. I had worked with Lord Selsdon, the Midland Bank’s Project Finance Director, on the Greater Cairo Wastewater scheme and we had worked well together. He told me that he had become Director of the Docklands Arena and wanted to raise funds for Mother Teresa. Did I know the Indian singer, Lata Mangashker, who was “India’s Vera Lynn” as he wanted her to sing there. (I called Sashi, who told me he was having dinner with her that evening, and he called back to say she would do it.)He would like Michael Caine, Bob Hope, and  Steve Martin as narrators plus Whitney Houston as one of the singers. I suggested that Sashi would be a great Indian narrator and he agreed. Sashi agreed also. We had a meeting in London with Michael Hollingworth, a promotor, and discussed how to approach Mother T.
 
After she had agreed I would need to invite Mother T and Bob Hope to join Lord Selsdon and me at the House of Lords for tea, “Wow!” I thought; “a whole new world opening for me”. He wrote to Mother Teresa and she replied that she would not allow funds to be raised in her name. If God wanted her to have the money, he would give it to her. So that was that and it ended my brush with Hollywood.
 
Violet Smith ran the Fairlawn until 2014 when she died aged 94. Her daughter took over and in 2018 sold it to a member of the Oberoi family. It is still there, refurbished, and If I ever returned to Calcutta I would want to stay there.
 
Anyway, here is the piece on my visit. I hope you find it of some interest and do hope you don’t find it too self indulgent. Next week’s piece will be on the start of my acting career unless I get a flood of emails pleading me to stop with this rubbish.
 
Noel Rands
Secretary
The British Egyptian Society

© Noel Rands 2022