EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Royal Ballet star Francesca Hayward reveals she's a little tutu fond of shopping

As a Royal Ballet star, Francesca Hayward is used to receiving bouquets and applause.

But now the principal dancer is hearing the sound of alarm bells as she fears she's become addicted to shopping via her smartphone.

'I actually have near-to a shopping problem,' admits the 28-year-old, who's enjoying a passionate romance with her fellow dancer Cesar Corrales. 'I'm just constantly on my phone looking at clothes online. I do love to be in a shop, but I just don't get that time a lot.'

Francesca, who appeared in the film Cats, has also suffered some awkward encounters in bricks-and-mortar shops.

'I've had lots of guilty moments,' she says. 'The worst was probably my Bottega Veneta handbag — the waiting list was 500 people. I paid a lot for that — I think it was £2,000 — but I wear it every day.'

As a Royal Ballet star, Francesca Hayward is used to receiving bouquets and applause

As a Royal Ballet star, Francesca Hayward is used to receiving bouquets and applause

But now the principal dancer is hearing the sound of alarm bells as she fears she’s become addicted to shopping via her smartphone

But now the principal dancer is hearing the sound of alarm bells as she fears she's become addicted to shopping via her smartphone

 

Wild life photographer who has tamed a daredevil

A swashbuckling sportsman who captured the heart of Viscount Cowdray's sister, Lucy Pearson, Charles Fraser is now readying himself for his next matrimonial gallop.

The former Life Guards officer and polo aficionado is to marry wildlife photographer Nathalie Mountain — much to the excitement of their society friends.

A devotee of the fearsome Cresta Run toboggan track in Switzerland, Fraser, 60, tells me he's 'absolutely thrilled' to have met baronet's granddaughter Nathalie, a decade his junior. 'We're planning the wedding for next spring at Nathalie's parents' lovely estate in Hampshire,' he explains.

Fraser has four daughters with Lucy, but their marriage ended after she discovered he was 'on a business trip to Grenada' accompanied by 'this woman' — a reference to 'slim, dark-haired' Emma South.

But, ever the romantic, Fraser envisages a perfect English spring day 'with blossoms everywhere', for next year's nuptials, which are Nathalie's first.

Charles Fraser is set to marry wild life photographer Nathalie Mountain, pictured, much to the delight of their society friends

Charles Fraser is set to marry wild life photographer Nathalie Mountain, pictured, much to the delight of their society friends

 

Boris Johnson is killing off businesses with his new Covid restrictions, but restaurateur Jeremy King is defying the gloomsters.

He's reopening his fashionable Central London haunt The Delaunay next Tuesday, even though Tier 2 rules brought in by Boris and London Mayor Sadiq Khan mean diners must sit only with members of their own households.

'I am going ahead,' King tells me. 'I can't allow the stupidity of the Government and the Mayor to send us cowering into our homes.

'We will be trusting the guests more than the Government does. I am certainly not doing the police work necessary on behalf of them.'

 

The Duchess of Cornwall's son, Tom Parker Bowles, has come up with a cunning wheeze to comply with new pandemic restrictions while still being able to see pals in restaurants.

Condemning 'this Tier 2 nonsense', Camilla's food writer son says: 'We just book tables for one. Next to our friend, who also books a table for one. I'm sure restaurants would be happy to book adjoining tables.'

 

Proof the rich have money to throw away? I hear that a collection of five wastepaper bins was sold this week for a staggering £34,000 —that's £6,800 each.

Christie's achieved the sum even though the New York auction house had put a low estimate of just £232 on the collection.

They weren't just any bins, but five faux woodgrain and cream painted wastepaper baskets created by the celebrated late French designer Henri Samuel. They came from the collection of American arts collector Jayne Wrightsman, who died last year aged 99. Just don't chuck your apple core in one...

Proof the rich have money to throw away? I hear that a collection of five wastepaper bins was sold this week for a staggering £34,000 —that’s £6,800 each

Proof the rich have money to throw away? I hear that a collection of five wastepaper bins was sold this week for a staggering £34,000 —that's £6,800 each

 

PR guru Tim's girl is a wedding Bell

Tim Bell, the colourful public relations man who advised Margaret Thatcher, loved a celebration, so the late peer was much missed last night at the wedding of his daughter, Daisy.

She exchanged vows with Australian banker Andrew Gray at Chelsea Old Town Hall in London. 'We were planning on getting married in Cape Town next month, but sadly had to push the big celebration back a year due to Covid,' Daisy tells me.

She was with Prince Harry's ex, Cressida Bonas, when she first set eyes on dashing Andrew, 34, in a bar on Bondi Beach, Sydney. 'It was love at first sight,' she later explained.

Daisey Bell exchanged vows with Australian banker Andrew Gray at Chelsea Old Town Hall in London

Daisey Bell exchanged vows with Australian banker Andrew Gray at Chelsea Old Town Hall in London

Since Simon Armitage was appointed as Poet Laureate more than a year ago, he's failed to compose a single verse to celebrate a royal birthday or even Princess Beatrice's wedding.

So is the Duchess of Cambridge seeking inspiration elsewhere? I hear Kate invited poet Lemn Sissay for private talks at Kensington Palace this week. 'He was honoured,' I'm told. Much-loved Sissay, who grew up in children's homes, beat Peter Mandelson to become chancellor of the University of Manchester.

Officials decline to comment on the tete-a-tete, but Sissay is one of the judges on a National Portrait Gallery photographic project led by Kate to document the hopes and fears of lockdown.

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