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You can meet the Clooneys – but it will cost you €100,000

You can meet the Clooneys – but it will cost you €100,000

Telegraph4 days ago
It's a rare opportunity to enjoy fine wines, gourmet food and the sublime scenery of Lake Como – all in the company of George and Amal Clooney. There's just one catch – it will set you back at least €100,000 (£87,000).
The Hollywood actor and his wife, British human rights barrister Amal Alamuddin, will this month host a 'philanthropic travel experience' near their Lake Como estate in northern Italy.
The four-night, five-day experience, set on the shores of one of Europe's most beautiful lakes, promises a giddy whirl of encounters with the Clooneys.
Guests will be able to take part in an 'immersive travel experience', relishing the vistas of Lake Como while at the same time participating in the couple's 'quest to change the world.'
And for anyone with a few tens of thousands to spare and a hankering to meet Clooney, who was once described as 'the sexiest man alive', there is good news – there is still one hotel room available.
Guests might even get two Hollywood legends for the price of one – local media are reporting that Robert De Niro, 81, was recently spotted touring the lake with his girlfriend, Tiffany Chen, 45, and may drop in on his friend George.
The aim of the exclusive event is to raise money for the couple's human rights organisation, the Clooney Foundation for Justice, which provides free legal aid to wrongly imprisoned journalists and support to women's rights groups around the world.
The foundation works in 40 countries, from Belarus and Syria to Sudan and Zimbabwe.
A select group of just 16 people have made generous donations to the foundation, in exchange for which they will spend time discussing world affairs and human rights with the star of Ocean's Eleven, Burn After Reading and Monuments Men, as well as his wife, a celebrated lawyer who is based in London.
Italian media have reported that those donations will amount to €160,000 per person, but that was denied by the organisers. 'The number is incorrect, but it's six figures for sure,' an insider told The Telegraph. 'Each individual donates a different amount to the foundation. There is no minimum.'
There will be gastronomic tours of the lake and an alfresco dinner at a historic villa, with guests taken there and back by motor launch.
It is the first time that such an event has been held by the Clooneys, one of Hollywood's most formidable power couples. 'They have been talking about it for some time,' said the insider.
After flying to Milan, guests will be picked up and whisked to the Passalacqua Hotel on the shores of Lake Como.
An imposing villa built in the 18th-century, its illustrious guests have included the composer Vincenzo Bellini and Pope Innocent XI. The hotel's Bellini Suite, described as 'a succession of lavishly decorated halls', costs €12,000 a night. Breakfast is included.
Guests on a slightly tighter budget might opt for a 'grand junior suite', boasting a king bed and lake views, which goes for a modest €5,500 a night – excluding taxes and fees.
Once the guests are settled in, they will be invited to a welcome reception and then a garden party hosted by George and Amal.
The next few days will feature a busy round of private dinners and 'engaging discussions' on international justice and philanthropy.
If the debates about global crises and human rights abuses get a bit heavy, relief will not be far away – guests are promised 'exquisite menus with wine pairing.'
After hobnobbing with George and Amal, guests will be sent on their way with a farewell brunch.
The event is being organised by a high-end company, Satopia Travel, which promises its clients 'the utmost discretion and confidentiality'.
Clooney has had a love affair with Italy for years. He bought Villa Oleandra, his property on Lake Como, for a reported $10 million more than 20 years ago and has been a regular visitor ever since.
For years, he was one of the world's most eligible bachelors. But all that changed in 2014 when he married Ms Alamuddin during a lavish wedding in Venice – a precursor to the recent multi-million dollar nuptials held by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos when he married television journalist Lauren Sánchez in June.
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Moment private plane makes emergency landing at Birmingham Airport: Travel chaos for holidaymakers as all flights remain grounded
Moment private plane makes emergency landing at Birmingham Airport: Travel chaos for holidaymakers as all flights remain grounded

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Moment private plane makes emergency landing at Birmingham Airport: Travel chaos for holidaymakers as all flights remain grounded

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I won a life-changing £10,000 on bingo but lost the whole lot in just SECONDS – despite prize being genuine
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Prince Andrew: A tale of lust, avarice and poo cushions
Prince Andrew: A tale of lust, avarice and poo cushions

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It is not unprecedented for members of the Royal family to get rather carried away sexually. Edward VII had some disgusting sort of chair made so that, despite his girth, he could carry on with tarts in Paris. Edward VIII lost the throne through the allure of an American divorcee. The present Duke of Sussex went through a similar process, though without having a throne to lose. And now, according to Andrew Lownie (the author of biographies of other odd royalty, such as the Duke and Duchess of Windsor), Prince Andrew, Duke of York, 'is supposed to have slept with over 1,000 women'. Who, I wonder, was counting? An unnamed source says that the Duke slept with half a dozen women before he was 13. That sounds like child abuse. But is it true? Excess is the motif of Entitled. The Duke is turned into an oafish version of Sir Epicure Mammon, the hyperbolic character in a Ben Jonson play who dreams of eating 'the swelling unctuous paps of a fat pregnant sow, newly cut off'. Actually, the deadly sins allocated to Andrew are lust and avarice. In the book it's his former wife, Sarah, Duchess of York, who is left with spendthrift gluttony. According to a sacked staff member in 2010, 'every night she demands a whole side of beef, a leg of lamb and a chicken, which are laid out on the dining room table like a medieval banquet'. Does he realise that a side of beef is half a cow: chuck, rib, brisket, shank, sirloin, fillet, rump, the lot? Talk about a groaning board. Returning from New York from promoting her Budgie books, the Duchess had 51 pieces of excess baggage containing newly bought clothes and gifts. She was nicknamed by the press as 'Her Royal Excess'. Piling up the carvery plate of royal excess makes Entitled less, not more, plausible. It is also indigestible for the reader. No unkindness is too small to throw into the pot. The Duke is often rude to inferiors (almost everyone). Boris Johnson is quoted as saying that another lunch with the Prince might make him a republican. One of his dates said: 'He tells the most pathetic jokes. He finds poo cushions funny.' I didn't quite know what a poo cushion was. I thought it might be a whoopie cushion. But more likely it means a cushion bearing the likeness of a piled turd. The notorious and tragic accompaniment of Randy Andy's sex mania was the suicide in prison of his erstwhile friend Jeffrey Epstein and the suicide this year of Virginia Giuffre, aged 41. She had reached an out-of-court settlement with the Duke, who she claimed had sex with her aged 17 after a meeting at the Belgravia house of Ghislaine Maxwell, now in jail. 'Ghislaine served tea from a porcelain pot and biscuits,' is one of the more banal touches in her account, here, of that meeting. According to one of the Duke's friends, meeting Epstein was like 'putting a rattlesnake in an aquarium with a mouse'. The Prince may have been the mouse, but it was Epstein who died. So pumped up is this biography, that I was surprised to find no suggestion from an anonymous source that Prince Andrew bored Epstein's prison guards into a deep sleep with his conversation and then strangled him with his mouse-like grip. As it is, what made the public think the Duke is not a very nice man was his own testimony in the celebrated BBC interview in 2019 – the one in which he declared that he didn't sweat. Now an unnamed Buckingham Palace employee says that if the full extent of the Duke's involvement with Epstein came out, 'I think the British public would try to impeach the Royal Family.' I don't even know what that is supposed to mean. In the Middle Ages, peers could be impeached and tried by the House of Lords, and Warren Hastings was impeached and acquitted in 1795. I'd love to see it done again. It would probably resemble the trial of the Knave of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland. That's fiction. Entitled is meant to be fact. But it gets nowhere near the bottom of the psychology of the Duke of York, the 'spare' to our present King. As an infant he was known as Baby Grumpling and even his mother the Queen found him 'not always a little ray of sunshine about the house'. Most curiously, 60 years on and more, he lives in the same (big) house as the Duchess, 29 years after their divorce.

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