Account
These Butlers Are Neither Carson Nor Hudson
The rise of “executive butlers” — a breed whose job
combines silver polishing with being a concierge and a maitre d’ — reflects the
changing nature of the very rich.
By Plum
Sykes
Plum Sykes
reported this story from her home in Britain’s Cotswolds region. She has
written about society for magazines and in several novels.
May 14,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/14/style/executive-butlers-country-houses.html
In
Britain’s bucolic Cotswolds region, the arrival of summer is typically marked
by a migration. Specifically, the return of a rarefied group to grand country
houses in counties like Oxfordshire or Gloucestershire, where preparations
begin for a season of hosting guests at picnics, luncheons and events like the
Chelsea Flower Show, the Royal Ascot horse races and “the tennis” — shorthand
for a center court box at Wimbledon.
Owners of
those country estates — let’s call them the one percent of the one percent — of
course do not handle such preparations themselves. These are relegated to
butlers, whose job, like for others associated with the lifestyles of the
ultrawealthy, has evolved.
As personal
assistants have been rebranded as executive assistants and child care providers
as executive nannies, buttling has become a career that involves not only
polishing silver and folding napkins but also lifestyle management.
The modern
butler — also known as, wait for it, an executive butler — is still in most
cases a man. But he is no longer a grandfatherly type in morning trousers that
stays in the background, if not out of sight. More likely, he is fresh-faced,
wears a lounge suit with a Charvet tie and is by his employers’ side whether
they are at home or not.
“They’re
like a private maitre d’ now,” said Nicky Haslam, 84, the English interior
designer and social fixture. “In the old days the butler was in the house all
the time. Now, if the family is on their yacht, the butler goes with them.”
This was
not the case as recently as the 1990s, when butlers for the most part reflected
the archetype popularized by characters like Hudson, from the TV show
“Upstairs, Downstairs”; Carson, from “Downton Abbey”; or Stevens, from Kazuo
Ishiguro’s novel “The Remains of the Day.”
Among that
ilk was Michael Kenneally, a mischievous Irish butler employed for decades by
my cousin, Sir Tatton Sykes, at his country estate, Sledmere, in the county of
Yorkshire.
His antics
were legendary. If children were visiting, he would sometimes accessorize his
formal uniform with a curly-haired wig or glasses with plastic eyeballs on
springs. His pièce de résistance was riding through the dining room after
dinner on a bicycle with a port tray balanced on the handlebars, a trick that
was noted in his obituary in The Telegraph. When he died at 65 in 1999, his
funeral drew a crowd of about 300 people, and he was buried alongside members
of the family that had employed him for 40 years. On the headstone marking his
grave, the epitaph simply read “The Butler.”
The
profession’s evolution in recent decades is a signifier of a societal shift in
Britain: What rich people want has changed because who rich people are has
changed.
That
group’s makeup has shifted from being primarily aristocratic families, the type
long associated with traditional butlers, to include a new breed of self-made,
high-net-worth individuals who have built fortunes in industries like
technology and media and who see butlers less as part of the furniture and more
as a flashy accessory.
Graeme
Currie, 53, exemplifies the modern butler, a role that he said requires
“sparkle, darling, sparkle.” He has been employed by some of Britain’s
highest-profile families and was the head butler for 10 years at Weston Park,
an estate in the county of Staffordshire that is the ancestral home of the Earl
of Bradford and can now be booked for private events.
This summer
Mr. Currie — who has tawny hair and, often, a light tan — is planning to travel
to various destinations in Europe to buttle at vacation houses. In his spare
time, he breeds toy poodles, some of which have competed at dog shows like
Crufts.
Mr. Currie
is the sort of person who can whip up an espresso martini blindfolded and
comprehend the precise level of froth someone might prefer for a coconut-milk
cappuccino. He developed such skills in part from a career in hospitality that
has included jobs on the Queen Elizabeth 2 ocean liner and at ritzy London
hotels like the Dorchester and Claridge’s and restaurants like the Ivy.
“The
difference between me and an old-fashioned butler is that I’ve had the
experience of people paying for dinner and of always being critiqued,” Mr.
Currie said.
Seasoned
butlers like him can make around 100,000 British pounds a year, or about
$125,000. The job’s starting salary is closer to 40,000 pounds, or $50,000.
For butlers
with full-time positions, various costs — food, lodging, even fancy uniforms —
are subsidized by employers. And those who work in Europe are typically
afforded the same mandatory benefits granted to other workers, like a minimum
of 20 vacation days. Many develop schedules with their employers that include
regular time off on the weekend or midweek to account for other days when they
are expected to work long hours.
Mr. Currie
was drawn to the profession for a reason that many butlers are: He is
passionate about taking care of people.
“One thing
I always say is that I’m very good at remembering who people are and what they
want,” he said. “You’ve got to have a whole repertoire in your brain because
people ask for things they have never asked for before.”
That
repertoire can vary wildly depending on a butler’s location, said Niels
Deijkers, the managing director of the International Butler Academy in
Simpelveld, the Netherlands.
Mr.
Deijkers recalled a story he had heard from an executive butler who was with a
family on a yacht. “The client pointed toward the coastline and said, ‘Tonight
I’d like to have dinner on top of that mountain — please arrange it,’” he said,
explaining that the butler contacted a restaurant in the area, which “set up a
table for six and flew in everything with a helicopter.” (Mr. Deijkers
estimated that the dinner cost “around $300,000.”)
Andrew
Gruselle, 53, has encountered similar demands in his time working on Lamu
Island, off the coast of Kenya, where he has managed grand beachfront
properties with staffs that have included cooks, housekeepers and pool
attendants.
In his
typical uniform of loose cotton shirt and seersucker Bermuda shorts, Mr.
Gruselle has performed a range of duties: serving trays of fresh mango or
papaya for breakfast; arranging water-skiing excursions; recommending fabric
shops; securing reservations at the Peponi Hotel, a Lamu hot spot; and
wrangling six donkeys to stage a makeshift Nativity scene at Christmas.
“When
someone comes out here,” he said, “you have to be very careful that they are
looked after properly, and that it’s a seamless experience for them.”
Carole
Bamford, 78, expects nothing less of the head butler at Daylesford House, her
country estate in Gloucestershire, one of several homes she resides at with her
husband, Anthony Bamford, the billionaire owner of the British construction
company JCB.
Events held
at Daylesford House by the couple, known formally as Lord and Lady Bamford, are
among the most coveted invitations in the Cotswolds. This spring Lady Bamford,
who is the founder of Daylesford Organic, a popular British lifestyle brand,
hosted various lunches with themes inspired by plants grown on the estate like
snowdrops and tulips.
Leading the
preparations for those lunches was, yes, Daylesford House’s head butler, whose
résumé reflects those of traditional butlers, in that he has been with the
Bamfords for more than 20 years.
“He was
with the queen for about eight years before me,” Lady Bamford said.
But his job
also involves many duties expected of modern butlers, too.
Lady
Bamford recalled a recent lunch where the menu included lamb, purple sprouting
broccoli, a cheese board, panna cotta and rhubarb bellinis.
“Who makes
the bellinis?’” I asked.
“Well, the
butler,” she said.
Susan
Beachy contributed research.
Plum Sykes
is the author of “Bergdorf Blondes,” “The Debutante Divorcée,” “Party Girls Die
in Pearls” and the just released “Wives Like Us.”
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