Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Blair never sends wife flowers
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-02-01 16:57

British Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted on a television program broadcast Sunday he had never sent flowers to his wife Cherie and he had a youthful crush on Hollywood beauty Grace Kelly.


British Prime Minister Tony Blair and wife Cherie. Blair admitted on a television program broadcast Sunday he had never sent flowers to Cherie.
Blair, who allowed Channel 4 interviewer June Sarpong to shadow him for two days last month, made other personal revelations when asked questions he rarely hears on the usual television political programs.

During the interviews for a program targeting 18-30 year olds, the prime minister admitted he sometimes has to "win it" when making public appearances and that he yearns to go out for a drink without being recognized.

However, the most dramatic revelation was his reply to Sarpong’s question whether he still sends his wife flowers, prompting his interviewer to shriek in disbelief.

"I've never sent her flowers. If I sent her flowers, she would get worried," Blair said.

But he added: "I am romantic. There are other ways of being romantic." Blair needed a few moments to recall the posters he had on his bedroom wall as a youngster, then revealed: "I'll tell you ... actually, when I was younger, I loved Grace Kelly."

Born in 1929, Kelly starred in films like Dial M For Murder, Rear Window and High Society in the mid-1950s, but quit acting to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956, when Blair was just two years old.

The program also features Blair, dressed in a suit, being grilled by an audience of young people on issues ranging from the Iraq war to binge drinking, university fees and sex education. And it reveals the results of a straw poll of viewers that found two-thirds did not trust him, twice as many as for Conservative leader Michael Howard and three times as many as for the Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy.

Blair admitted he initially found it "odd" to be prime minister and to be rushed in motorcades from appointment to appointment, and worried his lifestyle left him "a bit isolated" from ordinary people.

Asked what he would do if he could be invisible for a day, Blair yearned for a more ordinary life, saying he would "just walk down the street and go to the pub ... just be absolutely normal."



Jackson stands before prospective jurors
Keanu Reeves got his star on the Walk of Fame
Hurdler Liu Xiang, a shy commercial star
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Experts forecast price rise, population growth for Beijing

 

   
 

Closing farm-urban income gap 'top' goal

 

   
 

More meningitis cases, but no new deaths

 

   
 

Central bank plans more market moves

 

   
 

China, US discuss setting up defense hotline

 

   
 

Allawi calls for unity after Iraqi vote

 

   
  Blair never sends wife flowers
   
  Hillary Clinton collapses during speech, then recovers
   
  Jackson stands before prospective jurors
   
  Fortune-telling ads banned in China
   
  Chinese teachers spread the world to pass heritage
   
  Hospitals should focus on patients
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Claim of Blair-guru relationship draws Downing Street snub
  Feature  
  Chen Ning Yang, 82, to marry a 28-year-old woman  
Advertisement