Book description
For the first time since the Profumo scandal of the 1960s, the Astors'
own version of the events at Cliveden is told. Peter Stanford has been
granted unprecedented access to Lady Astor, her private papers and her
friends, as well as to many family members and key players in the drama.
When Bronwen Pugh married into the celebrated Astor clan in 1960, she
seemed to have the world at her feet. She was a media darling, BBC
television presenter, the most celebrated model of her generation, and,
after her marriage to millionaire Bill Astor, mistress of the Cliveden
mansion. Three years later her world was turned upside down by the
Profumo scandal. Cliveden - with its famous guests, lavish parties and
spectacular setting - was alleged to be at the centre of an
international web of sexual debauchery and espionage.
Bronwen lost everything in the scandal: husband, home, friends and her
good name. Bill Astor was accused of being a louche playboy and an
unfaithful husband, Bronwen little better than Christine Keeler and
Mandy Rice-Davies, the two escort girls at the centre of the scandal.
The reversal of fortune for Bronwen Astor was immense, and in charting
the private agony behind the public disgrace, Peter Stanford has written
a fascinating and moving story of a remarkable and resilient woman.
Peter Stanford's previous books include biographies of Lord Longford,
Cardinal Basil Hume and the Devil. He has written an investigation of
the Pope Joan legend and a polemical book, Catholics and Sex, which
accompanied a Channel 4 television series. He contributes regularly to
the Guardian and Sunday Telegraph and New Statesman. A regular
broadcaster, he is also chairman of the national disability charity
ASPIRE.