Cocktails with Churchill in Narnia by Maggie O'Sullivan
Just before Christmas I took my eldest goddaughter to Narnia. But there were no lions, witches or wardrobes: our Narnia was the terrace bar of the Hyatt Regency Churchill hotel, transformed into C S Lewis’s magical world for the festive season. Instead of Aslan the lion, we had a life-size bronze of Sir Winston Churchill which someone had thoughtfully dressed in a woolly hat and scarf.
The Churchill, you might recall, is where Barack Obama stayed when he visited London in 2008. Despite its name and a meticulously themed bar that pays homage to a young Winston and his wife, Clementine, the hotel has no actual connection with the former British prime minister. It has no connection with C S Lewis either, but that hasn’t stopped it from combining the two in a winter wonderland. Still, if Selfridges can have a forest on its rooftop terrace, The Churchill can have its Narnia.
I arrived in Narnia (the distinctly prosaic instructions from Reception were ‘right at the fireplace and left through the bar’) to find my goddaughter already snuggled up under a hotel blanket. Above her head an infrared heater was blasting out much-needed warmth, while all around pretty silvered twigs shone in the candle light. True, we couldn’t help but notice the traffic that passed within a few feet of where we were sitting, and the sheepskin-draped chairs gave the terrace more of a mountain chic vibe than one of a mythical kingdom, but the whole affect was charming nonetheless.
So as shoppers in nearby Oxford Street made their last-minute purchases, we worked our way through Narnia’s extensive drinks menu. Once again, the theme was distinctly Churchill-meets-Pevensie-children with cocktails bearing names like ‘Never Give In’, ‘Breakfast in Blenheim’, ‘Always Winter, Never Christmas’ and ‘Aslan’s Roar’. While we were deciding, the waiter brought us a couple of furry hot water bottles.
Service in Narnia was not the speediest, but eventually we took delivery of a British Raj Mohito poured from a vintage silver teapot, and The Ice Queen, which came topped with an impressive spun-sugar crown. Both were extremely good though our second choices were even more successful: a Hedgerow Bramble teapot cocktail for me, and The White Witch for my goddaughter. Prices, at £16-£17, were reasonable for a London five-star, though complimentary nibbles were just this side of stingy, comprising a glass of cheese straws (which wasn’t replenished) and a bowl of olives.
We called it a night after two cocktails (there is a minimum charge of £25, so you might as well have a couple), agreeing that our Christmas trip to Narnia had been a great success – though one of us will have to read the books again to discover exactly how Winston Churchill fits in.
Further information, Hyatt Regency London – The Churchill