The idea for the Oldie was cooked up 25 years ago by its founding editor, Richard Ingrams, and his much-lamented successor, the late Alexander Chancellor. Their aim was to create a free-thinking, funny magazine, a light-hearted alternative to a press obsessed with youth and celebrity. The Oldie is ageless and timeless, free of retirement advice, crammed with rejuvenating wit, intelligence and delight. With over 100 pages in every issue, The Oldie is packed with funny cartoons and free-thinking and intelligent articles covering a wide range of topics – from gardening and books to travel, arts, entertainment, and so much more.
The Oldie
Among this month’s contributors
The Old Un’s Notes
NOT MANY DEAD • Important stories you may have missed
GREAT BORES OF TODAY - PROTESTERS
My bottom-spanking guide to Soho • Molly Parkin introduced me to bohemian life - and to Francis Bacon, who took a passing fancy to me
Lawrence’s family friends • Seven Pillars of Wisdom, published a century ago, paid fond tribute to Ivo Dawnay’s grandfather and great-uncle
OLDEN LIFE
MODERN LIFE
The Oldie of the Year Awards • Our Champion of Champions
Growing up in showbiz • Anita Land salutes her dad, Leslie Grade, and her uncles, Lew Grade and Bernard Delfont
The Plymouth Rubens • Fifty years ago, Hunter Davies discovered Beryl Cook. Now, on her centenary, he finds he owns her long-lost self-portrait
Oh, Mandy! • Matthew Norman tormented Peter Mandelson, invented his nickname - and then had him round to dinner
The real Captain Grimes • Robert Kirkpatrick on the scandalous schoolmaster who inspired Evelyn Waugh’s monstrous antihero
Is there anyone there? No • Miranda May tried - and failed - to contact her late parents through a corrupt medium
Great Scott! • Sir Walter Scott, once internationally revered, is now sadly forgotten
Don't let it all hang out • While Sydney Sweeney exposes her breasts, oldies should cover up
Be more lemur
Mrs Jellyby's charitable side • Charles Dickens was wrong to mock do-gooders, says Mary Kenny
The Cleethorpes Twilight Zone • As I put the bins out in our dark, scary alleyway, I saw a ghastly figure. Was it the ghost of Henry VIII?
My life? Read all about it in Mum's nosy articles
Cold comfort in freezing Tenerife
Offa's Guide to Anglo-Saxon Attitudes • The King of Mercia built a mighty dyke — and built bridges with Charlemagne
Lord of the Flies - my scary sequel
Steve Cram
Oxford blues in the County Library
The Gospel according to Eliza Doolittle
Dame Jilly Cooper (1937-2025)
Bad effects of Goodhart's Law • Treat people - not their measurements
READERS' LETTERS • The Oldie, 23-31 Great Titchfield Street, London, W1W 7PA letters@theoldie.co.uk To sign up for our e-newsletter, go to www.theoldie.co.uk
Commonplace Corner
RANT
Russian roulette
Liza's lifelong cabaret
Dubliners today
Bible studies
Gold-digger
The sound of silence
OLDIE NOVEL OF THE MONTH
Two fabulous reader trips
FILM
THEATRE
TELEVISION
RADIO
MUSIC
GOLDEN OLDIES
EXHIBITIONS
GARDENING
KITCHEN GARDEN
COOKERY
RESTAURANTS
DRINK
SPORT
MOTORING
AI's insatiable greed
Gilt-edged investment tips
Join The Oldie in Cairo and down the Nile With Ellie Jones 30th January to 9th February 2027
Storm petrel
Voice of America • Alistair Cooke broadcast his first Letter from America 80 years ago. He continued for 58 years
What a...