Sept. 12, 2026

An Evening with Prue Leith

Sudeley Castle

Saturday 12th September, 18:00, Orangery

 

British restaurateur, broadcaster, cookery writer, novelist and chef Prue Leith joins us for an evening of sparkling wit and humour celebrating her book Being Old…and learning to love it! in conversation with renowned podcaster and presenter Jo Durrant. Taking place in the Orangery, adjacent to the Castle Terrace with stunning views of the Cotswolds countryside, this special event is a chance to hear The Great British Bake Off judge and one of the nation’s favourite TV personalities reflect on the trials and taboos of growing older – along with its unexpected joys.

 

Jo Durrant presents the award-winning arts and science podcast ‘Jo Durrant’s Beautiful Universe’ and is a familiar face at literature, history and science festivals. Jo was a presenter, producer & reporter with BBC radio for over 20 years and interviewed hundreds of people from Spice Girl Melanie C to astronaut Tim Peake.

 

Tickets for the event cost £35pp and include a copy of Sunday Times bestseller Being Old…and learning to love it! and a glass of fizz or a soft drink before the event.

Doors open at 6pm for drinks with the talk following at 7pm with time for audience questions at the end.

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An Evening with Prue Leith
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MORE ABOUT THIS LOCATION

Sudeley Castle

SUDELEY CASTLE

Enjoy 10 unique gardens, visit the tomb of Katherine Parr and marvel at a stunning exhibition of Tudor costumes.

Sudeley Castle

The origins of Sudeley Castle date back to at least the 11th century, when it was formed of a manor house set in a deer park, given as a gift from the Saxon king Æthelred the Unready to his daughter Goda on her wedding day in 1024. Miraculously, the family held on to Sudeley after the Norman Conquest, where they stayed put for the next 400 years.
 
In 1443, Lord High Treasurer of England Ralph Boteler began work on a new castle at Sudeley, building a house with a double courtyard – an outer layer for his staff, and the inner court for his family. When Boteler was compelled to sell Sudeley in 1469, the house passed to Richard, Duke of Gloucester, later Richard III, who built the large banqueting house at the castle, a fashionable ground floor entertaining space. After Richard III’s death at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, Sudeley passed to Henry VII. His son Henry VIII stayed at Sudeley in 1535 with his second wife Anne Boleyn, and after his death in 1547 his sixth wife Katherine Parr married the courtier Thomas Seymour, with whom she moved to Sudeley with her retinue. Seymour had done it up especially for her, but his wife tragically died there in 1548, shortly after giving birth to a daughter, and was buried in the grounds. 
 
Sudeley soon passed into the hands of the Brydges family, who thrice hosted Elizabeth I, remodelling the castle in the 1560s and 1570s and creating the functional building lived in by the custodians today. In 1592, the Brydges threw a magnificent three-day party for the queen to celebrate the defeat of the Spanish Armada, landscaping the grounds in preparation and almost bankrupting themselves in the process. During the Civil War, Charles I used Sudeley as a base in Gloucestershire; at the end of the war, the house was dismantled and left for dead, the family unable to repair it. Sudeley spent the next 200 years neglected and ruined until 1837, when glove makers John and William Dent bought the house and restored it, leaving part of it in picturesque ruins and filling it with art and antiques. The Dent family continued to look after Sudeley right up until the Second World War, during which the house was used as storage by the Tate and a prisoner of war camp was located in the grounds. 
 
The castle's current custodian Elizabeth, Lady Ashcombe, came to Sudeley in 1969 after her marriage to Mark Dent-Brocklehurst and the couple succeeded as owners, deciding to open Sudeley to the public. In 1972 Mark died, leaving his wife to manage Sudeley alone. She remarried in 1979 to Harry Cubitt, 4th Baron Ashcombe, and together they ran the house until his death in 2013. Lady Ashcombe and her son, daughter and their families are committed to the continued preservation of the castle. 

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