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Where Europe's A-listers are heading in 2025

Where Europe's A-listers are heading in 2025

Telegraph30-05-2025

Curious to know where the low-key cool kids and savvy A-listers are holidaying in Europe this summer? I checked in with a few of my most trusted travel fixers to find out.
From Tuscany-on-sea to a super-rustic-chic Greek island, the non-bling super-savvy travel set is keeping it simple.
Italy
Monte Argentario, Tuscany
Say Tuscany and most people think of rolling countryside and vineyards. Less well known, unless you're a member of Italian high society or a savvy Roman, are the great swathes of the southern Tuscan coastline and in particular, Monte Argentario.
Once an island, it is now a forest-covered promontory dotted with secluded private homes, connected to the mainland by three spits of land and best explored by bike or boat.
The top hotel is Il Pellicano, where everyone from Charlie Chaplin to Henry Fonda would decamp to for summer breaks in the 1960s and 1970s.
Today its glamour is somewhat faded, endearing it to its regulars even more
The nearest town, the pretty, restaurant-filled Porto Ercole, also remains reassuringly disinterested in the trappings of modern life.
There are some beautiful tucked-away villas for rent through companies such as Tuscany Now and More but if you want to be closer to the albeit-sleepy action, chic modern newcomer La Roqqa in Porto Erecole is an excellent option for half the price of Il Pellicano.
With its rooftop restaurant and fabulous beach club, it's attracting a whole new generation.
How to do it: Doubles at La Roqqa in the summer from about £370
France
Lourmarin, Provence
The fact that Lourmarin's vibrant Friday market runs year-round says a lot about this lovely hillside Provençal town in southern Luberon, increasingly in favour with discerning Britons.
Unlike many of its better-known neighbours, this is a working town with a thriving local economy that doesn't entirely revolve around tourism.
It has long attracted artists, writers and other creatives (both philosopher and writer Albert Camus and writer Henri Bosco lived here, and are buried in the local churchyard).
Home to cute little boutiques and antique shops and set among vineyards and olive groves, Lourmarin can feel sleepy and slow paced one minute and buzzy and vibrant the next and has one of the best dining scenes in the Luberon.
The town is home to Provence's first Renaissance castle, Château de Lourmarin, which hosts festivals and events throughout the year, including a three-day music and arts weekend in June (6-8) hosted by local resident and house DJ Laurent Garnier and classical concerts in the summer months.
If money is no object, check out the local holiday rentals, for example, Mas du Bourg, available through Le Collectionist.
Alternatively, French hipsters are heading to Le Moulin, a stylish hotel in an old converted mill in the centre of town.
How to do it: Doubles at Le Moulin in the summer from £216.
Spain
Ávila, Castilla y Leon
On the cusp of international recognition, heralded by, amongst other things, the arrival of a Six Senses hotel at the end of next year, the medieval walled city of Ávila has long been the weekend escape of choice for well-heeled foodie Madrileños, for whom it is just an hour and a half's drive north-west.
For those in the know, La Casa del Presidente is the hotel to book. The former home of Adolfo Suárez, Spain's first democratically elected prime minister post-Franco, this 10-room boutique hotel is built into the city walls and still feels like a grand private residence.
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It also has a new restaurant, by 24-year-old wunderkind Diego Sanz, so there has never been a better time to go. Sanz has brought his contemporary take on the region's traditional stews and fire cooking and the restaurant has just been awarded one 'Sol' in the Guia Repsol (Spain's answer to the Michelin guide).
Elsewhere in the city are other excellent dining options from Sanz's former home, the sustainably-focused Barro to the traditional cuisine of Restorante El Almacén, located in a former wheat store.
How to do it: Doubles at La Casa del Presidente in the summer from €235.
Portugal
Olhão, Eastern Algarve
A rare seaside town on the Algarve for whom tourism isn't the primary focus, Olhão is a busy fishing port, famous for its fantastic fish market, seafood restaurants – try Prazeres and Cha Cha Cha – and access to Ria Formosa Natural Park.
It is a little rough around the edges, which has kept it somewhat under-the-radar. It is also less than a 20-minute drive from Faro Airport by taxi.
Defiantly un-glossy, it has long attracted a bohemian and well-travelled crowd, some of whom have never left, buying and restoring town houses in the Moorish, white-washed streets of the historic centre and setting up restaurants, hotels and other businesses. Launching in the autumn in the beautifully restored Casa Braga, for example, will be an outpost of the superb London-based cookery school, Food at 52.
Olhão now has accommodation to suit all budgets, from an exquisite, boho-chic townhouse with a rooftop pool (sleeps 24), available for rent through The Luxury Travel Book, to some great little boutique hotels like chic, affordable, nine-room Casa Rosa.
How to do it: Doubles at Casa Rosa hotel in the summer from about €145.
Greece
Antiparos, Cyclades
The rule with Greek islands is the harder it is to get to them, the more unspoilt they're likely to be, because the people who would spoil them are frankly, lazy.
There are several ways to get to Antiparos, Paros's quieter little sibling, but all require at least one boat.
For the extra effort, you will be rewarded with the most heavenly little island, where rustic, simple living, beautiful beaches and fantastic food are the order of the day. One could say it's undiscovered but that wouldn't strictly be true: Tom and Rita Hanks have had a house there for over 20 years, Matthew McConaughey is a regular and it seems to be popular with the international art crowd.
If you've got deep pockets, you too can rent a house there through the excellent Five Star Greece. Alternatively, there's the wonderful, understated, 17-room Rooster, a boutique wellness hotel on the island's west coast opened by Greek shipping heiress and sustainability champion, Athanasia Comninos.
Better still, you can now book The Beach House, a restaurant with eight rooms on its own secluded cove, that Comninos has just restored and brought back to life. She took it on to stop it being snapped up by the circling beach club developers from Mykonos and has done a beautiful job. Opening any day now, it will undoubtedly be the low key hot ticket for summer 2025.
How to do it: Doubles at the Beach House from € 590 in the summer.
Croatia
Cres, Kvarner Gulf
It may be the biggest of the Croatian islands but Cres is also one of the most wild and sparsely populated and feels a world away from better known spots such as Hvar or Vis.
It has a bit of everything, including a beautiful capital, Cres Town, that feels like a little slice of Venice, due to 400 years of occupation, with hundreds of churches (literally), great restaurants and fishing boats trundling in and out of the turquoise harbour.
The island is also hilly and rugged, with 300kms of walking and biking trails, villages to explore and an impressive population of golden eagles, Griffon vultures, peregrine falcons and kestrels. It is also increasingly popular with sailors, who love its well-protected harbours and sandy bays.
Unless you're on a yacht or would prefer to go for an authentic-but-basic, family-run guest house, stylish accommodation on the island has been scant until now, with a just handful of luxury villas available through the likes of My Luxoria, but this spring saw the opening of a surprisingly international hotel, the 49-room Isolano, Cres, Autograph Collection (part of Marriott), a fresh and contemporary feeling waterfront hotel a 10-minute walk from Cres Town.
How to do it: Doubles at The Isolano, Cres, Autograph Collection from £375 in summer.
Turkey
The Bozburun peninsula
One of the most peaceful stretches of south west Turkey, the heavily forested Bozburun peninsula on the Aegean is a protected area of outstanding beauty, where in-the-know international travellers have been going for years.
South of touristy Marmaris and also popular with wealthy Turkish tourists, the coastline is dotted with sleepy fishing villages, sheltered swimming coves and idyllic waterfront restaurants where you can sit and watch the world go by.
There are also some good quality, independently owned little hotels and guest houses, such as the Losta Sahil Evi in Selimiye, which is a smaller, quieter version of Kalkan and where Istanbul's elite sail in on their gulets and hop ashore to dine at the town's many excellent restaurants. Losta Sahil Evi, which is open to those aged 12 and above, sits right on the water and has its own sunbathing platform and popular local restaurant.
How to do it: Seven nights at Losta Sahil Evi in early July cost from £1,861 per person based on two sharing, including flights transfers and breakfast.

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Tammy Hembrow celebrates an early Christmas in July with children after fleeing the country following split from husband Matt Zukowski: 'My soul needed this'
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Tammy Hembrow celebrates an early Christmas in July with children after fleeing the country following split from husband Matt Zukowski: 'My soul needed this'

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‘Some dude Katy Perry met': The baffling rise of Orlando Bloom
‘Some dude Katy Perry met': The baffling rise of Orlando Bloom

Telegraph

time40 minutes ago

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‘Some dude Katy Perry met': The baffling rise of Orlando Bloom

Among the many eye-popping sights this week in Venice, where billionaire Jeff Bezos tied the knot with Lauren Sanchez amid a storm of local protest (and an actual thunderstorm which sent A-list guests running for cover), perhaps one of the most baffling is the presence of erstwhile actor Orlando Bloom, who has reportedly called off his romance with singer Katy Perry. Bloom, 48, shot to fame in the early 2000s in two massive franchises, The Lord of the Rings and Pirates of the Caribbean, but his career has since flatlined. He has become more famous in recent years for his relationship with Perry – and for weird viral moments like paddleboarding naked – than for his actual performances. Now it seems he has a new headline-grabbing partnership: a bromance with Amazon founder Bezos. On Thursday, Bloom arrived solo in Venice for the first day of Bezos's lavish £36 million, three-day wedding celebrations. He first enjoyed an al-fresco lunch at the swanky Gritti Palace hotel with music executive Scooter Braun and NFL star Tom Brady. Perry had previously taken sides in Braun's row with Taylor Swift. In 2019, after Braun bought the rights to Swift's masters, Perry wrote on social media: 'I stand with Taylor. Stay strong my friend.' Bloom also shared air kisses with fellow wedding guests Kim and Khloe Kardashian. He has a history with Kim too: in 2024 he was spotted seemingly checking out her bottom at a charity dinner in New York. Perry responded to the viral photo of Bloom apparently gawking on a radio show a few days later, jokingly saying 'I approve'. But she might not find his current antics quite so amusing. A source told TMZ that Bloom was planning to be 'the life of the party' as a single man at the Bezos-Sanchez bash, and we're already seeing signs of that. When the heavens opened at a party at the Madonna dell Orto cloisters and guests – including Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, Oprah Winfrey and Leonardo DiCaprio – were forced to flee, Bloom was spotted with a mystery brunette in a striking pale-green mini dress, wrapping his arm around her as they cosied up in a water taxi. (Tabloid reports have identified her as Perry's stylist and friend Jamie Mizrahi.) Perhaps he's taking inspiration from DiCaprio, who attended the wedding with yet another young model (Vittoria Ceretti, 27), and is forming his own post-split Venetian 'pussy posse' (as DiCaprio and his friends became known in their 1990s pomp). The wedding trip is presumably a professional obligation for Bloom. His new release is Amazon Prime Video's mediocre action comedy Deep Cover, about three improv wannabes recruited by police to infiltrate the criminal underworld. Bloom plays an oddball, deeply irritating method performer who thinks he deserves meaty roles, but whose only steady work is Pizza Knight commercials. 'You're from the Cotswolds, you're not Al Pacino,' his agent grumbles. As a spot of meta-commentary on Bloom and his roller-coaster run, it's pretty apt. The actor was born in Canterbury and named after a 16 th -century English composer, Orlando Gibbons. He got his break aged 20 playing a rent boy in 1997 movie Wilde, starring Stephen Fry as the playwright. He then took a swerve into mega-budget fantasy with the Lord of the Rings films in 2001, starring as the elf Legolas. That catapulted him to Hollywood stardom and instant heartthrob status – although in very specific, slightly kinky terms. Essentially, fans went giddy at the sight of Bloom as an androgynous folkloric being with a lust-worthy bow and arrow and long, flowing flaxen hair – a cross between a mystical fairy-tale prince and a shampoo ad. He was the ultimate unattainable pretty boy, albeit one with pointy ears. (A friend who worked in teen magazines at this time recalls being inundated with letters specifying that they publish more posters of Legolas – not of Orlando Bloom himself.) However, that's not exactly a sustainable image for a long career. Nor did Pirates of the Caribbean, his swashbuckling Disney stint beginning in 2003, demonstrate much range. In fact, Bloom, playing the whiny blacksmith Will Turner, was easily the weakest of the cast, acted off the screen by Johnny Depp 's preening pirate and Keira Knightley's feisty heroine. Bloom's 2006 appearance in TV comedy Extras really summed it up. This 'Bloom' was desperately insecure, working overtime to seduce extra Maggie and making snide, but clearly jealous, comments about Depp such as 'Ooh, look at me, I make art-house movies'. Significantly Maggie, who was once a superfan, later took down her Bloom poster. Bloom wasn't faring much better in real life, with critics unconvinced by his performances in films such as 2005's Kingdom of Heaven (playing another blacksmith, who joins the Crusade), and box office flops like Elizabethtown (2005), Sympathy for Delicious (2010), The Good Doctor (2011), Unlocked (2017) and The Outpost (2019), as he made abortive attempts to diversify into thrillers, dramas and war movies. Predictably, he retreated to his fantasy safe place by reprising his Lord of the Rings role in the Hobbit films in 2013-14, and is eager to appear in 2027's next entry in the franchise. Bloom said earlier this month that he'd like to see Legolas 'the same age as he was' in the original trilogy, 'lithe and breezy and warrior-like, so AI would have to come into play'. It's a fairly depressing acceptance that he's never really progressed beyond that early-years hit. His popularity with Britons in particular took a nosedive in 2021 when he revealed his very Hollywood life in an interview with The Sunday Times. Unfortunate LA-isms included: 'I chant for 20 minutes every day, religiously. I've had a Buddhist practice since I was 16, so that's infiltrated my whole being. I'll read a bit of Buddhism and then I'll type it up and add it to my [Instagram] Stories.' He also talked about his diet, including mixing green powders with brain octane oil, waxed lyrical about the 'methodical nature of creating' when building Lego cars, and slipped in a plug for his exclusive deal with Amazon, which he'd signed in 2019, and which was probably the origin of his current closeness with Bezos. In 2014 he drew the wrath of the Beliebers (and pained everyone else) by engaging in excruciating fisticuffs with pop star Justin Bieber. Bloom walked up to Bieber and punched him outside restaurant Cipriani in Ibiza, and the scuffling pair then had to be separated by their respective entourages. One source claimed that Bloom was enraged by a lewd comment Bieber made about Bloom's ex-wife, Victoria's Secret model Miranda Kerr, who had reportedly been on a date with Bieber in 2012. It probably doesn't help his appeal that he's also indulged in some strange vanity projects, like 2024 TV documentary series Orlando Bloom: To the Edge. 'I felt about as close to death as I could possibly get,' he boasts in the cringe-inducing trailer, in which he shows off muscles and a man-bun and adopts a mockney tough guy accent, trying to rebrand himself as a death-defying extreme-sports bro – Canterbury's answer to Tom Cruise. Alas, Bloom jumping out of a plane only cemented the image of a career in freefall. Bloom also made an unfortunate appearance in RJ Cutler's Billie Eilish documentary in 2021. Eilish meets him and Perry at Coachella and completely fails to recognise him. Her brother Finneas later tells her 'he played Will Turner in f---ing Pirates of the Caribbean ', and Eilish, after Googling pictures of Bloom, says 'I thought that was just some dude Katy Perry met'. Then comes a second even more excruciating meeting, during which Bloom (who is a Buddhist) gives Eilish a lingering hug and says: 'This is the universe hugging you. I'm giving you so much love and light right now.' He probably wasn't aiming to change his public reputation from bland to downright bizarre. That brings us to the on-off romance with Perry. The pair began dating in 2016 after a meet-cute following the Golden Globe Awards: they were both grabbing burgers at In-N-Out. Bloom went viral during a couple's trip to Sardinia, when they were photographed on a paddleboard – Perry wore a bikini, he was stark naked. Needless to say that has haunted Bloom ever since. 'Are we going to talk about my penis?' he sighed in a 2017 Elle interview. They split in 2017, with Perry later explaining on the Call Her Daddy podcast that they weren't really 'in it from day one'. She added: 'He was in a way, because he had just done a huge time of celibacy, and he had set intentions' – a quote that raises far more questions than it answers. But the pair got back together the following year, and announced their engagement in 2019. Perry gave birth to their daughter Daisy Dove in 2020. However, the couple apparently hit a rough patch in the past few months. Bloom's pal Bezos may actually have contributed to their split: the actor was reportedly mortified by her soundly mocked Blue Origin space flight in April alongside Bezos's fiancée Sanchez. An inside source suggested that Bloom warned her about a possible backlash and later told her that the whole thing looked ridiculous. There were also apparent tensions following Perry's album 143 tanking; reportedly, he had voiced his concerns about that as well. Bloom was allegedly annoyed that Perry then used him to drum up publicity, sharing a risqué story on Call Her Daddy in 2024 – Perry said that if the kitchen was clean, Bloom had 'better be ready to get [his] d--- sucked' – and posting videos on her Instagram of a topless Bloom jogging. Now Perry is on tour in Australia, so apparently too busy to attend Bezos's wedding (though ticket sales haven't exactly been in high demand). That leaves Bloom in the spotlight as he contemplates his next chapter, which might feature another comeback: he has a Werner Herzog film on the horizon, the gloriously titled Bucking Fasterds. For now, it looks like the sexy elf is back on the market – and raising a glass to Mr Amazon.

This grown-up lip gloss is the perfect shade for summer
This grown-up lip gloss is the perfect shade for summer

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This grown-up lip gloss is the perfect shade for summer

It is hot at the time of writing, and I hope still hot at the time of reading, which for me, when it comes to make-up, means paring everything right back. (If skin tints or balms aren't quite enough, consider this your reminder about the brilliance of Nars Soft Matte Concealer, £28, which will conceal anything, anywhere on your face, and still look completely natural — even a dot of black pen, which is how I test concealers these days.) I like a shiny lip in summer, especially on an otherwise minimally adorned face, but I passionately dislike stickiness. I don't even like things looking sticky. Sadly, the line between 'glossy' and 'sticky' is often blurred. But the other day I was fossicking about in the Boots at Liverpool Street Station in London and was reminded of the existence of Fenty Beauty Gloss Bomb Universal Lip Luminizer (£19, which is an 'old' product, certainly pre-2020. So I bought some, in the shade Fenty Glow, which is a sort of pinkish nude that is also slightly golden and would suit anybody. I thought it might look nice in the heat. And I was right. This is the perfect lip thing to take with you on holiday, or indeed to stick on (except it's not sticky) if you're going to lie about in the park.

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