With the tournament at capacity for the first time in three years, the pair electrified an otherwise genteel atmosphere

Welcome back, then, the great British summer picnic, a tournament where it is somehow always a muggy mid‑afternoon and where there are still, it turns out, strawberries for tea.

The All England Club was a cold, fresh, breezy kind of place as it opened its doors wide for the first time since 2019. There were dumps of chilly summer rain. The fabled queue could be seen basking in watery sunshine before the start of play, with that familiar sense of something performative, theatrically static, being British for the British, in front of the British. Other nations have parades, fiestas, fetes. We have the plastic strawberry punnet, the cargo short, a stagey politeness.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Christine Sinclair retirement

Christine Sinclair

A radical British politics rooted in nature is spreading – and the establishment doesn’t like it | John Harris

From right to roam to anger over polluted rivers, a new breed…

Country diary: fire, feasting and stories, the age-old answer to winter’s curfew

Crambeck, North Yorkshire: Midwinter always brings a lockdown of sorts – a…

Was it right to give Peter Sutcliffe a Guardian obituary? | Elisabeth Ribbans

Many readers thought an obituary about the man who murdered 13 women…