Paul Hollywood hits out at ‘unforgivable’ criticism of wife in pub row

Entertainment

Paul Hollywood has said criticism of his wife is “unforgivable” after she and her family were granted permission to turn their Kent pub into a house.

Landlady Melissa Hollywood, who is married to the Great British Bake Off judge, reportedly said her family was planning on closing the Grade II-listed Chequers Inn in Smarden, Kent, at the end of August due to declining trade.

She was granted permission to turn the 600-year-old property into a home by Ashford Borough Council’s planning committee.

The Chequers Inn in Smarden, Kent. Pic: Google Street View
Image:
The Chequers Inn in Smarden, Kent. Pic: Google Street View

But the request, submitted in January, faced opposition from residents and Smarden Parish Council who feared the loss of the pub at the “heart of the village” would “conflict with the aims of promoting the economy”, planning documents said.

The TV star, 58, told BBC South East: “The vindictiveness from the locals towards the family who have been here 18 years is unforgivable.”


Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Hollywood said his wife’s family wanted to sell the pub as a business after the council planning meeting but had received unrealistic offers.

“If the villagers themselves want to get their act together and put a bid in and buy it, that’s fine,” he said.

“At the end of the month it’s earmarked to close because they cannot sustain the money that’s coming in because there’s no money coming in.”

Read more:
Farage revealed to be highest-earning MP
Yoga teacher injured in Southport readmitted to hospital
Harry tests his Spanish in ‘DIY royal tour’

He said the pub was failing even though tens of thousands had been spent on a renovation and a new car park.

“I’m going to have to step in and help them out, personally, but I’m not a charity,” Hollywood said.

“I have given a substantial amount of money to turn it into what it is now. It is a beautiful pub but it is a business that is losing money.”

Articles You May Like

Kingsbury sends Spirit to final with air of ‘destiny’
Saldivar’s Trucking: first owner-operator to deploy Volvo VNR Electric semi
Row over how many farms will be affected by inheritance tax policy – as PM doubles down
‘I can one day tell my grandkids that I played Rafa’: Nadal retires, with an unreachable legacy
‘Immense complexities’: UK’s longest-serving MP calls for delay to assisted dying vote