Boris Johnson’s mother Charlotte Johnson Wahl dies aged 79

UK

Boris Johnson’s mother has died at the age of 79.

Charlotte Johnson Wahl, a professional painter, passed away “suddenly and peacefully” at a London hospital on Monday.

Johnson Wahl had been suffering from Parkinson’s disease.

During an interview in 2008, she had said: “I try to paint every day if I possibly can, though I have to go to the hospital a lot.

“I still manage to paint, though my arm will suddenly do a movement which is completely unintentional and that almost brings me to tears.”

Her artistic interests varied but she made her name as a portrait painter, with sitters including author Jilly Cooper and actor Joanna Lumley.

Johnson Wahl studied English at Oxford University but put her education on hold to travel to the US with Stanley Johnson.

More on Boris Johnson

The two married in 1963 before she completed her degree as the first married female undergraduate at her college – Lady Margaret Hall.

She and Stanley had four children – Boris, journalist Rachel, former MP Jo, and environmentalist Leo – before divorcing in 1979.

In 1988, she married American professor Nicholas Wahl.

They lived in New York, where she turned to painting cityscapes and held a sell-out exhibition in 2004.

She returned to London in 1996, after Mr Wahl died.

Mr Johnson once described his mother as the “supreme authority” in the family and credited her with instilling in him the equal value of every human life.

Reacting to Johnson Wahl’s death, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said: “I’m very sorry to learn of the prime minister’s loss. My condolences to him and his family.”

Articles You May Like

Bestselling author CJ Sansom dies days before Disney adaption of his Shardlake series airs
Microsoft to invest $1.7 billion into AI infrastructure in Indonesia, CEO Satya Nadella says
Gold watch recovered from body of richest man on the Titanic sells for £1.2m
Save $729 on Hiboy’s Step-Thru e-bike at $850, Greenworks and WORX 1-day electric tool sales, and more
Brexit border checks to ‘add billions’ to consumer bills