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  • What The Butler Saw

    WHAT THE BUTLER SAW

    The Age, Australia
    Sept 28 2007

    Colonial charm ... the view at the E&O hotel.

    It's a steep learning curve but Stella Martin quickly adapts to
    royal treatment.

    'Most people don't know how to use butlers now," says Elizabeth Dass,
    communications manager at Penang's Eastern and Oriental Hotel, in
    a slightly peevish tone. "For example, if you are busy you can ask
    your butler to pack your bags for you."

    I don't really want a stranger poking around the dirty laundry at the
    bottom of my bag, but perhaps with a bit of practice I could get used
    to it.

    It is 25 years since my husband and I met, as young teachers working in
    Malaysia. Now with the nest empty, we have returned for our anniversary
    and checked into the E&O, which prides itself on its 24-hour butler
    service. It would be hard to find a better place to celebrate.

    We stagger in from the oppressive afternoon heat and frantic streets
    of George Town and are quickly guided to enormous armchairs, presented
    with cold face towels and glasses of pink fruit cocktail. I like this
    place already.

    A porter in pith helmet, white shirt, shorts, gloves and long socks
    takes charge of our bags as our butler guides us across the domed
    entrance hall. At the end of a cool, high corridor lined with old
    photos of the hotel in its colonial heyday is our suite. "There are
    no rooms, only suites" is the catchcry of the E&O. A sumptuously
    furnished living room overlooks the swimming pool and, beyond the sea
    wall, the bay. Our emperor-sized bed is flanked by butler-summoning
    buttons, and beyond stained-glass doors is a black-and-white marble
    bathroom. You could get lost in here.

    One of the delights of Penang is its colonial architecture. Many
    of the great buildings constructed during the days of the British
    Empire are in a state of advanced decay, but the E&O is in beautiful
    condition. Built in 1884 by the Armenian Sarkies brothers, the Eastern
    Hotel was such a success that within a year they had added another,
    the Oriental, next door. Eventually the two merged; our butler points
    out the slightly sloping wooden floor that marks the join. A third
    brother added an extravagant ballroom in 1903.

    The hotel was renovated recently. The main staircase had to
    be completely rebuilt but is identical to the one ascended by
    Somerset Maugham, Rudyard Kipling, Hermann Hesse and Noel Coward. The
    neoclassical facades, domes and minarets have been repainted a crisp
    wedding-cake white.

    The hotel was built to last. Its solid walls have caused headaches
    for technicians installing modern communication facilities but its
    sea wall stood up to the Boxing Day tsunami in 2004.
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