Her father is a Nigerian oil tycoon and his father is the Marquess of Bath, and they are to soon marry making this celeb chef, Emma McQuinston, the first black Marchioness in England… |
His father might be famous for his harem of ‘wifelets’ but Ceawlin Thynne, Viscount Weymouth and son of the notorious Marquess of Bath is taking a more conventional approach to marriage. But his wife-to-be is anything but the typical aristocratic bride. Not only is artist Emma McQuiston the daughter of a Nigerian oil tycoon, she’s a former actress and celebrity chef. Yet despite the 26-year-old’s impressive CV, the soon-to-be marchioness has admitted that her presence at Longleat has raised eyebrows among some elements of the aristocracy. ‘There has been some snobbishness, particularly among the older generation,’ she revealed. ‘There’s class and then there’s the racial thing. It’s a jungle and I’m going through it and discovering things as I grow up.
‘I’m not super-easily offended but it’s a problem when someone’s making you feel different or separate because of your race, or forming an opinion about you before they even know you.’ Her mother Suzanna also admits to being worried on her daughter’s behalf but hopes she’ll be accepted.
‘I always felt there might be this slightly snobbish thing about anyone that’s black but it seems that everybody has taken Emma into their hearts and they love her.’ The snobbish comments are all the more ironic because McQuiston isn’t exactly a stranger to high society. In fact, McQuiston and her husband to be are technically already family. The daughter of Oxford graduate, Ladi Jadesimi, McQuiston grew up in the rolling Wiltshire countryside and has long been part of her future husband’s circle, first meeting him when she was just four years old. Her mother, Suzanna McQuiston, had already been married when she met Emma’s father, and had a son named Ian, now 51.
Ian is the husband of Lady Silvy Cerne Thynne, the daughter of the sixth Marquess of Bath by his second wife, and the half-sister of the current incumbent. Lady Silvy is the Viscount of Weymouth’s aunt, which means that his soon to be brother-in-law is also his uncle. With connections such as these, it is perhaps no surprise that McQuiston was a regular guest at Longleat celebrations, often spending Christmas and Easter with the Bath family
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