A traditional butler is someone who devotes his life to supporting another.


奥翱搁顿厂听JOSEPH L. GARCIA | ILLUSTRATION聽JOY D. DAGUN

Are you sure you have everything in the world when you鈥檙e missing someone in your life? We鈥檙e not talking about a lover; we鈥檙e talking about a butler.

鈥淗e鈥檚 devoted his life to supporting someone, which is what you do as a butler,鈥 said Steven Ferry, founder of The International Association of Traditional Butlers, the first organization of its kind. Mr. Ferry was speaking about Stevens, the main character in Kazuo Ishiguro鈥檚 Nobel Prize-winning novel, The Remains of the Day, eventually made into a film starring Sir Anthony Hopkins.

To Mr. Ferry, Stevens is the most accurate depiction of a butler in fiction: not Alfred from Batman, nor Mr. Carson from Downton Abbey. 鈥淗e鈥檚 the old-fashioned butler, but he embodies everything that is good about the butler, but he also has the bad things about the butler,鈥 said Mr. Ferry, describing Stevens. 鈥淗is attitude, his devotion to duty鈥攖hat is really the epitome of what a butler should be.鈥 Stevens is a butler who serve Lord Darlington, who unfortunately sympathized with the Nazi cause in the years leading up to and during the Second World War. Mr. Ferry points out, that in the end, Stevens devotes his life to 鈥渟omebody who isn鈥檛 worth devoting your life to.鈥

In any case, Mr. Ferry鈥檚 career began in the 鈥80s, after attending the Ivor Spencer International School for Butlers and the Professional School for Toastmasters, taught by Sir Ivor Spencer himself (Spencer, who passed away in 2009, received his MBE for his service to the Royal family). Mr. Ferry then went on, armed with this education, to serve as a butler in domestic settings and then moved on to consultancy work. Mr. Ferry has authored various books on the subject, such as The British Butler鈥檚 Bible: The Key to Private Service in the British Tradition, the two-volume Serving the Wealthy, Hotel Butlers, and The Great Service Differentiators.

High Life spoke with Mr. Ferry when he visited Manila this August to teach a basic butler service course at De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde.

Most butlers usually come from a long line of butlers, so if judged on this metric, Mr. Ferry wouldn鈥檛 have been a butler. His father was a lawyer, and his brothers were doctors. He said that his mother was 鈥渏olly sure鈥 he鈥檇 become a doctor too, but Mr. Ferry was not interested in the profession. Instead, he went into education, then counseling, and along the way, jumped from job to job. He spent a period in Hollywood doing鈥攐f all things鈥攊ntelligence work. 鈥淚f I told you before, I鈥檇 have to kill you,鈥 he said while laughing. His wife was involved in the launch of a yacht, and, in her efforts for the event to run seamlessly, came upon Sir Ivor Spencer鈥檚 butler academy. 鈥淚 learned to be a butler from him; the basics of it.鈥

鈥淭o become a butler,鈥 he continued, 鈥測ou really have to either go up the ranks, which doesn鈥檛 really happen anymore.鈥

RUNNING THE HOUSEHOLD
In the old days, at least starting from the Victorian Era, a young boy entered domestic service to a great household by applying as a lower-ranked employee, say, a footman or a valet, and was supervised by a butler already in place. In time, if he worked well, he would come to replace the butler himself. Mr. Ferry compares the former life of the butler to an apprentice program, and said that knowledge of buttling was usually passed through word of mouth.

The butler鈥檚 role has expanded in the thousand years since the profession鈥檚 inception. Originally, the butler was in charge of wines and bottled beverages in a household (the word shares its etymology with 鈥渂ottle鈥), but the role of the butler as we see today really came about in the Victorian Era. The butler was in charge of the household staff and the way it ran, and, in a manner, also influenced the life of the house鈥檚 master from the time he woke to the time he slept.

The way of the butler suffered a decline after the First World War, the flaming sunset that closed most of the doors of Europe鈥檚 great houses and the age of the aristocracy. Taxation and political reform in England lessened the power and prestige of the great houses which needed armies of staff to run it. 鈥淭hey couldn鈥檛 afford it so much,鈥 said Mr. Ferry. Furthermore, while the social reforms and the carnage of the war changed the lifestyles of the lords and ladies who employed them, the War also brought a change in the mindset of the household staff. 鈥淭hey saw a wider world out there. They were paid more, they had more respect, perhaps, and those who survived the war didn鈥檛 want to go back to the drudgery of household work.鈥

For a period, only the wealthiest of the wealthiest could afford a butler, but financial booms in the 鈥80s brought the butler back in fashion. Continuing financial booms in Asian countries such as China fuel the demand for British-trained butlers. Speaking about the modern butler鈥檚 role in the modern world, he said, 鈥淵ou really are CEO of Home, Inc., meaning that you run the household,鈥 he said, citing duties such as the effective management of staff, and, in some cases, even managing funds.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got, maybe, ten companies, and you鈥檝e got people running each of the companies for you. You don鈥檛 run them yourself necessarily; you鈥檙e maybe Chair of the Board,鈥 he said, profiling what sort of person would require the services of a butler. 鈥淚f you鈥檝e got everything in the world, you must be wasting an awful lot of time managing it all.鈥

HE SMALLEST THINGS MAKE THE GREATEST IMPACT
As in any profession, one must have the proper traits and character to handle the position for as long a time as possible. He says that as a butler, being invisible is one. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l want to be invisible because you鈥檒l get up the boss鈥檚 nose if you鈥檙e in his face the whole time.鈥 Another important trait: discretion. 鈥淚f you have someone in your house, you don鈥檛 want all your secrets or private matters appearing in The Times of London.鈥 One such person who arguably broke this rule was the butler of the late Diana, Princess of Wales. In 2003, he-who-shall-not-be-named released a memoir titled A Royal Duty, where he wrote about his career in royal service in great detail. He also served as a witness during the government鈥檚 inquest in the death of the Princess of Wales, saying things that could have painted him as an unreliable witness. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 mention his name around here,鈥 said Mr. Ferry, laughing.

As in any type of service or work, while one is expected to do one鈥檚 duty, it鈥檚 always the smallest things that make the greatest impact. 鈥淗elping with their mother,鈥 he said, when prompted to recall an occasion where his employer thanked him for something. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a stupid little thing,鈥 he says modestly. 鈥淭he mother wasn鈥檛 in good shape, so I helped her.鈥

On another occasion, he was working under a Russian magnate who had a fabulous estate hidden near the Urals. 鈥淗e could鈥檝e bought anything he wanted, but he was eating slop.鈥 He said that he wasn鈥檛 there to handle the cook, but he was there to train the Russian magnate鈥檚 butler. Going to the kitchens to investigate, he found out that the cook had given up on life after her husband killed himself in the garage. Relying on his counseling skills from his previous life and vocation, he helped the cook find her footing again. 鈥淪he came back the next day with lipstick on,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淪he cracked open a cookbook, and started cooking fantastic food.鈥

Our lives never run truly smoothly. What would compel a person to devote their life to making sure that another one鈥檚 life goes on smoothly, when a whole world runs inside you already? He said, 鈥淵ou take joy in helping others. You could do that as a nurse. You could do that as a minister. As many things鈥攁s a mother, even. But you have the additional benefit of working with very high-end possessions and properties, and so forth, in a beautiful environment where money is no object.鈥

In the end, however, what matters most is a quality that Mr. Ferry describes as 鈥渟olicitousness.鈥 鈥淵ou鈥檙e really caring about another person. You really care about the boss, all the guests, all of the family,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou really make sure that there鈥檚 a smile on their face as much as possible. Their life just really rolls along smoothly. And that鈥檚 really what you鈥檙e there for.鈥