This is the revealing ‘uniform’ young women were made to wear at a controversial men-only charity gala at which female ‘hostesses’ were groped.
Undercover Financial Times reporter Madison Marriage attended the Presidents Club gala at the Dorchester Hotel last week where the 130 ‘tall, thin and pretty’ women drafted in to serve 300 businessmen were given a very strict dress code.
Hostesses at the gala, billed as ‘the most un-PC event of the year’, were told to wear matching black underwear and ‘sexy’ black shoes and had to be at least five foot six and come in full make-up with glamorously styled hair.
They were supplied with short, tight black dresses and corset-style belts on the day and instructions from 2015’s fundraiser, reveal an image of a partly see-through garment, while images from the event also show hostesses in revealing garments with mesh panels.
Reports suggest the dresses were similar to the revealing panelled number worn by model Carla Bellucci pictured below, who was not involved with the event, which clearly shows off the wearer’s underwear, as well as exposing the thighs, buttocks and midriff.
Another hostess told ITV news: We were handed a short minidress which was very revealing on the side. It showed parts of your breasts. I saw a girl in it and it gave me a shock.’
One hostess reported that some also wore red shoes to indicate that they were available for ‘extra duties’, inferring that it was a sign they were sex workers, while others were groped and harassed with one saying an attendee had exposed his penis to her.
Another was told by an attendee as he grabbed her by the waist: ‘I want you to down that glass, rip off your knickers and dance on that table.’
Model Carla Bellucci, who was not involved with the event, in the very revealing ‘uniform’ hostesses were ordered to wear to the controversial President’s Club function at the Dorchester Hotel last week
Hostesses were given tight, revealing dresses to wear with reports emerging of outfits with sheer panels that showed off a multitude of skin and underwear (left). Staff were told to wear matching black underwear, which was clearly visible under revealing dresses (right)
An undercover reporter said she and other women who worked at the event were grabbed by the men as prizes such as tea with the head of the Bank of England were raffled off for charity.
Education minister Nadhim Zahawi also attended the event at The Dorchester hotel in Mayfair last Thursday, but felt ‘extremely uncomfortable’ and left early, the House of Commons heard.
He tweeted: ‘I do unequivocally condemn this behaviour. The report is truly shocking. I will never attend a men only function ever.’
But opposition politicians called for him to step down amid a growing scandal.
Hostesses were provided with black, corset-style belts by the event’s organisers
According to reports, some of the hostesses wore red shoes to indicate they were available for ‘extra services’
Carla, who was not at the event, models a revealing dress of the type hostesses were given to wear. An undercover reporter said that the tall, thin and pretty staff were groped by attendees
It comes as a waitress at the event claimed a group of five prostitutes turned up after dinner and began soliciting for sex.
‘They were wearing red dresses,’ she told ITV News. ‘And they were acting very provocatively around the men. Kissing men almost instantly’.
The club announced it would shut down this afternoon. A statement said: ‘The trustees have decided that the Presidents Club will not host any further fundraising events. Remaining funds will be distributed in an efficient manner to children’s charities and it will then be closed.’
Flat shoes were banned and all hostesses had to bring their own black heels to wear at the event
Comedian David Walliams, who hosted the fundraiser, tweeted saying he ‘agreed to host as it is one of the biggest charity fund raising events of the year’.
He added: ‘I left immediately after I had finished my presenting on stage at 11.30pm. I did not witness any of the kind of behaviour that allegedly occurred and am absolutely appalled by the reports.’
A leaked brochure from the notorious night at London’s Dorchester hotel shows off the items the super-rich guests could bid for as they were served drinks by the ‘tall, thin and pretty’ hostesses who were allegedly groped.
Businessmen outside the secretive Presidents Club charity dinner, at which more than 100 ‘hostesses’ were brought in, with some reportedly being groped and propositioned. It not suggested those in this image took part in an impropriety
There were calls for Children and families minister Nadhim Zahawi (left) to be sacked today. Businessman David Meller (right) today stepped down from his role at the Department of Education after it emerged he was involved with the club which organised the sexist event
Children and families minister Nadhim Zahawi, who attended the event, tweeted saying he was shocked by the reports. He is said to have left early, having found it ‘extremely uncomfortable’
Lot One in the booklet is the chance to have a character in David Walliams’ next book named after your child and the chance to meet the author.
The female hostesses at the event were given black outfits and allegedly told to wear matching black underwear and ‘sexy’ shoes to parade in front of guests from British business, politics and finance at the start of the event.
Two undercover reporters who posed as hostesses for the evening claimed some women were repeatedly propositioned by the male guests, with one man allegedly exposing himself. One of the reporters said she was groped ‘several times’. The woman were reportedly made to sign non-disclosure clauses.
Education minister Anne Milton said today: ‘I have spoken to my fellow minister in the department [Mr Zahawi], he didn’t stay at the event long and I know that he found the event extremely uncomfortable. He left and he was truly shocked by the reports that have emerged.’
But Labour’s Sarah Jones called for Mr Zahawi’s resignation, saying: ‘If it transpires that the minister did not report his concerns and that he was there on previous occasions it is absolutely surely obvious that he needs to resign.
‘Our women are too important, our young girls are too important to get this kind of message from our leaders and to think that it’s acceptable.’
Opposition MP Jess Phillips added: ‘What happened is that women were bought as bait for men who were rich men, not a mile from where we stand, as if that is an acceptable behaviour – it is totally unacceptable.’
Tory MP Margot James branded the event the ‘slimeball’s ‘charity event [sic]’.
WPP, the world’s biggest advertising agency, which had sponsored a table at the dinner, said it was withdrawing its future support.
Boss Sir Martin Sorrell, who did not attend, said his guests did not see such behaviour.
But he told Sky News standards in the City need to raise.
Two undercover reporters who posed as hostesses for the evening claimed some women were repeatedly propositioned by the male guests, with one man accused of exposing himself
Undercover reporter Madison Marriage (pictured left) recorded footage from inside the event, which was hosted by David Walliams (pictured at the National Television Awards on Tuesday night, right)
The event was referred to as the slimeballs’ ‘charity event’ by Tory MP Margot James
Their comments came as businessman David Meller, a trustee of the Presidents Club, quit his role as non-executive board member at the Department for Education.
Education minister Ms Milton told the Commons her first reaction to reports of the event was ‘words fail me’.
‘It is quite extraordinary to me that in the 21st Century allegations of this kind are still emerging,’ she said. ‘Women have the right to feel safe wherever they work and allegations of this kind of behaviour are completely unacceptable.
‘David Meller has been a non executive board member of the department for education. The government expects board members to adhere to the code of conduct for board members.
‘David Meller has stepped down as a non-executive member of the board of education. I know that the Secretary of State is clear that this is the right thing to do.’
Meller, 58, is chair of the Meller Group, one of the largest luxury home and beauty suppliers in the UK. His work sponsoring academies and schools led to him getting a CBE in this year’s New Year’s Honours list for ‘services to education’.
Asked for Theresa May’s opinion of the Presidents Club event, a Downing Street source said: ‘The Prime Minister was uncomfortable at the reports that she read this morning.
‘Clearly, this is an event to which she would not be invited, because she is a woman.’
The Number 10 source said that Mr Meller ‘has been asked to step down’ from his role in the Department for Education, adding: ‘The Prime Minister thinks that is the right decision.’
Meller, pictured with his wife Wendy, was asked to quit after details of the event emerged
Evelina London Children’s Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital announced that they will be returning previous donations from the Presidents Club following the allegations, while the Charity Commission said it is investigating the claims ‘as a matter of urgency’.
Great Ormond Street said it would hand back the £530,000 given to it by the club between 2009 and 2016.
London’s Royal Academy of Music said it will refund a £10,000 donation made in 2017 as a scholarship to a violin student.
A Great Ormond Street Hospital spokesman said it was ‘shocked’ to hear of the behaviour reported and would be returning money and no longer accepting gifts from the charitable trust, blaming the ‘wholly unacceptable nature of the event’.
Madison Marriage, the reporter who went undercover, said she was groped ‘several times’
A spokeswoman from Evelina London Children’s Hospital said: ‘We are very alarmed by the allegations about the behaviour of some of those attending the Presidents Club fundraising dinner.
‘This is not the kind of event we would wish to be associated with and we will therefore be declining funding from it and returning all previous donations from the Presidents Club.’
Sir Martin Sorrell, head of advertising firm WPP, said he had attended the event ‘many years ago’.
‘(I’d) never seen anything like that,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
‘If it’s true, we checked with our people who were there at our table and they said they saw nothing of that kind.
Mr Sorrell added: ‘We issued a statement last night saying that we won’t support the charity in future, which is regrettable because it is a charity that supports numerous children’s charities and has done a lot of good work.’
Asked if the sort of behaviour alleged was normal among top firms, he said: ‘No, that’s not the case, certainly not in this case, the particular case you are referring to.
‘I don’t know about other cases, but no, I think if true it’s highly regrettable.’
Now, a furious backlash has begun, with MPs, business leaders and others (pictured) slamming the sexist event and telling those who allowed it to happen ‘time’s up on this crap’
Financial Times reporter Madison Marriage, who was one of those to go undercover at the event, told BBC Newsnight: ‘I was groped several times and I know that there are numerous other hostesses who said the same thing had happened to them.
‘It’s hands up skirts, hands on bums but also hands on hips, hands on stomachs, arms going round your waist unexpectedly.’
One unnamed man, described as ‘a society figure’, reportedly grabbed a hostess by the waist and said: ‘You look far too sober. I want you to down that glass, rip off your knickers and dance on the table.’
The undercover reporters also spotted a troupe of burlesque dancers ‘dressed like furry-hatted Coldstream Guards, but with star-shaped stickers hiding [their] nipples’.
Labour MP Jess Phillips, who had tabled an urgent question about the event in the House of Commons today said: ‘What happened is that women were bought as bait for men who were rich men, not a mile from where we stand, as if that is an acceptable behaviour – it is totally unacceptable.’
Evelina London Children’s Hospital (pictured) have said they will return all previous donations from the Presidents Club
Tracy Howarth, head of regulatory compliance at the Charity Commission, said: ‘The public hold charities to the highest standards, both in what they do and how they go about it.
‘They will rightly be dismayed by the reports they have read today and will consider that the alleged behaviour has no place being taken in the name of charity, whether raising funds for good causes or not. Charities have a duty to fundraise responsibly and in line with their values.
‘Trustees must also consider the well-being and protection of staff and all those who come into contact with their charity – not just those they are there to help.
‘We are aware of concerns reported by the Financial Times about the Presidents Club charity dinner.
‘We are assessing these allegations as a matter of urgency and will be contacting the charity named in the reporting.’
Sir Philip Green (left) and Dragons Den star Peter Jones (right) were seen on a seating chart ahead of the event. There is no suggestion that they were involved in the organisation of the event or any alleged groping
The hostesses were recruited by the Artista agency, which reportedly said all hostesses had to be ‘tall, thin and pretty’, and told successful applicants not to bring their boyfriends or girlfriends to the event.
During the interviews, founder Caroline Dandridge allegedly told an undercover Financial Times reporter: ‘It’s a Marmite job. Some girls love it and for other girls it’s the worst job in the world and they will never do it again.
‘You just have to put up with the annoying men and if you can do that it’s fine.’
The women, who are believed to have signed a five-page non-disclosure agreement, were warned some of the guests might try and get the girls ‘p***ed’.
It was claimed they were paid £150 for a ten-hour shift and given £25 for a taxi home.
According to the reporters, the women were given dresses to wear during their shift and had to line up and parade in front of the guests at the start of the night.
During the evening, some of the guests allegedly held hostesses’ hands while they were sitting down. One 28-year-old hostess told an undercover reporter she had been inappropriately touched on her hips, stomach and legs, and a man had tried to kiss her.
Many of the hostesses at the party were jobbing actresses or students looking for extra money, and some were described as looking ‘shocked’ and ‘frightened’ by the experience.
The main event at the fundraiser was an auction in which guests got the chance to bid for tea with Bank of England governor Mark Carney, or lunch with Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson hosted by Sir Ian ‘Beefy’ Botham.
Other lots included a brand new Land Rover to being a named character in Mr Walliams’ next children’s book.
Seedier lots are believed to have included a trip to the Windmill strip club in Soho or plastic surgery ‘to spice up your wife’.
At midnight, the group moved to a different room in the hotel for an after-party, where one hostess was told to take off her underwear and dance on the table.
Both Miss Dandridge and The Dorchester told the Financial Times they had no knowledge of any harassment or wrongdoing at the party.
According to the reporters, the women were given dresses to wear during their shift and had to line up and parade in front of the guests at the start of the night
In a statement, the luxury hotel said it had a zero-tolerance attitude to harassment and said it would cooperate with the authorities if any complaints were made. Miss Dandridge told the Financial Times: ‘There is a code of conduct that we follow.
‘I am not aware of any reports of sexual harassment and with the calibre of guest, I would be astonished.’
MailOnline has contacted Sir Philip Green and Peter Jones for comment. None of the club’s trustees provided any comment last night.
Today the organisers of the men-only charity dinner said they are ‘appalled’ by allegations of sexual harassment at the event.
A spokesman said: ‘The Presidents Club recently hosted its annual dinner, raising several million pounds for disadvantaged children.
‘The organisers are appalled by the allegations of bad behaviour at the event asserted by the Financial Times reporters.
‘Such behaviour is totally unacceptable. The allegations will be investigated fully and promptly and appropriate action taken.’