The general manager of the Windermere Manor hotel harassed his head chef by singing Victoria Wood’s the 'Ballad of Barry and Freda (Let’s Do It)' while making “disconcerting gestures”, an employment tribunal has found.
The tribunal heard that Andrew Wilson had sung the song, in which a wife propositions her reluctant husband, placing emphasis on the repeated refrain “let’s do it”, while attempting to make eye contact with chef Mr S Nunns.
Wilson had told the tribunal he sang the song after the actor and comedian came up in conversation and the chef revealed he had not heard it before.
However, employment judge Phil Allen found the chef to be the more credible witness.
The chef, who said he had been “excited” to join the hotel in 2021, made a number of allegations about Wilson spanning the period up until his resignation in July 2022.
He said Wilson would hug him and that these hugs became “more frequent and long” as time went on.
He also accused Wilson of squeezing his knee while driving him home, and said he had also placed a hand on his bottom, caressed his nipple and massaged his back and shoulders before hugging him, kissing him on the forehead and saying ‘I love you’.
These complaints were upheld by the tribunal.
In his judgement Allen wrote: “Singing the song and singing it in the way which it has been found he did, was considered in the context of the other harassment which the tribunal found had occurred.
“The tribunal accepted that the song, and what was emphasised in it, took on a very different tone in the light of the events which the tribunal found had occurred.
“It was clear from [the chef’s] evidence that the song being sung to him in that way with the relevant emphasis had the effect of violating the claimant’s dignity and creating a degrading, humiliating and offensive environment for him.”
Wilson and the hotel management company SBH Windemere were found to have harassed the chef by the tribunal, with compensation to be determined at a future hearing.