BBC NEWSAmericasAfricaEuropeMiddle EastSouth AsiaAsia PacificArabicSpanishRussianChineseWelsh
BBCiCATEGORIES  TV  RADIO  COMMUNICATE  WHERE I LIVE  INDEX   SEARCH 

BBC NEWS
 You are in: World: Americas
News image
Front Page 
World 
Africa 
Americas 
Asia-Pacific 
Europe 
Middle East 
South Asia 
-------------
From Our Own Correspondent 
-------------
Letter From America 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 
News image


Commonwealth Games 2002

BBC Sport

BBC Weather

SERVICES 
Wednesday, 22 August, 2001, 15:21 GMT 16:21 UK
Widow makes QE2 her home
The QE2
Beatrice Muller enjoys her life on the ocean wave
It is probably the world's biggest, grandest - and fastest - retirement home.

But 82-year-old Beatrice Muller believes she's got a bargain, as the sole resident on the luxury liner the QE2.

The American widow has paid �3,440 a month for the past 20 months for her cabin, but reckons it's a snip compared with the cost of a nursing home.

She moved into Cabin 4068 on the fourth deck of the Cunard ship nine months after her husband died on board as the ship sailed out of Bombay.


Sometimes I feel like I have died and gone to heaven

Beatrice Muller
The couple, from Bound Brook, New Jersey, near New York, fell in love with the QE2 when they took a world cruise in 1995 and had planned to spend a year on board together.

But after the death of her husband, her son persuaded Mrs Muller to take one last cruise - and she decided to make a permanent home on the 67,000-tonne vessel.

Since then Mrs Muller, known as Bea to the crew, has sailed the Suez and Panama canals and seen the Fjords of Norway.

And this week she clocked up her 30th Atlantic crossing when the liner berthed in New York.

'Value for money'

Mrs Muller knows each crew member by name. She spends two to three hours each day dancing or playing bridge and attends on-board lectures and shows.

Her only concerns are that she misses her flower garden, does not like karaoke night, and cannot fit in everything she wants to do.

"It is a lot of value for your money. I have everything I need here," she said.

"Sometimes I feel like I have died and gone to heaven. I have to make sure the crew members do not have wings on their backs."

Mrs Muller is reported to have funded her lifestyle by selling two of her three homes.

See also:

06 Jul 00 | Americas
QE2 bumps Japanese warship
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more Americas stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Americas stories



News imageNews image