Friday 29 April 2011

Watch the Royal Wedding Live on YouTube

Royal wedding: Crowds swell outside the Westminister abbey

LONDON: Each step has been rehearsed, each flower meticulously arranged, the aisle ofWestminster Abbey transformed into a flowering avenue of trees. 

With just hours to go before his wedding to Kate Middleton, dedicated royal watchers camped outside got an unexpected surprise — a visit fromPrince William

The 28-year-old groom-to-be emerged from his residence Thursday night to greet the hordes of well-wishers gathered along the processional route. Dressed in khakis and grinning broadly, William shook countless hands as his photo was snapped on cell phones and digital cameras. 

The visit lent further excitement to the carnival atmosphere near the abbey, where hours earlier 29-year-old Kate had a final run-through with William's best man, Prince Harry. 

A throng of curious tourists, dedicated monarchists, souvenir vendors, William-watchers and Harry-hunters have turned the Union Jack-bedecked streets into a scene of festive chaos. 

"It's a once-in-a-lifetime thing. Not many kings-to-be are going to be married anytime soon," said 26-year-old Sarah White, camped out with her sister, Liz. "Everyone's making friends and is in good spirits — or at least will be until tomorrow." 

The only clouds on the horizon: the threat of rain and the intrusion of politics, with the British government revoking an invitation to Syria's ambassador to condemn a deadly crackdown on protesters that has left hundreds dead. 

Friday's ceremony has been planned like a military operation. More than 1,500 soldiers, sailors and air crew will be on duty to line the couple's procession route between the abbey and Buckingham Palace, just under a mile (1.6 kilometers) away. 

An additional 5,000 uniformed and undercover police will be on alert for threats from Irish dissident terrorists, Muslim extremists, anti-monarchists, royal obsessives and drunken hooligans. 

The royal nuptials will offer pomp and circumstance on a grand scale, starting with a global guest list of 1,900 that includes kings and queens, sports stars, music royalty, the couple's university chums, Royal Air Force pilots and charity workers, as well as friends and family. 

Royal carriages drawn by mounted troops of the Household Calvary will roll to the palace in a sweeping procession under fluttering rows of Union Jacks. Hundreds of thousands are expected to line a parade route scrubbed clean in recent days. 

Westminster Abbey itself has been remade into a blooming forest, with six field maples and two hornbeams lining the aisle to the altar. 

William and Kate have been intimately involved in planning their wedding, officials say, from the music to the flowers to the cake — in fact, two cakes. Kate opted for a traditional white-iced fruitcake while William made sure that was accompanied by his childhood favorite, a chocolate biscuit cake. 

Britain has not seen a royal celebration on this scale since 1981, when Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer at 
St. Paul's Cathedral. 

Much is at stake for the royal family, who hope the latest match bolsters the Windsor dynasty, which has been buffeted by a series of failed marriages, including those of Charles and Diana, Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, and Princess Anne and Mark Phillips

Despite the tawdry way Charles and Diana's fairy tale ended — in a 1996 divorce after embarrassing admissions of adultery on both sides — most Britons feel an outpouring of goodwill for his son William and fiancee Kate. 

The British government also hopes the wedding will lift people's spirits during a period of tough austerity measures. 

The Conservative-led government is cutting 81 billion pounds ($135 billion) in spending through 2015, slashing hundreds of thousands of government jobs and sharply hiking tuition fees. 

Excitement built Thursday, as a crowd of die-hard fans camped out in tents and sleeping bags swelled near the 1,000-year-old abbey. 

Among them was India Marlow-Prince, a 17-year-old from London who was picnicking with friends. The trio painted their faces with the Union Jack and wore tiaras and matching hot pink T-shirts with the homemade slogan "Will and Kate forever." 

"She is the Diana of our generation. And Wills is a babe," Marlow-Prince said. "We are a little annoyed at her for taking him, but there's always Harry." 

Prince Charles' wife Camilla, the duchess of Cornwall, delighted royal fans by emerging from her residence nearby. 
"We're all ready for tomorrow," she said. "It's wonderful and we're all very excited." 

More royal-watchers gathered outside the five-star Goring Hotel, where Kate and her family were spending her last night as a single woman. A canopy was erected over the entrance to block onlookers from catching sight of Kate when she emerges in her wedding gown Friday morning. 

The dress has been the best-kept secret of this very public event. Its designer remains unconfirmed, and hundreds of millions of TV viewers will see it for the first time when Middleton steps out of herRolls-Royce at the abbey. Her husband-to-be will get a first glimpse a few minutes later, when she makes her entrance. 

After Friday morning's ceremony, the couple will travel by carriage to the palace and emerge onto the balcony for a precisely timed kiss — at 1:25 p.m. (8:25 a.m. EDT) — followed by a ceremonial fly-past of military aircraft. 

Then the partying starts. Some 650 people are invited to a luncheon with the queen, and later that night 300 close friends and family will attend a black-tie evening bash. 

The palace says Queen Elizabeth II and her husband, Prince Philip, planned to go away for the evening, leaving the younger royals free to party unfettered — and Harry to make his best man's speech away from his octogenarian grandparents' ears. 

British singer Ellie Goulding, 24, is reportedly going to perform, and rumors have it that Harry has even planned a breakfast for those with the stamina to dance all night. 

Hundreds of thousands of people across the country will celebrate as well, for the day has been declared a public holiday. More than 5,500 official street parties are planned, including one by the anti-monarchist group Republic and another on Downing Street, home to Prime Minister David Cameron

Cameron told CBS the wedding will bring "happiness and joy and light relief after some difficult times." 

In William and Kate's wedding program, released Thursday and on sale for 2 pounds ($3), the couple said they have been deeply touched by the outpouring of affection toward them. 

"We are both so delighted that you are able to join us in celebrating what we hope will be one of the happiest days of our lives," they wrote. "The affection shown to us by so many people during our engagement has been incredibly moving, and has touched us both deeply." 

They also released a new photograph by celebrity photographer Mario Testino — a warm black-and-white image showing them with broad smiles and sparkling teeth. 

Middleton will not promise to "obey" her new husband in her vows but instead to "love, comfort, honor and keep" him. 

She will walk up the aisle to the sounds of "I was glad," the anthem setting of Psalm 122 composed by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry for the coronation of King Edward VII in 1902. The anthem was also sung at the 1981 wedding of William's parents. 

But as wedding excitement heated up, the weather in London cooled down. Royal wedding fans may want to pack extra umbrellas. 

Gray skies were forecast for Friday, with a 30 percent chance of rain at the time of the ceremony, the Meteorological Office said. Some sunshine might break through in the morning, with temperatures rising to about 66 degrees.

Thursday 28 April 2011

Countdown begins for Britain’s biggest party

The last time Britain saw such frenzy was July 29, 1981, when Prince Charles married Lady Diana. Today, again, the royal family is set to dazzle when their son Prince William marries Kate Middleton in the ancient Westminster Abbey. The event to be watched live by a record two billion audience <P> Planned and choreographed to the last second, Britain is known for organising such royal spectacles better than any other country.It is a national holiday in Britain, and it is clearly party-time for many people, momentarily setting aside the effects of economic downturn.

The pomp, pageantry and history associated with the royal family have attracted millions from far and wide. Fans of the royal family have poured into London to occupy every available inch along the wedding procession route, outside the Abbey and the Buckingham Palace.

Camping in the city
For many among them, this is their third royal wedding, having camped on the route during the wedding of Queen Elizabeth in 1947, and Prince Charles and Lady Diana’s in 1981.
A media village has sprung up near the palace with all the world’s major news broadcasters setting up temporary studios. Clapham Common, a patch of land in south London, is hosting a makeshift campsite for the fans. People are paying £75 (Rs5,500) to camp there for three nights. And for those opting for luxury tents, the price is £3,500 (Rs2.55 lakh) for three nights. These come equipped with beds made with Egyptian cotton, bathrooms with running water, sheepskin carpets, champagne and hot meals.
Bollywood & bhangra 
Those who cannot make it to London will celebrate in street parties, another quintessentially British tradition.
The parties will include Bollywood-style dancing to bhangra music in places such as Southall, where members of the Middleton family lived years ago. Virendra Sharma, the Labour MP from Ealing Southall, has written to residents to celebrate the event with street parties.

Eric Pickles, the Communities secretary, said: “Royal wedding street parties are a great British tradition. So if folks want to get together to organise a street party to celebrate, we have made it as easy as possible without endless form filling.”