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Showing posts with label Kate Middleton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Middleton. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Kate Middleton lidera lista de personas mejor vestidas según Vanity Fair





La revista reveló algunos de los personajes que aparecen en su ranking anual, destacando a la duquesa de Cambridge por su habilidad al momento de vestirse con tenidas casuales y elegantes.

Vanity Fair destaca el estilo de Kate Middleton La revista Vanity Fair reveló un adelanto de los personajes mejor vestidos del año, según su listado anual, destacando a la duquesa de Cambridge, Kate Middleton, quien lidera el ranking, por su habilidad para estar bien vestida tanto en eventos casuales como elegantes.

Se trata de la primera vez en los 72 años de la lista, que un integrante de la familia real británica aparece a la cabeza del resto. Pero no se trata del único miembro de la realeza que llega en esta edición. La acompañan la princesa Charlene de Mónaco, la princesa Alexandra de Grecia, y la condesa Matidlde Borromeo, entre otras.

Pese a que aún no se devela el listado completo con los mejor vestidos del año, el sitio web de Vanity Fair publicó en su adelanto que, Middleton está acompañada además por Carla Bruni Sarkozy, la actriz Carey Mulligan, el actor Colin Firth, el heredero y ex novio de Paris Hilton; Stavros Niarchos; el actor Armie Hammer, y el piloto Jenson Button, entre otros.



Thursday, June 30, 2011

ROYAL VISIT: Kate-mania in Canada!

Beaming broadly, a picture-perfect Duke and Duchess of Cambridge touched down in Ottawa this afternoon to be greeted by thousands of Royal fans as they began their first official Royal tour together.


Kate looked elegant and graceful despite the blustery conditions, and concealed any nerves on this, her first major test as a fully-fledged member of the Royal family, with a wide smile.

The newlywed couple were greeted by a host of dignitaries and a wall of photographers as they stepped on to the gusty runway, before being driven to the city centre where crowds had been gathering to meet the couple since early this morning.




















They were formally greeted at the airport by the Canadian Foreign Minister. The Duchess accepted a posy from a young boy on the tarmac and chatted to him for some time before moving along the line of dignitaries as William waited for a few moments in their car.

It was adorned with a special flag created in their honour by Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper - the first to be designed by the Commonwealth country for a member of the royal family since 1962.


The flag was given Prince William’s seal of approval and that of the Queen, who was the last royal to adopt one for her own use.


The Duchess had transformed herself during the seven hour flight from London, and was wearing a dress by the hugely fashionable designer Erdem Moralioglu, favoured by Samantha Cameron and Michelle Obama. Erdem is another Canadian designer born in Montreal.

The dress was a navy, lace Cecile shift scoop-backed dress of contrast stone crepe with a navy lace overlay. The dress has a sheer lace sleeve with a scallop detail.


She sported the same nude LK Bennett £175 heels she has sported on several occasions recently. Her hairdresser, James Pryce, had also swept her hair back in a 'half up, half down' do to account for the slight breeze.

After their official welcome, they headed straight for the National War Memorial in the centre of the city.

As the couple's official car drew up along the red carpet, they were greeted by the Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife Laureen.

The 10,000 strong crowd, waving Canadian flags and flowers, cheered wildly as they stepped out. Tanned Kate looked particularly delighted at the warm reception and waved shyly.

The foursome approached the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and stood in quiet contemplation as the Last Post was played by a lone trumpeter.


William then placed a large wreath on the monument while his wife leant forwards to put down a small posey. The duchess warmly greeted the woman who had handed it to her, Mabel Girouard.

Mrs Girouard's son Bobby, 46, was killed by a suicide bomber in Afghanistan in 2006. She was chosen by the Canadian Legion as their Memorial Silver Cross Mother.

As they left the memorial the couple undertook what will be the first of many walkabouts, sending the crowd into a frenzy. There were as many screams for William as there were for Kate.

The Duchess looked delighted as she was handed armfuls of flowers and gifts.'Thank you so much. We are so delighted to be here,' she said.

Great honour: A special flag created for the young Royal couple flew from the bonnet of their car. It's the first new flag to be designed by a Commonwealth country for a member of the Royal family since 1962. Right, the Prince's standard was waved from the Canadian Air Force plane as the couple landed

Occasionally she looked over to her husband on the other side of the crowd to make sure she was moving quickly enough.


GLITTERING KATE: QUEEN OFFERS DUCHESS THE PICK OF HER JEWELS

The Mail can reveal that the Queen has given the new Duchess the pick of her fabulous collection of jewels for the 11-day trip.

The monarch, who is said to be extremely fond of her grandson’s new bride, wants Kate to shine on her first major test as a member of the Royal Family.

A few weeks ago she invited the 29-year-old Duchess into Buckingham Palace to choose from her priceless collection of tiaras, necklaces and bracelets.

Some, such as the legendary Delhi Durbar diamond and emerald necklace, belong to the Queen personally, while others are held by the monarch on behalf of the nation.

A source said: 'Although, given the largely informal theme of the tour, particularly in Canada, there is no need for tiaras or the like, the Queen owns one of the most valuable collections of jewellery.

‘The Duchess was touched by her offer. She has picked out one or two exquisite pieces she wishes to borrow.

'Her choices were made with a particular eye on the Los Angeles leg of the trip, where she knows she needs to dazzle.’

William looked equally thrilled as one woman told him;'Canada is so happy you are here.' 'Thank you, that is so kind,' he replied.

As she waited for the prince to finish Kate chatted with the Prime Minister and his wife and told them: 'That was so amazing, there were so many people there.... How many do you think?

'We have been on the go since 7.30 this morning so it's been a long day.'

Then, as the couple got into their official car, her first test over, Kate leant into her husband's shoulder and grinned broadly with undisguised relief.

But the new Duchess only had a brief respite before the couple were driven to Ottawa's Rideau Hall, the governor general's residence, for an official welcome event.

Prince William charmed the crowd by flitting between English and French, as Kate looked on admiringly.

He joked: 'It will improve as we go on,' and continued: 'Catherine and I are so delighted to be here in Canada.

'Instilled in us by our parents and grandparents, who love this country, we have been looking forward to this moment for a very long time – and before we were married, we had a longing to come here together.

'The geography of Canada is unsurpassed and is famous for being matched only by the hospitality of its people. We are so very excited about having this opportunity to experience both – and learn much more about this amazing country.'

Among those who turned out the greet the Royal couple was Jennifer Baldwin, 19, who drove for 21 hours from her home in Bloomington, Illinois, and stood in the street from 5.30am to see the couple at close quarters.

She said: 'I talked to William and congratulated him on the wedding and he said "thank you very much", he's so polite! My mum told him we had come from the U.S. and he said: "We're going there next".

'It was completely worth the journey just for that five seconds. I mean, I shook his hand!'

Francine Dorion, 50, gave the Duchess a tapestry she had made, featuring a picture of the couple kissing on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on their wedding day.

She said: 'Kate said it was beautiful and thanked me for doing it for them. She is so pretty and reminds me of Diana. She just steals you.'

Tomorrow they will take part in Canada Day - a special day for William as it would have been his mother's 50th birthday. They will be opening the Calgary Stampede and canoeing in the Northwest Territories before flying to Los Angeles.

he Duke and Duchess of Cambridge made a sombre start to their official tour with a visit to the Canadian War Memorial. Flanked by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife Laureen, they pause for a moment of silence

During the visit, Prince William will demonstrate his skills as a helicopter rescue pilot by performing a water landing. Later, they will head to Quebec City where they will don their aprons for a cooking workshop.


Tomorrow they will mark Canada Day and after their week-long tour of Canada they will jet to LA to host a gala dinner.

There, they will promote up-and-coming British film talent by introducing them to Hollywood executives.

The south Californian trip will include a $4,000-a-head three-course meal and charity polo match, giving revellers an opportunity to get close to the Duke and Duchess.

The Queen has given the new Duchess the pick of her fabulous collection of jewels for the 11-day trip.


The monarch, who is said to be extremely fond of her grandson’s new bride, wants Kate to shine on her first major test as a member of the Royal Family.

A few weeks ago she invited the 29-year-old Duchess into Buckingham Palace to choose from her priceless collection of tiaras, necklaces and bracelets, and she picked out one or two pieces to borrow.

While Kate is said to be ‘excited beyond belief’ at the prospect of the hugely anticipated tour, she is also keen not to overshadow her new husband.

It is one of the reasons she has chosen not to make any public speeches during the trip, while the Duke will make several.


In this she appears to have learnt a lesson from the experience of Princess Diana, who repeatedly stole the limelight from her then husband, Prince Charles, and in doing so unwittingly drove a wedge between them.

The prince would become particularly frustrated when, during official walkabouts, the crowds would groan and call for Diana when he approached them.

Walkabouts will be a particular feature of the Canadian leg of William and Kate’ s trip as they attempt to meet as many of their future subjects as possible.

Their arrival in the Commonwealth country, where the Queen is still sovereign, is eagerly anticipated, with frenzied minute-by-minute television coverage.

Each public appearance is expected to draw thousands of well-wishers on to the streets and large crowds gathered from early yesterday keen to meet the glamorous young newly-weds.


Some anti-royal protests are, however, expected later in the week in the French-speaking provinces, with small republican groups planning protests in Quebec City and Montreal.

‘This visit is really a battle for the hearts and minds of Canadian as to what to do down the road about the head of state in Canada,’ said University of Ottawa History Professor Michael Behiels.

They had no fears about winning over Joyce Udell, 57, a diplomat with the Canadian Government, had delayed travelling home to St John's in Newfoundland in order to see the couple.

She said: 'I don't like to use the word admire but I like her style, I like both their styles, they're not as ostentatious as some in the royal family.


'Kate, she reinvents herself with her clothes and wears the same dress twice - which the royals don't do.

'They are going to be a fabulous king and queen in the future. They are obviously in love and I think that's where their strength lies.'

Cherie Gray, 50, a by-law enforcement officer from the town of Manitouwadge, Ontario had made a six-hour detour while on holiday in the national province with husband David, 51, to see the royal couple.

She said: 'We're so excited to be here and hopefully to meet Kate - she brings a new revival to the royal family and represents the younger generation.'

June 30-July 2: The National Capital Region (Ottawa)







Thursday, April 28, 2011

Prince William and Kate Middleton's Wedding Countdown


The final day of royal wedding preparations were hectic for the royals and the public.

Royal Wedding update: Official programme, including Order of Service, available online


28th April 2011



The Official Programme for the wedding of Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton is now available for the public to download for free.



The Official Programme includes the full Order of Service (as used by guests in Westminster Abbey), a personal message of thanks from Prince William and Miss Middleton, and a photo of the Couple taken by photographer Mario Testino at the time of the Couple’s engagement. The Official Programme features Prince William’s recently updated Coat of Arms on the front cover and Catherine Middleton’s new Coat of Arms on the back cover.



The Order of Service includes full details about the processions, music, hymns, prayers and readings. The Wedding Service follows the Book of Common Prayer (Alternative Services: Series One). There will be one Lesson during the service, which the Couple have asked James Middleton to read.



The Official Programme will also be available for free electronically in three formats: as a page-turning PDF (using Flash) and an iBook compatible with Apple products, which can be downloaded from the Apple iBookstore. It is also available as an Adobe Acrobat PDF (you will need Adobe Reader to view the file)



On the wedding day, 150,000 copies of the programme will be sold by 60 Explorer Scouts and 80 Cadets (supervised by adults) for £2 per copy at locations in Green Park, Hyde Park, St James’s Park and Trafalgar Square. Profits from the sale of the Official Programme will go to benefit The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry.



Notes to editors



The photo



The Mario Testino photograph cannot be downloaded or reused in any way from the print version, Ceros or iBook. Any organisation wishing to use the imagery should contact Art Partner at: licensing@artpartner.com or gregory@artpartner.com.



The Order of Service



If reprinting the Order of Service, please use the following Copyright acknowledgment:



©The Registrars of the Convocations of Canterbury and York, 1965, 1966.



The copyright of the Alternative Services: Series One, material from which is included in this service, is assigned with effect from 1 July 1978 to the Central Board of Finance of the Church of England, and with effect from 1 January 2005 to The Archbishops’ Council of the Church of England.



The scripture reading is from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, Anglicized Edition copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States of America.



Sale of the Official Programmes



The Official Programme will be sold at the following locations:



•St. James’s Park – Marlborough Gate, North Horse Ride, Storeyard Triangle and Queen Anne’s Gate, as well as four mobile sales units around the park.

•Green Park – Green Park Underground Station, as well as two mobile sales units around the park.

•Hyde Park – Speakers Corner and at the Fun Fair, as well as two mobile sales units around the park.

•Trafalgar Square – opposite South Africa House, as well as one mobile sales unit opposite Canada House on Cockspur Street.

The Programme



The Programme will be A5 in size and printed on Novatech Matt paper (the cover is 250gsm and the inner pages are 150gsm). The paper is FSC stock produced with 100% Elemental Chlorine Free pulp.



The Programme is designed and produced by Haymarket Network Limited.



Cadets from the Greater London Reserve Forces and Cadets Association representing the Combined Cadet Force, Sea Cadet Corps, Army Cadet Force, and Air Training Corps, will be selling the Programmes alongside Explorer Scouts aged 14 to 18 years old from across London.



The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry



The main mission of The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry is to fund projects and organisations that create opportunities so all can achieve their full potential, especially those who are vulnerable or damaged by their circumstances or experiences. The Foundation aims to create lasting change in targeted focus areas and geographies, based on need and the passions and interests of Prince William and Prince Harry. Early priorities for the Foundation are young people in society, sustainable development at home and overseas and the welfare of veterans and their families.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Prince William and Kate in final royal wedding rehearsals



LONDON—Last minute rehearsals for this week’s wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton got under way before dawn in central London on Wednesday with the royal couple expected to put the final touches to their preparations.


Roads around Buckingham Palace and along the route the couple will take from Westminster Abbey after Friday’s service were closed as about 1,000 members of the armed forces took part in a full-scale practice for the couple’s big day.

Carriages that will carry members of the wedding party also took part alongside mounted cavalry, with a full dress-rehearsal involving the clergy and broadcasters scheduled for Thursday.

The abbey itself has already been closed off to the public, and William and Middleton will be there for some final rehearsals on Wednesday, although royal officials declined to give details.

“As with anybody’s wedding, you can imagine rehearsals happening up until the eve of the wedding,” a spokesman for William said.

Across the capital, bunting is going up and flags are beginning to be hoisted, while a small army of media from around the world has descended on makeshift studios set up outside Buckingham Palace and along the route.

The ceremony is predicted to attract a global TV audience of some two billion people.

“We have been coming over in waves, we have a cast of thousands,” said NBC Washington news anchor, Wendy Rieger.

“I called back to work yesterday, and said the only Americans I can find here right now are people with cameras on their shoulders, you know. The media is bumping all over each other,” she told Reuters TV outside Westminster Abbey.

Some royal fans have already begun camping outside the abbey to secure the best spots to watch Friday’s events, and hundreds of thousands of people are expected to start arriving in London in the next days.

MORE THAN A MILLION VISITORS

VisitBritain, the national tourism agency, is predicting an extra 600,000 tourists in the capital on the day, meaning there would be a total of some 1.1 million visitors with 40 per cent of those coming from abroad.

“That could bring anything up to 50 million pounds,” a spokesman said.

The number of inbound flights to Britain for the weekend had risen by 244 per cent while online travel booking company Expedia said hotel bookings had surged 266 per cent when the wedding date was announced, the spokesman added.

London and Partners, the agency which promotes the city, said it expected there would be 600,000 people actually lining the streets, the same number as came to watch the 1981 wedding of Prince Charles to Princess Diana.

Despite the interest, those planning last minute trips could still find somewhere to stay.

“From what we’re being told by contacts in the industry there are still rooms available,” a spokeswoman said.

However, anyone coming to London to watch the procession or camping out could be in for a cold and wet experience, with weather forecasters predicting showers and a brisk wind.

On Tuesday, police appealed to the public to help them spot any potential troublemakers, while promising that they would not tolerate any attempt to disrupt the event.

Some 5,000 police officers will be on duty to deal with potential threats ranging from international Islamist militants to anarchists and stalkers.

Meanwhile the one-and-a-half mile processional route has undergone a deep clean to get it looking spic and span.

Much has been made of Kate Middleton’s pedigree: the coal in her veins, the Ellen DeGeneres connection, the tattooed uncle.

Any woman who marries a royal will have her family tree scoured for signs of weakness, intrigue and significance. As soon as Middleton emerged as a serious girlfriend, U.S. genealogist William Addams Reitwiesner began digging through the documents.

Reitwiesner, who has published genealogies on U.S. political figures, royals and noted Europeans, amassed thousands of British records and plotted out the family lines with a colleague, but died a few weeks before the engagement was announced.

Along with discovering — no surprises here — a working middle class background, Reitwiesner found that Ellen DeGeneres and Middleton, along with Prince William himself, share a common ancestral couple: Sir Thomas Fairfax and Agnes Gascoigne. That makes them all 14th cousins.

“You will have millions of 14th cousins,” said Christopher Child, a genealogist with New England Historic Genealogical Society, who edited Reitwiesner’s account.

The Middleton family tree is a beacon for Britain’s upwardly mobile, a testament to the fact that fairy tales can come true, so long as your great grandfather moves from the coal mines of northeastern England to a carpentry gig near London.

Kate Middleton, like every human being, has 64 great great-great-great grandparents. Through their marriages and job choices, these lawyers, butchers and miners set into action a course of events that none of them would have been able to predict: a Royal marriage.

In 1821, Middleton’s great-great-great-great grandfather James Harrison was a miner in the north east corner of England. Industrialization was well underway and new rail lines had opened the possibility of mining operations in smaller inland villages like Hetton-le-Hole.

The underground world where Harrison toiled was brutal. He and his colleagues were “slaves in all but name,” according to the town’s historical record, working long hours for little pay.

It was far removed from palace life in London, where Prince William’s great-great-great-great-great uncle, King George IV, was incurring major debts, a bad case of gout and a spare tire around his waist as an overly indulgent monarch.

When George IV died and his younger brother ascended the throne, Harrison’s male children, as young as 11, were being lowered into the coal pits. It was Harrison’s great grandson Thomas, (Middleton’s great grandfather), who broke from the coal mining tradition, learned carpentry and moved closer to London after World War II, where his daughter, Dorothy, made a match with an engineer and lorry driver named Ronald Goldsmith. Their marriage would produce a daughter named Carole, who would become an airline stewardess, and later, mother-in-law to Prince William.

While Carole Middleton’s hard-working ancestors died of exhaustion, internal strangulation and emphysema, her husband Michael had a more middle class pedigree where death from natural decay, heart disease or diabetes was more common, according to the census records obtained by Reitwiesner. Michael’s Yorkshire ancestors were lawyers, aldermen and gentry. Of course, there was one relative — Edward Thomas Glassborough — who spent some time in prison for unspecified acts in 1881. Every family has one of those.

“It could have been debts, we don’t really know. He was older and married with children,” Child said.

One of the most successful branches of Michael Middleton’s family tree is the Lupton family. The Luptons were descended from tradesmen, clergy and surgeons. Olive Lupton, Kate Middleton’s redoubtable great grandmother, held the family together after World War I. She schooled her four children in camping and survival skills in the Lake District, taught them resilience, and perhaps most importantly, left them the equivalent of $15 million when she died in 1936, undercutting the rags to riches mythology of Kate’s family.

One of those children was Kate’s grandfather, Peter Middleton, who was a pilot in the Royal Air Force and later a civilian pilot.

His son Michael carried on the tradition and met his wife when he worked for the airlines.

After Carole and Michael Middleton began their own family, they left the skies for the more whimsical world of children’s party supplies. Their lucrative mail-order company Party Pieces gave the family the resources to send their children to Marlborough College, where boarding fees are currently £29,310 ($46,000) a year. Their eldest daughter Kate then attended St. Andrews University in Scotland, where she met Prince William and eventually became his girlfriend.

Since the relationship was exposed, the class differences between the two have been fodder for the British press. At Prince William’s passing-out parade at Sandhurst, Carole Middleton was ridiculed for chewing gum.

Making fun of the “commoner” who marries well is nothing new for those who roll with the elite.

Elizabeth Woodville, who married King Edward IV, was “recent gentry, rather like the Middletons,” said Morris Bierbrier, a former co-editor for Debrett’s Peerage & Baronetage, in London.

“When the marriage took place in the 15th century, people regarded her as extremely low born, not fit to be a queen. She was aristocratic on her mother’s side, but her father was, how do I say it, a handsome young man who ran off with the widow of the duke.”

Bierbrier says there are working class strains in all recent marriages into the royal family.

“With the Duchess of Cornwall you find the same sort of mix, but her aristocratic ancestors are more aristocratic (than Middleton’s),” he said.

Bierbrier said genealogists thought they might find connections to the more aristocratic Welsh Middleton family, but that wasn’t the case.

“Compared to Mark Phillips (former husband of Princess Anne) and Lord Snowdon (former husband of Princess Margaret), she’s got a more important line descending from King Edward III,” he said.

But that’s nothing special. Millions of people are descended from the king, who reigned in the Middle Ages.

Consider the tattooed Gary Goldsmith, Middleton’s uncle. Goldsmith, who is also a descendant of the good king, owns an Ibiza mansion named “Casa de Bang-Bang” and occasionally shames the Middleton family with his antics. He’s been on his best behaviour lately, trying to get in his sister’s good books after undercover reporters filmed him allegedly offering up some cocaine and prostitutes in 2009.

It just goes to show, you can have a family tree with working class ancestors, middle class ancestors, and even a king from centuries past, but you can’t prune the Gary Goldsmiths of the family. You can only polish them and hope for the best.



Thursday, April 7, 2011

Prince William and Kate's Royal Wedding: Bridesmaids, Hotel Arrangements, Party, and Honeymoon

Speculation Grows: Will Prince Harry Bring On-Again-Off-Again Love Chelsy Davy?












As plans for the royal wedding take shape and more details slowly leak out to the public, the big news is that best man Prince Harry might be getting back together with his on-again-off-again love Chelsy Davy.
Harry is said to be bringing Davy, who may be moving back to London, to the April 29 wedding, royal author Katie Nicholl told "Good Morning America" today.
Regardless, it's clear that both princes -- William and Harry -- have been left alone to pursue royal romance on their own terms.
"The royal family has learned lessons from Diana. The great legacy that Diana left William is [that] he can or has been able to marry whomsoever he wants," biographer Andrew Morton, author of "Diana: Her True Story," told "GMA."
While the couple wants to ensure that Princess Diana is part of the wedding, the two also wants to forge their own way.
"One of the things that William is very concerned about is that Catherine doesn't try to follow in Diana's footsteps, and that she makes her own identity," said Morton.
To make their wedding their own, the couple has played a role in every step of the wedding planning. William and Kate Middleton reportedly plan to take over London's exclusive Goring Hotel for their reception. Kate could possibly spend her last night at the Goring before she takes her vows, although William will probably stay elsewhere.
The Goring Hotel, located near Buckingham Palace, is rumored to be the location for the royal wedding party's guests. The 100-year-old hotel is intimate, luxurious and private, and has its own royal pedigree: During the queen's coronation, many of the royal families of Europe stayed at the Goring.
The Goring also has historical significance. Its kitchen was the command center for the Chief of Allied Forces during World War I.
Winston Churchill visited his mother who lived at the Goring in 1919. More recently, it has hosted the likes of David Frost, actor Christopher Plummer of "The Sound of Music," Vanessa Redgrave, Margaret Thatcher and Sarah Ferguson.
Kate Still Undecided on Bridesmaids
Kate has yet to select all of her bridesmaids.
"Kate's sister is going to be chief bridesmaid," said Nicholl, who wrote "William and Henry Behind the Palace Walls." As for the rest of the bridesmaids, "she's still undecided," said Nicholl. "It seems to me that she's not great at decision making."
As far as a bachelor party goes, Harry made a secret trip to a club in London, but William may want to have the party outside London.
"I think he wants it to be more low-key than that. Somewhere where they really can't be spied on. William is taking the matter into his own hands," said Nicholl.

Royal wedding details announced

Carriage procession, Buckingham Palace reception and dancing will mark marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton
Clarence House has revealed further details of April's royal wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton.
It was not entirely unexpected news – the couple having already ruled out a beach party, a country hotel or a register office – that Middleton will be driven by car to Westminster Abbey along the traditional processional route of the Mall, Horse Guards Parade, Whitehall and Parliament Square.
The service, at 11am on 29 April, will be conducted by the dean of the abbey, the Very Rev John Hall. The archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, will marry the couple and the Right Rev Richard Chartres, the bishop of London and a longstanding friend of the royal family, will give the address.
The couple will return along the same route, but this time in a carriage procession.
The Queen, who has a larger pad than the Middletons, is laying on a reception for the couple's "official and private" guests. In the evening, when the VIPs have gone and granny and grandad have retired to bed, Prince Charles will host a private dinner followed by dancing for close friends and family.
The reception is being funded by the royal family with the Middletons, who are wealthy from their business in children's party accessories, chipping in. The state will bear the cost of security and the troops on parade will be drawn from detachments already on duty in London.
No word yet on the honeymoon. But Prince William is toying with Australians. Yesterday, while in Australia visiting the portions of the country hit by Cyclone Yasi, he told press that he loves scuba diving and has always wanted to dive the Great Barrier Reef. He said he would have to come back and even went so far as to say, "...maybe we'll have a honeymoon in Cairns [Australia]."
Ever since the news broke about the royal wedding of the century, the web has been buzzing in the search for Kate Middleton and her beau Price William’s wedding details.
This much we know: their April 29 wedding will be at Westminster Abbey and Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams will marry the couple of nearly 8 years in an ceremony.
Lucky for the rest of the world, the big bash will viewable via television and the Internet.
Keep reading for more details!
Post (gigantic) ring exchange, the newlyweds will then journey from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace — allegedly in a horse-drawn carriage. Just like a fairytale.
Then, William’s grannie, Queen Elizabeth II, will host a no doubt glamorous reception at Buckingham Palace.
That wedding night, dad Charles is to host a dinner and dance at Buckingham Palace for family members and close friends of the newlyweds.
So, now that those logistics are figured out… what about the dress?! Who will design it?
And, who will do the music!?
Will the new couple have oldies but goodies Paul McCartney and Elton John provide music, like they did at Diana’s funeral? Or will they just hire a DJ or get a standard wedding band?  Think of pressure on those guys.
After all is said and done, the couple will surely head out on a honeymoon, though there’s no word yet on the couple’s plans.