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Princess Eugenie wedding: celebrities and royal guests gather for ceremony Princess Eugenie wedding: royal marries at star-studded ceremony
(about 1 hour later)
Guests and fans of the royal family have arrived in Windsor for the second royal wedding in the town this year, that of Princess Eugenie to Jack Brooksbank. Roads were closed, balloted tickets offered to members of the public and the streets of Windsor scattered with royal devotees, but this was, insisted the father of the bride before the service, “not a public wedding. This is meant to be a family wedding.”
The princess, an art gallery director and the younger daughter of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, married her long-term partner, who works as a “tequila brand ambassador”, at St George’s Chapel in Windsor. The ceremony was attended by the Queen, senior royals and celebrities including Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Robbie Williams and Demi Moore. And so it turned out when Princess Eugenie, the younger daughter of Prince Andrew and Sarah, Duchess of York, married Jack Brooksbank, a “tequila ambassador”, at St George’s chapel on Friday, in a service that was both a highly formal royal event and a somewhat idiosyncratic ceremony reflecting the distinct character of the younger generation of royals.
The couple followed in the footsteps of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, who married in the same chapel in May. However, the bride’s father said the ceremony would have a very different feel. “It is not a public wedding. It is meant to be a family wedding.” As befits a ceremony where guests ranged from the Queen to Ricky Martin, the service was conducted by the Dean of Westminster, with music by Andrea Bocelli, while the bridal party included Prince George and Robbie Williams’s daughter Teddy.
He said the 850-strong guest list, considerably larger than that of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, came about because the couple “have got so many friends that they need a church of that size to fit them all in”. The readings included a lesson from St Paul’s letter to the Colossians and an extract from The Great Gatsby, read by the bride’s older sister, Beatrice, which raised eyebrows for its description of the lead character as “an elegant young roughneck, a year or two over 30, whose elaborate formality of speech just missed being absurd”.
In an interview before the ceremony with the presenters Ruth Langsford and Eamonn Holmes, who were anchoring live coverage of the event for ITV Daytime, the groom described the 28-year-old Eugenie as a “bright, shining light”, while she said: “Jack is the kind of guy who, you know when you are lost at a party he will walk in and he makes everyone feel so special. He will scoop you up and talk to you and make you feel a million dollars.” The passage, the dean later explained in his address, had “reminded [Eugenie] immediately of Jack”, though it was particularly the description of Gatsby’s smile as having “a quality of eternal reassurance” that she had meant, he said pointedly.
The couple met in the ski resort Verbier in 2010 while he was working behind a bar; on giving Eugenie a “big, windscreen-wiper wave”, she knew that he liked her, she said. They referred to themselves, the princess said, as “Team Euge and Jack”. Eugenie, who is ninth in line to the throne, met Brooksbank in 2010 while he was working behind a bar in Verbier, a ski resort favoured by the royals. Describing their “love at first sight” encounter in an interview on the eve of the wedding, he said: “We just stared at each other.” Eugenie said it was his “huge, windscreen wiper wave” that first convinced her he liked her.
Getting married was “nerve-racking and a bit scary but at the end of the day, you are going to be at the end of the aisle”, she said to Brooksbank. The groom described Eugenie, 28, as a “bright, shining light”, while she said: “Jack is the kind of guy who, you know, when you are lost at a party he will walk in and he makes everyone feel so special. He will scoop you up and talk to you and make you feel a million dollars.”
Guests at the ceremony were serenaded by the tenor Andrea Bocelli and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. The readings included an extract from The Great Gatsby, read by the maid of honour, Princess Beatrice, which puzzled some observers with its description of the main character as “an elegant young rough-neck, a year or two over 30, whose elaborate formality of speech just missed being absurd”. Brooksbank, 32, who went on to manage the London nightclub Mahiki, works as a representative for a tequila brand launched by George Clooney. Eugenie, who is employed as a director at the London art gallery Hauser & Wirth, does not receive any money from the sovereign grant, which replaced the civil list, but is supported from her father’s private income.
Sitting on folding chairs outside the chapel and wrapped warmly against a cold wind, mother and daughter Enid and Charlotte Kendrick, from Penistone, near Sheffield, said they were “so excited” to have won some of the 1,200 tickets offered to members of the public to watch the bridal party from inside the grounds of Windsor Castle, and to have spotted the comedian Jimmy Carr and the presenter Richard Bacon. The BBC had demurred when offered the opportunity to broadcast the ceremony live, as it had done with the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in May, so the honour fell to ITV, anchored by the This Morning presenters Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford.
“We’re here just for the love of royalty,” said Charlotte, who works as a nurse in Leeds and remembers their family’s special tea party in 1981 when Eugenie’s uncle Prince Charles married the then Diana Spencer, and her father took photographs of the event on the television. “I just love the history. I’m a big Tudor fan.” Although senior royals may be accustomed to a more stately tone, the broadcaster’s more informal approach Langford asked if the pair wanted “any advice from an old married couple” perfectly suited the event. The guestlist of 850 250 more than the Duke and Duchess of Sussex was due to the couple having “so many friends that they need a church of that size to fit them all in”, the Duke of York said.
Nicola Tucker, whose five-year-old granddaughter Daisy was wearing a tiara, said most of her fellow Windsor residents felt affection for the royal family. “If you live in Windsor it sort of rubs off on you a little bit.” The dean broached the subject of the pressure of royal weddings and marriages in his address, noting that “of course we know that marriages, even between the kindest and most careful people, can founder because of pressures unforeseen”.
The decision of the couple to include an open-topped carriage ride after the service, leading to road closures and an estimated taxpayer bill of £2m, has attracted criticism, but Tucker said: “I think it’s such a shame if people don’t support her. The royals support our country and do so much for our country. It means a lot to foreigners, so I think it should mean a lot to us.” The “miracle”, he said, was that “so many of us keep on hoping”, adding that the newlyweds “have acknowledged their need of your support and your encouragement. They want you to believe in them.”
As the ceremony ended, the couple paused on the steps for the now customary kiss, followed by a short carriage drive through the streets of Windsor, necessitating the closure of the centre of the town and a policing bill to taxpayers estimated at £2m. The TV coverage then paused for a break in which there was a cannily placed advert for Bocelli’s new album.
Though the weather stayed dry, guests arriving at the chapel faced a cold wind that removed the hat of Williams’s mother-in-law and flashed one guest’s underwear to the TV cameras. Wrapped warmly against the gusts, Enid and Charlotte Kendrick from South Yorkshire said they were “so excited” to have won some of the 1,200 tickets offered to members of the public to watch the bridal party from inside the grounds of Windsor Castle, and to have spotted Jimmy Carr and Richard Bacon among the guests.
“We’re here just for the love of royalty,” said Charlotte Kendrick, who works as a nurse in Leeds and remembers the royal family’s special tea party in 1981 – when Eugenie’s uncle Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer – with her father taking photographs of the event from the television. “I just love the history. I’m a big Tudor fan,” she said.
Abby Osgood and Louise Blundell, from Windsor, had brought their children, who were chomping through commemorative chocolate coins and playing computer games on their phones while wrapping their coats around their ears. Why were they such royal fans? “They keep the town nice,” said Osgood. “Without the castle, the town probably wouldn’t be as nice as it is.”
Blundell said: “For me, after Harry and Meghan’s wedding, they are changing with the times and they are trying to keep it real.”
They had no doubt the couple would be happy together. Osgood said: “Now they are allowed to marry for happiness rather than a certain type or a certain breed. The royal family have learned their lesson. You need to marry someone who makes you happy in the long run.”
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