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22:17There are three Aquarius to Her Majesty within the palace, one of them also performing the role of Deputy Master
22:23of the Household.
22:25In addition to the Queen's page, Her Majesty's most senior personal servant, there are also three categories of page.
22:33Pages of the chambers, pages of the presents, and pages of the back stairs.
22:39Now, shall we move on to ladies of the bedchamber?
22:42If the weather's fine, Prince Charles will make his way to the altar and leave later with Lady Diana in
22:47the 1902 state Landau.
22:49It was first used by King Edward VII and is now favoured by the Queen to meet foreign heads of
22:54state.
22:55Its wet weather replacement will be the Scottish state.
23:01Yes, ma'am?
23:02Could I speak to the Prince of Wales as private secretary, please?
23:06One moment, please.
23:13I'm afraid there's no answer, but I will certainly let Mr. Adeen know he called.
23:27Yes, ma'am?
23:29I was wondering which number to call to speak to the Queen.
23:32One moment, please.
23:40Her Majesty is at a reception, ma'am, but I shall inform her of your call.
25:55Not so long ago, there was a little girl, and her name was Emily.
26:02Good morning, Mum. More letters for you.
26:07She had a shop.
26:12There she is.
26:15It was rather an unusual shop, because it didn't sell anything.
26:19You see, everything in that shop window was a thing that somebody had once lost.
26:24The Prince of Wales and I are incredibly grateful that you've all come out here to join us this evening
26:30in support of a cause that's incredibly close to our hearts.
26:35Protecting our local wildlife is crucial. It is a...
26:41You use your hands far too much. Make gestures when you talk.
26:45Gestures reveal us whether we're anxious or agitated or coarse.
26:51It's best not to give that away. One should never try to show one's emotions.
26:56Now, Queen Mary famously taught her ladies-in-waiting
27:00to use rope to stop their arms flapping about like windmills.
27:08Oh, that's better.
27:10Thanks, Karen.
27:16The Prince of Wales and I are so incredibly grateful
27:21to all of you for coming here this evening and showing your support
27:24to a cause that is so incredibly close to both of our hearts,
27:29especially the Prince of Wales.
27:30I haven't heard from him for three weeks.
27:33He must be busy.
27:34But not to ring a single time.
27:36I asked to speak to the Queen, but she won't see me either.
27:39Is there fun?
27:40Nothing.
27:43I get letters from people all over the world,
27:45but nothing, not a squeak from the man I'm supposed to marry.
27:50How are you all?
27:51Good.
27:52Penny's taking your room.
27:54And Peter's over.
27:56All the time.
27:58Of course.
27:58He's in love with Virginia.
28:00Stop it.
28:01Oh, don't miss yourself.
28:02We're still going.
28:20Go ahead.
28:22How are you?
28:22Go ahead.
28:24Go ahead.
28:25Good.
28:25It's a good time.
28:28Come in.
28:28Welcome to Ménage al Troie.
28:30Come in.
28:34Here she is.
28:37You're so kind of you to write.
28:39Oh, not at all. It's the very least I could do.
28:41And the Prince of Wales told me he was going away for six weeks and not taking you.
28:46May I?
28:48Oh.
28:49I said, that's not very nice.
28:51Your poor, brand-spankingly gorgeous young fiancée, all alone in the house.
28:56You're actually left all alone in the palace.
28:58Yes.
28:59Well, not the house.
29:00Yes. That's what the Prince of Wales calls by the palace.
29:03It's what they all call it, the house.
29:19The concept here is no main courses, just starters and desserts.
29:23So no need to feel guilty about ordering the food, because it's pretty much all you're getting.
29:27I'll have that delicious duck and truffle ravioli thing I had last time,
29:31and then the orange and chocolate creamy creation that's stalked my dreams ever since.
29:40I'll have the same.
29:42You sure?
29:44Very happy to go with the flow.
29:46Well, he'll love that.
29:48He's so fussy and set in his ways.
29:50He'll love it if you adapt to him.
30:00Trio of chocolate mousses with vanilla cream and candied orange.
30:17You know, I took the Prince of Wales here once.
30:20Thinking he might like to try something new.
30:22He loathed it.
30:23Oh?
30:23He loathed.
30:25Not just the concept or the decor or the people,
30:28but they made the cardinal mistake of refusing to put a soft-boiled egg on top.
30:34What?
30:36He has a soft-boiled egg with everything.
30:38You must know that.
30:40And he never eats garlic,
30:42because of this bizarre new rule come suppertime he's always ravenous.
30:48Which new rule?
30:50The lunch rule.
30:54Darling, I would have thought it would have been one of the first things you'd have noticed about him.
30:58The Prince of Wales doesn't eat lunch.
31:01Well, never.
31:01Not if he can help it.
31:03And if he's forced to because of some engagement,
31:06it puts him in a terrible mood.
31:07And he drones on and on about gas and bloating
31:10and wasted energy due to needless digestion.
31:14I try to cheer him up,
31:16but when his tummy goes, so does his sense of humour, I'm afraid.
31:20One of his awful gurus put him onto it.
31:23Well, not gurus, but you know how he loves to surround himself
31:26with dreary old men and daddy substitutes.
31:29No.
31:32Darling, you really know nothing, do you?
31:36You need a proper Fred tutorial.
31:41Ah, si. Capisco.
31:54Who's your Fred?
31:58It's my new name for the Prince of Wales.
32:00And he calls me Gladys.
32:02It's harmless nonsense, really.
32:05Right.
32:07Anyway, one of his boring friends,
32:10probably Lawrence Vanderpost,
32:11good luck with that, by the way, snooze,
32:14got into his head and said that it was only healthy
32:16to eat two meals a day.
32:17And since Fred says that
32:19breakfast is too delicious to give up
32:21and dinner's too important.
32:22It had to be lunch.
32:30Now that you mention it,
32:33we've hardly been with one another at lunchtime,
32:35so I haven't really noticed.
32:36The fact is, we've hardly been with one another at all.
32:39That's not true.
32:41It is.
32:45You met at Babington Horse Trials?
32:46Yes.
32:47Then Verdi's Requiem at the Albert Hall,
32:49with the chaperone.
32:50Branny, yes.
32:50Who didn't let you out of her sight for a second.
32:52What a second?
32:53Then the weekend at Balmoral,
32:55where you were a complete triumph.
32:57It'll go down in history
32:58as one of the great Balmoral debuts,
33:00the perfect ten.
33:02And then...
33:04Highgraf?
33:07Golly.
33:08He hopes he tells you everything.
33:10Well, we talk most days.
33:15What did you think of it?
33:16His new house?
33:18Highgraf?
33:19Hmm.
33:21It's, um...
33:22It's lovely.
33:23Isn't it?
33:24Hmm.
33:24Hmm.
33:27He asked me what I would do with it
33:29if I was decorating.
33:32Did he?
33:33Hmm, yes.
33:35I'm rather good at all that.
33:38And what did you say?
33:39Well, he said I'd like to shoot it up a bit.
33:42Make it a bit less stuffy.
33:44Give it a bit of colour,
33:45some yellows and peaches.
33:48And don't forget green,
33:49his favourite.
33:50And green.
33:51Do you garden?
33:53Not really.
33:53He's obsessed by gardening.
33:55Yes, I know.
33:56He was already talking about
33:57either a wild garden
33:59or a walled garden.
34:00Both.
34:02Both.
34:03And a kitchen garden
34:04and a sundial garden.
34:05Do you fish?
34:06No, not really.
34:07What about hunting?
34:08Not if I can help it.
34:09More of a townie, really.
34:12So you see yourself
34:13living more in London
34:14than in the country?
34:16Why do you ask?
34:19Just curious.
34:20Oh.
34:22No, I'm sorry.
34:23I can't stay for coffee.
34:25Well, then let me get this.
34:28Absolutely not.
34:29I'm the senior party here.
34:31Oh, please.
34:32Well, let's go Dutch.
34:35Good idea.
34:37I'm all for sharing.
35:01I'm all for sharing.
35:08No, no.
35:35Lady Spencer is here to see you.
35:37She asked if she could wait.
35:38thank you can I help you ma'am I need to speak to the Prince of Wales as soon as
35:43possible I'm afraid he's unavailable is that what he asked you to tell me if my
35:55future wife wants to speak to me make an excuse no his Royal Highness is
36:01unavailable because he's on an aeroplane flying home I thought he was flying back
36:07tomorrow he was always flying back today what are these those are drawings of
36:20what I believe it's a bracelet which the Prince of Wales has had made
36:29for who
36:44so
37:11Yes, ma'am?
37:12I need to speak to the Queen. I need to speak to her.
37:15Ma'am. Don't fog me off.
37:16It is absolutely essential that I see the Queen.
37:19This wedding can't go ahead.
37:21It'll be a disaster for everyone.
37:23Her Majesty is unavailable at the moment, but I shall...
37:45...
37:49...
43:20For the princess of Wales.
43:45Shall we begin the rehearsal?
44:52Yes, yes.
44:54Yes.
45:28how were rehearsals
45:30mommy and i thought lovely
45:32margaret disagrees
45:34charles loves
45:36someone else
45:38how many times
45:40can this family
45:42make the same mistake
45:45forbidding marriages
45:48that should be allowed
45:51forcing others
45:52that shouldn't
45:56paying the consequences each time
46:02he's marrying diana
46:04but he's still in love with the other one
46:08let me say something as a man
46:11the older diana gets
46:13the more confident
46:15diana becomes
46:17the more beautiful
46:18diana becomes
46:20but she will
46:22the more charles will fall in love with her
46:25and this will be fine
46:27in the meantime
46:28he
46:30juggles them both
46:31that's how it works
46:36that's how it's always worked
46:39it's madness
46:40we can stop them now
46:42before they tie the knot
46:43not just for the sake of the monarchy
46:46but
46:46for them
46:47as human beings
46:54we have to stop them
46:56now
46:57now
46:57now
46:57now
46:58now
47:05now
47:06now
47:42Mummy?
47:48When your great-grandmother, Queen Mary, was a beautiful young princess, she was about to marry her Prince Charming, but
47:58before they got to the church, he fell ill and died.
48:02But everyone had been so impressed with her that they put her together with his younger brother.
48:06Only one problem, the younger brother was Prince Charmless.
48:11Dull and shy.
48:13There was no attraction, certainly no love.
48:17But in order to make the marriage work, they were encouraged to focus on the bigger idea.
48:23Duty.
48:27They worked and worked and worked.
48:31And out of that work, a tiny seed grew, a seed of respect and admiration, a seed that grew into
48:37a flower they could eventually call love.
48:48They were married for 42 years.
48:51They stabilised the country that was at war with itself.
48:54And they left the crown stronger, while all around them, the great monarchies of Europe fell.
49:06Now, I cannot claim to be the most intuitive mother, but I do think I know when one of my
49:10children is unhappy.
49:14Whatever wretchedness you are feeling now, whatever doubts you harbour,
49:23if you could follow the example of your great-grandmother,
49:29love and happiness will surely follow.
49:32What do you think?
50:07I don't know.
50:44I don't know.
51:30I don't know.
51:30I don't know.
51:30I don't know.
51:31I don't know.
51:59I don't know.
52:09I don't know.
52:15I don't know.
52:43I don't know.
52:45I don't know.
53:07I don't know.
53:12I don't know.
53:45I don't know.
53:45I don't know.
53:45I don't know.
53:53I don't know.
54:03I don't know.
54:16I don't know.
54:27I don't know.
54:42I don't know.
54:51I don't know.
54:56I don't know.
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