It was odd, especially when you compare to Eugenie's and later Ella Windsor wedding. Whatever the reason - we really will never know. However I do know that Louise and James Windsor were also not included in the original list. Many people hoped that they might be in the Wedding party, but they were not even invited.
The reason was children were not invited as guest to the wedding - there was an age limit and they were under it. I think that the Queen personally requested that they be included.
Well, if we compare with Eugenie's wedding, it's rather odd that neither Savannah, Isla, nor Mia was included in the wedding party. For one, if it's about age, they're older than Charlotte so either of them would be better choice. If, say, Savannah were included, maybe George and Charlotte wouldn't seem to be as isolated (they clung to their parents before and after the ceremony, unlike during Eugenie's).
HMQ had to personally request the presence of Lady Louise and Viscount Severn?? Wow.
On the other hand, I was very happy to see that Harry refused to snub Sarah Ferguson, unlike William.
Sarah has/had only ever shown great kindness to Diana's boys, so banning her from his wedding always struck me as petty and mean spirited of William.
If people don't have children at weddings, it's usually either to keep the numbers down because they're on a tight budget, or because they're worried that young children will yell and scream and their parents won't have the sense to take them outside. Louise and James were well past the yelling and screaming stage, and money was hardly an issue. I'm amazed that the Queen had to intervene to get Harry to invite his own first cousins.
What saddened me was seeing Doria Ragland sitting all on her own. She was very dignified, but how awful to be sat on your own in Westminster Abbey, with the eyes of the world on you, when you're bound to ne nervous. Whomever else they did or didn't invite, couldn't they have asked someone - cousin, neighbour, friend, colleague? - to accompany her.
What saddened me was seeing Doria Ragland sitting all on her own. She was very dignified, but how awful to be sat on your own in Westminster Abbey, with the eyes of the world on you, when you're bound to ne nervous. Whomever else they did or didn't invite, couldn't they have asked someone - cousin, neighbour, friend, colleague? - to accompany her.
I didn't know that. Lots of people decide to not have children at weddings though.
William may not necessarily be close to Sarah. He probably didn't snub her just didn't have any relationship with her. He is close to Peter and Zara and never seemed that close to the York girls. That may be changing now with the realigned family dynamics.
IIRC the book specifically stated that Serena Williams herself claimed she wasn't a friend but indeed just an acquaintance of Meghan.
That statement by Serena was made in 2017. They became much friendlier later. The comment wasn’t made to Tom Bower. He just repeated it in his book.
So. I fail to see the relevance. Finding Freedom I distinctly remember said they met and became firm friends from day one. Well they didn’t. And to be fair. Why Serena Williams. She has never exactly covered herself in gold as regards her attitude.
If I was going for a tennis star numerous others come to mind as examples of dignity, equality, feminism and attitude.
It's not available for sale in the United States yet.
Perhaps Mr Scobie’s new book, that has just been announced, will address that FigTree.
Oops, I wasn’t going to post in this thread again, but anyway, while I ‘m here …
“60 Minutes” has Tom Bower, and Valentine Low of the Times, on tonight here in Oz.
And Mr Bower is being reported in some mainstream media, about some podcast comments he made, regarding the seating at St Paul’s for the Jubilee … details he learnt too late to put in “Revenge”.
(The Sussexes arrived late at Wellington Barracks for the group bus, wanted the others to move along so they could sit on the aisle. We’re told no, they had to take the seats assigned to them, asked who said so, we’re told it was his grandmother. Mr Bower says a senior military man relayed the incident to him)
Well, the book is now pretty much in the public eye, if “60 Minutes” is covering it … and not just the breakfast shows.
I downloaded it as a Kindle book from Amazon today in the United States. It is also available in hardback and paperback.
I'm about a third of the way through, and the main thing I've noticed is how many editorial mistakes it has. For instance, it talks about Thomas Markle being from "New England," even though it says he is from Pennsylvania, which is not in New England.
In other places, it talks about Suits being on "American Network." It was on USA Network.
I don't feel like I've read anything new so far, but we'll see...
Sarah has/had only ever shown great kindness to Diana's boys, so banning her from his wedding always struck me as petty and mean spirited of William.
TLLK, I had forgotten about how close that cash-for-access scandal was to William's wedding. Yes that could definitely explain why Sarah was persona non grata.
If William is regarded as not close to Sarah York and therefore didn’t invite her to his nuptials, how long ago before his wedding had Harry actually met and spent some time (if any) with the second cousins that weren’t invited? That is, ‘the paternal second cousins once removed (i.e. the children of the Duke of Gloucester, the Duke of Kent, Prince Michael, and Princess Alexandra) and his paternal third cousins (the grandchildren of the Kents of the Gloucesters)?’
I presume Harry and William probably met the extended family every year to HM's Christmas lunch at BP.
Harry was 33 at the time of his marriage. He stopped living at Kensington Palace in mid 1997 after his mother’s death, just before the age of 13.
And we really don’t know whether he or his brother played a lot with the Kent or Gloucester offspring, all of whom were several years older than Harry. The Gloucester children were born in 1974, 1977 and 1980 for example. Harry was born in 1984.
My point is, why is it considered obligatory to invite second cousins who you might have seen once a year for the last twenty or so years to your wedding?
Criticism of inaccuracies in Bower’s book ‘Revenge’.
Criticism of inaccuracies in Bower?s book by those cited as having been interviewed and weren?t.
Tom Bower's 'Revenge' Book About Meghan Markle Faces Criticism
Then on July 22, the royal commentator Kristen Meinzer wrote on Twitter that she was wrongly cited in the book as a friend to the duchess and that she was never interviewed by Bower.
Meinzer previously told Insider that Bower recycled her quotes used in the book from an interview with a news outlet without giving credit to the publication.
"'No one,' agreed Kristen Meinzer, a friend and a writer, 'could have been prepared for the level of racism and misogyny and vitriol that she's faced,'" Bower wrote.
Some actors and staff discovered that Meghan's attitude occasionally shifted. Sometimes she arrived late and her empathy morphed into near-arrogance," Bower writes, adding that coworkers thought Markle's tone had become sharper and more aggressive during the sixth season of the show.
But Markle's "Suits" coworkers came to her defense in March 2021 after the palace announced it would investigate claims made in a Times of London report that the duchess bullied two senior staff members during her time with the royal family. Representatives for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex denied these allegations and, in June 2022, the palace said the results of its investigation would not be published to protect those involved.
At the time, Derek Ursacki, an assistant director on the show, wrote on Instagram: "She was always a pleasure to work with and was always kind with a huge heart, easy going, humble even after the fame of the show and her popularity skyrocketed, so full of life, so giving, supportive and funny."
From the general tenor of the book one can only imagine the "sources" were overjoyed that they had "driven the witch out". However, every ugly report we have heard or read has been from "reliable sources" most of which seemingly wished to be left unnamed to ensure they can't be sued.
This toxic mess Bower et al are espousing is at direct odds with her 'Suits' castmates and the show's creators, directors and producers. Same for her previous jobs. So, how can they be so diametrically opposed? Well, judging the way "things" are handled, both good news and bad, by TPTB a the palace, (eg scandals) they take no prisoners and ensure the main line remains pristine and family are expected to fall on their swords.
I find handling family with the same callous ruthlessness as a cutthroat business squashing a competitor is toxically nauseating. Anyway, as has been made clear by both the Prince of Wales and Prince William, they were more than happy that Meghan seemingly had room for Harry when she got on her broom and left!
Perhaps Mr Scobie’s new book, that has just been announced, will address that FigTree.
Oops, I wasn’t going to post in this thread again, but anyway, while I ‘m here …
“60 Minutes” has Tom Bower, and Valentine Low of the Times, on tonight here in Oz.
And Mr Bower is being reported in some mainstream media, about some podcast comments he made, regarding the seating at St Paul’s for the Jubilee … details he learnt too late to put in “Revenge”.
(The Sussexes arrived late at Wellington Barracks for the group bus, wanted the others to move along so they could sit on the aisle. We’re told no, they had to take the seats assigned to them, asked who said so, we’re told it was his grandmother. Mr Bower says a senior military man relayed the incident to him)
Well, the book is now pretty much in the public eye, if “60 Minutes” is covering it … and not just the breakfast shows.
Criticism of inaccuracies in Bower’s book ‘Revenge’.
Some actors and staff discovered that Meghan's attitude occasionally shifted. Sometimes she arrived late and her empathy morphed into near-arrogance," Bower writes, adding that coworkers thought Markle's tone had become sharper and more aggressive during the sixth season of the show.
But Markle's "Suits" coworkers came to her defense in March 2021 after the palace announced it would investigate claims made in a Times of London report that the duchess bullied two senior staff members during her time with the royal family. Representatives for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex denied these allegations and, in June 2022, the palace said the results of its investigation would not be published to protect those involved.
At the time, Derek Ursacki, an assistant director on the show, wrote on Instagram: "She was always a pleasure to work with and was always kind with a huge heart, easy going, humble even after the fame of the show and her popularity skyrocketed, so full of life, so giving, supportive and funny."