Chris Radcliffe / PA Photos / ABACA
Nearly two months after completing chemotherapy, the Princess of Wales joined her husband at the Festival of Remembrance memorial concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall this Saturday.
Kate Middleton seems to be doing better, and this observation makes royal supporters happy. This Saturday, the Princess of Wales, who announced the end of chemotherapy in September, was at the side of her husband, Prince William. Both honored the first ceremony as the Festival of Remembrance (a tribute to World War I veterans), a memorial concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall. With King Charles III still undergoing treatment for his own cancer, the royal couple did however miss the absence of Queen Camilla, who succumbed to a lung infection last week. This has officially canceled several upcoming royal engagements.
As body language expert Judy James deciphered in the columns Daily Mail: Kate and William were especially tender and cuddly during the evening, which marked the start of the memorial services. The media reports that a few minutes before entering the performance hall, the Princess of Wales “gently stroked” her husband’s back. He added: “At several points during the ceremony, the royal couple could be seen looking and whispering to each other, showing the mutual love they share.” In another sequence circulating on social media, it is Prince William who defends his wife by grabbing her waist as she gets out of the car.
“The Power of Their Love”
For an expert, this look, albeit surreptitiously, may reveal the couple’s new royal posture. “They can’t stop touching each other,” she explains. However, for a couple who usually limit their display of affection in public, this brief arrival, marked by a series of affectionate and mutually protective caresses, glances and tender gestures, shows that they are now more inclined to express the power of their love. after that. have hidden their feelings for a long time, as the monarchy requires.
On Thursday, November 7, Prince William made a speech during his visit to South Africa. According to comments that report BBC: he confided that he had lived “probably the most difficult year” of his life, dealing with his wife and the king’s cancer. “I am very proud of my wife and my father for managing (during this period, Editor’s Note) But from a personal and family point of view, it was brutal,” he concluded.
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Source: Le Figaro
