.

Royal Wedding highlights best 20 moments

Prince William and Kate Middleton have been named husband and wife by the Archbishop of Canterbury at Westminster Abbey.

Here are the top 20 moments from the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton on Friday. See our live blog for continued coverage.

• Clarence House announced Prince William and his bride would leave Westminster Abbey in the same open topped horse-drawn carriage used by the Prince and Princess of Wales on their wedding day in 1981 – meaning that come rain or shine, crowds would be able to clearly see the married couple.

• The Queen gave the Royal couple the titles of Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, also naming her grandson Earl of Strathearn and Baron Carrickfergus, titles his bride would also inherit after the ceremony.

• As crowds gathered in Westminster, the crew of the International Space Station broadcast pre-recorded greetings to the Royal couple, from hundreds of miles above the surface of the Earth
• The Archbishop of Canterbury promised the ceremony would be “very special” to the bride and groom, adding that they seemed to him a “deeply sensible” and “realistic” couple.


• Crowds outside went into a frenzy as celebrity guests, including Victoria Beckham – who wore one of her own dresses – her husband David (who wore his OBE medal on the wrong lapel) and Elton John arrived at the abbey.

• Villagers from Kate Middleton’s home in Bucklebury held a quaint fete to celebrate the most momentous occasion in their small community’s history.

• Boris Johnson confirmed he would bestow a tandem Boris Bike on the couple as a wedding gift – cue a video of what that might look like.

• David Cameron arrived at Westminster Abbey wearing tails, after confusion earlier this week about whether the Prime Minister would dress down for the occasion due to fears over his image.

• The PM disclosed how he camped out on the streets to celebrate Prince Charles and Diana Spencer’s wedding in 1981.

• Prince William and his best man Prince Harry left Clarence House to a raucous reception from the public. The groom was resplendent in the full dress of the Irish Guards with RAF wings on his sash, while his brother wore black.

• Police sealed off an area around a suspicious car near the Goring hotel, where the bride’s family was staying, but the situation was resolved shortly afterwards.

• After Princes William and Harry arrived at the abbey, so did the Queen, wearing a yellow Angela Kelly-designed single crepe wool primrose dress.

• As Kate Middleton’s car pulled away from the Goring Hotel it was confirmed that she was, as suspected, wearing Sarah Burton, artistic director of Alexander McQueen, with a v-neck and lace long sleeves.

• The bride also wore a diamond tiara previously worn by Queen Mary, the Queen Mother, the Queen and the Princess Royal.

• As she arrived next to him on the aisle, Prince William could be seen remarking to Kate: “You look stunning, babe”, and joking to his father-in-law: “Just a small family affair!”

• During a service conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Prince William said “I will” clearly and firmly, while his bride spoke more quietly, apparently slightly overcome with emotion as the couple were married.

• Rousing choruses of Jerusalem and the National Anthem inside the abbey are echoed by crowds enjoying a brief period of sunshine in the streets outside.

• The couple left the abbey hand in hand and rode in the sunshine past cheering crowds to Buckingham Palace, where crowds converged to watch their first kiss as a married couple.

• As mounted guards accompanied the couple’s open-topped carriage, one rider lost control and fell from his saddle, while the horse bolted up Whitehall and past Downing Street.

• Anarchists’ plans to tarnish the wedding with a demonstration at Soho Square failed to spoil the day, with only 10 or so gathering for their so-called “zombie wedding” protest.

Here are the top 20 moments from the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton on Friday. See our live blog for continued coverage.

• Clarence House announced Prince William and his bride would leave Westminster Abbey in the same open topped horse-drawn carriage used by the Prince and Princess of Wales on their wedding day in 1981 – meaning that come rain or shine, crowds would be able to clearly see the married couple.

• The Queen gave the Royal couple the titles of Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, also naming her grandson Earl of Strathearn and Baron Carrickfergus, titles his bride would also inherit after the ceremony.

• As crowds gathered in Westminster, the crew of the International Space Station broadcast pre-recorded greetings to the Royal couple, from hundreds of miles above the surface of the Earth

• The Archbishop of Canterbury promised the ceremony would be “very special” to the bride and groom, adding that they seemed to him a “deeply sensible” and “realistic” couple.

• Crowds outside went into a frenzy as celebrity guests, including Victoria Beckham – who wore one of her own dresses – her husband David (who wore his OBE medal on the wrong lapel) and Elton John arrived at the abbey.

• Villagers from Kate Middleton’s home in Bucklebury held a quaint fete to celebrate the most momentous occasion in their small community’s history.

• Boris Johnson confirmed he would bestow a tandem Boris Bike on the couple as a wedding gift – cue a video of what that might look like.

• David Cameron arrived at Westminster Abbey wearing tails, after confusion earlier this week about whether the Prime Minister would dress down for the occasion due to fears over his image.

• The PM disclosed how he camped out on the streets to celebrate Prince Charles and Diana Spencer’s wedding in 1981.

• Prince William and his best man Prince Harry left Clarence House to a raucous reception from the public. The groom was resplendent in the full dress of the Irish Guards with RAF wings on his sash, while his brother wore black.

• Police sealed off an area around a suspicious car near the Goring hotel, where the bride’s family was staying, but the situation was resolved shortly afterwards.

• After Princes William and Harry arrived at the abbey, so did the Queen, wearing a yellow Angela Kelly-designed single crepe wool primrose dress.

• As Kate Middleton’s car pulled away from the Goring Hotel it was confirmed that she was, as suspected, wearing Sarah Burton, artistic director of Alexander McQueen, with a v-neck and lace long sleeves.

• The bride also wore a diamond tiara previously worn by Queen Mary, the Queen Mother, the Queen and the Princess Royal.

• As she arrived next to him on the aisle, Prince William could be seen remarking to Kate: “You look stunning, babe”, and joking to his father-in-law: “Just a small family affair!”

• During a service conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Prince William said “I will” clearly and firmly, while his bride spoke more quietly, apparently slightly overcome with emotion as the couple were married.

• Rousing choruses of Jerusalem and the National Anthem inside the abbey are echoed by crowds enjoying a brief period of sunshine in the streets outside.

• The couple left the abbey hand in hand and rode in the sunshine past cheering crowds to Buckingham Palace, where crowds converged to watch their first kiss as a married couple.

• As mounted guards accompanied the couple’s open-topped carriage, one rider lost control and fell from his saddle, while the horse bolted up Whitehall and past Downing Street.

• Anarchists’ plans to tarnish the wedding with a demonstration at Soho Square failed to spoil the day, with only 10 or so gathering for their so-called “zombie wedding” protest.

MLB’s 2010 Home Run Kings
With the 2011 major league season just beginning, now’s the time to take a final glance at last year’s hit makers -- the home-run kings of the 2010 season. While clicking on the top 20 players, scroll through the new rankings to see how last season’s powerhouse performers are doing in baseball’s opening days.

Jose Bautista
Toronto Blue Jays right-fielder Jose Bautista in the 2010 season.

MLB debut: April 4, 2004
Albert Pujols
St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols slugged his way to second place.

MLB debut: April 2, 2001
Paul Konerko
Chicago White Sox first baseman Paul Konerko.

MLB debut: Sept. 8, 1997
Adam Dunn
Chicago White Sox first baseman Adam Dunn.

MLB debut: July 20, 2001
Miguel Cabrera
Detroit Tigers first baseman Miguel Cabrera.

MLB debut: June 20, 2003
Joey Votto
Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey Votto.

MLB debut: Sept. 4, 2007
Carlos Gonzalez
Colorado Rockies center-fielder Carlos Gonzalez.

MLB debut: May 30, 2008
Mark Teixeira
New York Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira.

MLB debut: April 1, 2003
Dan Uggla
Atlanta Braves second baseman Dan Uggla.

MLB debut: April 3, 2006
Mark Reynolds
Baltimore Orioles third baseman Mark Reynolds.

MLB debut: May 16, 2007
David Ortiz
Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz.
MLB debut: Sept. 2, 1997
Josh Hamilton
Texas Rangers left-fielder Josh Hamilton ended the 2010 season in the 12th spot.

MLB debut: April 2, 2007
Prince Fielder
Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder.

MLB debut: June 13, 2005
Adrian Gonzalez
Boston Red Sox first baseman Adrian Gonzalez wrapped the season in the 14th spot.

MLB debut: April 18, 2004
Vernon Wells
Los Angeles Angels center-fielder Vernon Wells.

MLB debut: Aug. 30, 1999
Corey Hart
Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Corey Hart claimed the 16th position.

MLB debut: May 25, 2004
Ryan Howard
Philadelphia Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard landed in 17th place.

MLB debut: Sept. 1, 2004
Alex Rodriguez
New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez.

MLB debut: July 8, 1994
Vladimir Guerrero
Baltimore Orioles righter-fielder and designated hitter Vladimir Guerrero.

MLB debut: Sept. 19, 1996
Nick Swisher
New York Yankees outfielder Nick Swisher.

MLB debut: Sept. 3, 2004
Source:Specials

Lady Kanga Tryon’s daughter on her mother’s obsession

There is something familiar about the piercing eyes of the elegant brunette as she lovingly rearranges the silver-framed photographs in her South Kensington flat. A glance at these pictures explains why.

They are of the late Lady ‘Kanga’ Tryon, ‘close friend’ of the Prince of Wales and at one time an almost permanent fixture on the news and gossip pages of newspapers and magazines.

‘My darling mother – Mum,’ says Victoria Tryon, sadly. Now 31 and a successful jeweller, her socialite mother’s stormy relationship with the Prince has cast a long shadow over her life.

Kanga went from being the toast of society and a favourite of Charles in the Seventies and Eighties to a somewhat sad figure, and finally, by the time of her death in November 1997 at the age of 49, to a tragic victim of her own delusions.

‘I suppose now she would have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder but in those days less was understood about such conditions,’ says Victoria, talking for the first time about the way in which the colourful antics of her mother blighted her own unhappy childhood.

‘When I was at school there were never-ending Press reports about Mummy, some of them on the front page, calling her mad and all sorts of scandalous things.

‘I used to try to hide the newspapers in the common room from all the other girls in case they teased me.

‘It was a horrid, horrid time. It was embarrassing and it became even more embarrassing because later I learned that Mum was actually talking to the papers, which is just not the done thing in such circumstances.’

However, for Victoria the shadow of the past is finally lifting. In a few days her sister-in-law Nina, the wife of her beloved twin brother, Ed, the Honourable Edward, will give birth to their first child and Victoria will become an aunt and her father, Lord Tryon, a grandparent for the first time.

‘We already know the child is a girl and one of her names will be one of Mum’s. This represents a new era and a fresh start for us,’ says Victoria.

‘We are all excited and nervous. Mum never had a chance to be a grandmother. I only wish she could have been here . . .’ she says, her eyes brimming as her voice trails off.

Born Dale Harper in 1948, Kanga was a spirited Australian blonde. The daughter of a wealthy Melbourne printing magnate, she first met Charles in Australia in 1966 when the teenage Prince spent two terms at Geelong Grammar School in Victoria.

Their acquaintance was renewed some years later when she moved to Britain to work as a public relations officer for Australian airline Qantas.
Charles was charmed by the vivacious Australian, reportedly finding her lack of deference refreshing. He was said to have described her as ‘the only woman who ever understood me’, although that claim may have originated with Kanga herself.

However, she wasn’t considered suitable marriage material for the heir to the throne and she married the merchant banker Anthony Tryon, one of Charles’s oldest friends, in 1973.

The Tryons had long been in the Royal circle. Anthony was a page boy at the Queen’s coronation and in 1976, on the death of his father, who had been Keeper of the Privy Purse, he became Lord Tryon.

Kanga – so nicknamed by Charles, she claimed – and Lord Tryon had four children: Zoe, Charles (whose godfather was the Prince of Wales), and the twins, Victoria and Edward.

The marriage was to last 26 years, yet Kanga never stopped loving Charles, even after he married Lady Diana Spencer in 1981.

For a time there were rumours that she was his mistress.

The Prince had, in fact, resumed a romantic relationship with Camilla Parker Bowles, but when Kanga started a fashion business in 1983 – called, inevitably, Kanga – she was happy to fuel the speculation surrounding her, recognising that the publicity helped to sell her creations.

As her business flourished, the effervescent Kanga became the life and soul of the London party scene but there was a price to be paid for her hedonism.

While their mother cavorted around the party salons of the capital, the Tryon children, who were being brought up largely by nannies in Wiltshire, saw less and less of her.

When Victoria and her siblings reached the age of seven they were sent to boarding school at Great Durnford Manor, which, bizarrely, had been the Tryon family seat but had been sold and converted into a typically English public school.

The house in which they had spent their childhood until then, Ogbury House, was in the grounds of the 2,000-acre estate.

‘So we were sent to boarding school in what was effectively the ancestral home, and our actual home was just about 80 yards from the front door of the school,’ recalls Victoria.

‘I was boarding within walking distance of my house. I could see it, and yet I couldn’t go home.

‘I can still remember the sludgy brown colour of the school walls. I was a sad little girl, so homesick and miserable. I just kept making excuses about needing to pop home, saying I’d forgotten my violin or my tennis shoes. I think my housemistress might even have suggested that I see some child psychiatrist about it but I never did.’

In 1990, thanks to Kanga’s business acumen, Great Durnford Manor was bought back and once again became the family seat. By then, Victoria was boarding at the exclusive Marlborough College but this did not shield her from the constant gossip about her mother.

‘One of the things that made life hard was that all the scandals seemed to blow up when I was in the middle of my GCSEs,’ she says.

‘I did get ten GCSEs and two A-levels in History of Art and Classical Civilisation but felt I could have got higher grades if I hadn’t had all that stress.

‘Mum didn’t care. She was utterly selfish when she was going through her manic periods.’

And her bragging about her relationship with Charles was humiliating for Lord Tryon.

She committed the cardinal sin of talking about the Prince,’ says Victoria. ‘I didn’t want to believe it at the time but as the years have gone on I have learned more, and I can see that this is what happened.

‘There were fights at home behind closed doors between Mum and Dad. There were bitter, awful arguments – things you didn’t want to hear.

‘Mum was so horrible to Dad, which hurt me a lot. Although I loved Mum, Dad and I have always been close. He didn’t deserve that.’

Soon after this Kanga was rocked by a number of serious setbacks to her health.

She had been plagued by illness all her life – since childhood she had suffered from Perthes disease, a degenerative condition of the hip joints.

In 1993 she was diagnosed with uterine cancer and after treatment in 1996 she checked herself into a rehabilitation clinic in Surrey called Farm Place to cure her addiction to painkillers.

‘Dad wouldn’t let us go to see her in the clinic because he thought it would be too disturbing and he tried to protect us from what was going on,’ says Victoria.

While at Farm Place, under circumstances that have never been fully explained, she plunged 25ft from a window. She was paralysed below the waist and left wheelchair-bound.

Her behaviour subsequently became increasingly erratic. Her husband told her he wanted a divorce and at one point she was arrested on the drive at their home and sectioned under the Mental Health Act.

Despite everything, Kanga never lost her obsession with Prince Charles. As late as July 1997, she was seen at a polo match pursuing Charles in her wheelchair.

She had become an object of gentle mockery but, in truth, she was more tragic than comic.

After a trip to India she fell ill and subsequently contracted septicaemia.

‘She ended up in the King Edward VII Hospital in London in a coma,’ says Victoria. ‘Ed and I went to visit and we were in shock. His bottom lip started quivering and it was all too much.

‘The nurse said, “You can talk to your mother because she might be able to hear you.” But when I saw my normally immaculate mother lying there, bloated from the drugs and with chipped nail polish on her toes, I thought, “That is not Mum any more.” ’

Kanga died on November 15, 1997.




Read more: Dailymail

Blog Archive

Categories