Grazia (UK)

COVER STORY

- WOR DS HANNAH F L INT AND H A R R I E T K EAN

10 hot stories, including Meghan the peacemaker, the orgasm gap, the latest on Jen and Justin, the hit winter buys – plus unleash the fleece!

AFTER 16 DAYS and 76 official engagement­s, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s tour of Australia and New Zealand finally drew to a close last week.

By all accounts, it was one of the most successful royal tours in recent memory. Meghan, in particular, was widely praised after she gave an empowering speech on female suffrage in New Zealand (during which she refrained from using notes and spoke Maori). Then, in a moving moment, the duchess was seen having a surprise meeting with a 20-year-old student who she had once counselled on Instagram (way before she met Prince Harry) to ‘work hard and be herself ’.

But despite the positive headlines on tour, which also saw Meghan navigate the early stages of pregnancy, the pair returned home to a slew of less-than-favourable stories about their extended family. And for once, they weren’t about Meghan’s father. Just days before the tour ended, news erupted of an explosive new biography about Prince Charles ( Charles At Seventy: Thoughts, Hopes And Dreams) by royal commentato­r and Grazia contributo­r Robert Jobson.

He followed the Prince of Wales and his closest associates around the world for 18 months to gather informatio­n for the book. Among his claims was the revelation that there has long been a 

‘froideur’ between Princes William and Harry and their father. According to sources, that distance has only recently come to an end thanks to the arrival of Meghan (more on which later).

‘ To this day,’ Robert writes in the biography, ‘Charles admits he often finds it difficult to gauge either of his sons’ occasional­ly unpredicta­ble moods. Both boys blame Charles for being absent through much of their childhood.’

In an exclusive interview with Grazia last week, the royal writer said, ‘ The sons have had difficulti­es with Charles, which the public may be surprised to know. In particular, I know that he was upset and wounded when he wasn’t mentioned as someone who had raised his children in a documentar­y, Diana, Our Mother: Her Life And Legacy last year. There were also tensions over Diana, with the way that the boys’ mother has been perceived to have been treated.’ Yet, say experts, the princes’ relationsh­ip with their father has finally thawed. So much so that Prince Harry gave a moving and warm speech on his father’s 70th birthday this year – to the surprise of many. The reason? Meghan, who is said to have ‘transforme­d’ the prince’s relationsh­ip with Charles and finally brought the pair closer together.

‘Meghan has certainly helped,’ said Robert. ‘She is someone who has been divorced, and who has had family issues herself. She has made Harry look at things from a different perspectiv­e, and has shown him that relationsh­ips aren’t always black and white with parents or family. Plus, she gets on very well with the Prince of Wales. She has improved the relationsh­ip and built bridges between them. In a way, she has been a peacemaker.’

According to a second source, Meghan’s impact on Harry’s character has also helped heal divisions. ‘Meghan has really changed Harry,’ said the royal insider. ‘In the short time that they’ve been together, she’s made him far more emotional and open about his feelings. She actively indulges in the idea that he’s a boy who grew up without a mother and that attitude helps.’

It comes as Meghan and Harry approach their six-month anniversar­y – time that has been filled with royal engagement­s, Meghan’s first solo trip and appearance­s with the wider royal family. Last week, there were reports that Meghan has, at times, slipped up, as she has navigated the difficult job of entering the royal family – and winning over the British public.

One report claimed that she was perceived to have ‘disrespect­ed’ the Queen after she failed to wear a hat during her first solo trip with the monarch in May, despite being quietly told to do so. Then, on home turf, an eyebrow-raising story emerged that in her first marriage Meghan had asked her former husband Trevor Engelson, a TV producer, to sign a

SHE HAS MADE HARRY FAR MORE OPEN ABOUT HIS FEELINGS

‘pregnancy contract’, stipulatin­g that he pay for a personal trainer and nutritioni­st to help her ‘stay in shape’. It follows near ceaseless headlines this summer concerning her extended family, from her father Thomas Markle admitting that he had lied to (and then hung up on) Prince Harry regarding those staged paparazzi pictures, to her half-sister Samantha Markle publicly criticisin­g her, before turning up at Kensington Palace with a mask of Meghan’s face.

‘As a result of the betrayals in her family, Meghan has maintained an impeccably private social circle,’ said a source. ‘At times, Harry has felt worried that she is not opening up to his circle. With all the press attention, she won’t let anyone in – even his best friends who he has trusted for years. She far prefers to hang out with her own Hollywood circle who she feels she can trust.’

Another source added, ‘Despite Meghan’s apparent confidence, she has been incredibly nervous – especially when it’s come to public engagement­s. People close to her say she was nervous stepping into the public arena as a royal, and was particular­ly concerned about how she was going to be received. She’s aware that she’s a different kind of royal and she has, at times, feared that she wouldn’t be accepted by the British public.’

But despite any summer difficulti­es, Robert, who travelled to Australia and New Zealand with Harry and Meghan during their recent tour, was among those last week to confirm reports that Meghan had passed her first tour with flying colours. ‘She’s very slick and polished as a performer,’ he said. ‘She seems to be doing a very good job. It’s early days, but it’s been a very successful tour. I don’t think she put a foot wrong.’

Now, all eyes are on the pair as they resume their life together back home. And there will be a new way of operating for the young royals: according to a report last week, Harry and William now plan to formally ‘split their courts’ as they increasing­ly focus on their marriages with their wives and young families.

‘Harry and William are naturally focusing on their marriages, and will pursue their own projects,’ said a source. ‘ The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are keen to forge their own path.’ By Jennie Bond, former BBC royal correspond­ent Not since the ’80s, when the public was fascinated by the arrival of Princess Diana, has there been such a consuming interest in the royal family’s every move. The reason? William and Harry and their wives have brought a renewed glamour to the monarchy – and an openness that we’ve rarely seen.

Prince Harry, in particular, has spoken candidly about the importance of acknowledg­ing mental health problems. It’s a live topic among so many young people today, and by admitting that he’s faced his own struggles, Harry is making a real difference.

Some people question what purpose the royal family serve – and Diana certainly believed that to stay relevant and meaningful, the monarchy needed to make itself less aloof. She connected with the public in a more direct and sympatheti­c way than any royal before her. Now her sons are following in her footsteps.

But Meghan Markle has shown that she, too, has the Diana touch. And she has taken the world by storm. Like Diana, she reaches out to the crowds, she crouches down to greet old and young, she engages enthusiast­ically with royals fans and even exchanges hugs. Meghan is carrying on Diana’s legacy, but she seems even more relaxed and informal than the mother-in-law she will never know.

Of course, at 37, she is far more mature than Diana was when she married into the royal family. And her life as a TV star has turned her into a confident, self-assured woman. But behaving like a royal is a very different challenge, and her habit of holding onto Harry – often with both hands – suggests that it may not be as easy as it looks, and she knows she’s still learning the ropes.

But the new duchess has made several impromptu gestures that have immediatel­y endeared her to the public. In New Zealand, for example, she suddenly decided to run back to the café where she and Harry had been meeting young people to ask for the leftover cakes to be taken to the children waiting outside.

At the Invictus Games in Sydney, she agreed to a competitor’s tentative request for a kiss. It’s moments like these that make her a revolution­ary – but also very human – royal.

Meghan and Harry, along with Prince William and Kate, are making the monarchy cool. And that connection with a new generation is essential to the future of the institutio­n. It seems that the British public, and the world, can’t get enough of watching someone so different join The Firm.

‘ We’re more interested in the royals than ever before’ MEGHAN HAS SHOWN S He TOO HAS THE DIANA TOUCH

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 ??  ?? Clockwise Prince Charles’s from above: 70th; William and Kate last week; Meghan and first husband Trevor; Meghan in New Zealand last week
Clockwise Prince Charles’s from above: 70th; William and Kate last week; Meghan and first husband Trevor; Meghan in New Zealand last week
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 ??  ?? Déjà vu: Diana in Auckland in 1983 (top) and, below, in Victoria in 1985; Meghan in Wellington last week and, below, in Sydney, 16 October
Déjà vu: Diana in Auckland in 1983 (top) and, below, in Victoria in 1985; Meghan in Wellington last week and, below, in Sydney, 16 October
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