The Daily Telegraph

Pippa’s stunning staff add to party glamour

- By Eleanor Steafel and Victoria Ward

The serving staff at Pippa Middleton and James Matthews’s wedding celebratio­n on Saturday night were understood to be models. Details have emerged from the high-society event, including that couples were not permitted to sit with each other, meaning that Prince Harry’s girlfriend, the American actress Meghan Markle who did not attend the church service or the champagne reception, was not seated at his table.

FOR A bride who arranged her day with military precision, it is perhaps unsurprisi­ng that Pippa Middleton wanted to ensure that even the waiting staff were as svelte and glamorous as her high society guests.

The staff serving food and drink at Saturday’s wedding were all understood to be models.

Miss Middleton’s careful choreograp­hy extended to the table plan, which decreed that couples should not sit together.

There were no exceptions, not even for royalty, meaning that Meghan Markle was unable to sit next to Prince Harry, despite flying more than 3,000 miles to attend.

The Daily Telegraph can reveal that Miss Markle, 35, who missed the morning’s church ceremony and champagne reception on the private Englefield estate, arrived at the evening festivitie­s on the arm of her beau, dressed in a stunning maroon backless gown.

But despite her hotly anticipate­d arrival at the event, held in a 140ft glass marquee in the Middleton family’s back garden, all eyes were on the bride, who had changed into her second dress of the day, an elegant, white floor-length gown with v-neck and sparkle details.

The new Mrs Matthews, 33, wore her hair down in a relaxed style, much as her sister, the Duchess of Cambridge, had done at her own wedding in 2011, – prompting guests to remark that she looked “absolutely beautiful”. But despite happily posing for pictures outside the church earlier, Miss Middleton and her new husband James Matthews, 41, were keen to ensure that no pictures of the evening reception emerged.

The no-expense-spared party was held amid such tight security that guests had to send in photograph­s and produce a password before gaining entry. On arrival, attendees – who as requested had eschewed fascinator­s and suit tails for the more glamorous black tie – were asked to step outside for a flypast by a single Spitfire as the glass marquee was considered too hazardous should anything go wrong.

Outside, under a canopy that protected them from ominously grey skies, the guests duly watched for up to 15 minutes before the heavens opened.

One suggested the rain had come as a welcome respite, as the display had perhaps lasted a few minutes too long.

Back inside, the well-heeled guests, who included the likes of tennis star Roger Federer rubbing shoulders with television presenters Ben Fogle and Tom Bradby and Princess Eugenie, were guided to servers holding aloft table names, chosen to represent notable places the newlyweds had visited.

The staff were hired from one of a handful of specialist companies that pride themselves on providing impeccably trained models and/or actors to serve food and drinks.

An extra 150 joined the party for dinner, with a menu said to have included trout and Scottish lamb, before the bride’s father Michael Middleton gave another speech, as did reality TV star Spencer Matthews, the groom’s brother, who is said to have had everyone in stitches.

Guests then crowded around to watch the newlyweds enjoy their first dance together accompanie­d by a saxophonis­t and a DJ, before dancing the night away while enjoying a single malt whisky bar, photo booths and an astonishin­g light show that saw footage of the bride and groom beamed onto the back of Bucklebury Manor.

The dazzling marquee was decorated with an “enchanted forest” theme, featuring a plethora of trees decked with purple fibre optic lights.

Attendees had earlier witnessed Miss Middleton marry Mr Matthews in a one-hour service at St Mark’s Church, Englefield, which brimmed with flowers and scented candles.

Accompanie­d by the choir of Winchester Cathedral, they sang hymns including Be Thou My Vision; Tell Out, My Soul and I Vow To Thee, My Country.

Spencer Matthews read a passage from the Paulo Coelho novel, The Alchemist, while Miss Middleton’s brother James read Love Is An Adventure by Pierre Teilhard du Chardin and a family friend read the Song of Solomon.

The Duchess of Cambridge, who did a sterling job of marshallin­g all eight young page boys and bridesmaid­s down the aisle and keeping them in check, read a prayer.

Her fears that her own two children, Prince George and Princess Charlotte, might play up, went unfounded, although Prince George was deemed “excitable” inside the church, while his two-year-old sister had to be comforted by the nanny after bursting into tears and wailing “where’s mummy?”

After enjoying a champagne reception at Englefield House, part of a private estate owned by Richard Benyon MP, guests reassemble­d at Bucklebury village hall for security checks before being ushered to the Middleton family home for the evening festivitie­s.

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 ??  ?? A Spitfire performs a flypast over the Middleton estate in Berkshire, left, where the reception was held after the marriage of Pippa Middleton to James Matthews. The couple, right. left in an E-type Jaguar; Prince Harry’s girlfriend, Meghan Markle, inset below, pictured on another occasion, flew in from the US for the festivitie­s
A Spitfire performs a flypast over the Middleton estate in Berkshire, left, where the reception was held after the marriage of Pippa Middleton to James Matthews. The couple, right. left in an E-type Jaguar; Prince Harry’s girlfriend, Meghan Markle, inset below, pictured on another occasion, flew in from the US for the festivitie­s

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