The Mail on Sunday

Dress was lent by the Queen

- By Emily Andrews, Max Aitchison, Michael Powell and Scarlet Howes

THE Queen lent Princess Beatrice the tiara that she wore at her own wedding and a vintage gown first worn to a glitzy film premiere almost 60 years ago.

In an astonishin­g double display of generosity, unmatched for any previous Royal bride, the monarch made every effort to ensure that her granddaugh­ter’s wedding to Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi was an occasion for the couple to remember. It was an acknowledg­ement not only that lockdown had denied Beatrice the wedding-day fanfare enjoyed by her sister Eugenie and cousins William and Harry, but also of the distress of seeing her father’s reputation wrecked by his links to paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The wedding may have lacked pomp and pizzazz but it had intimacy, with 20 guests witnessing the couple exchange their vows.

Edo’s four-year-old son Wolfie served as both best man and page boy, while his niece Coco Yeomans, five, was a bridesmaid alongside her pageboy brother Freddie, three.

The party-loving Yorks ensured a high-spirited reception, featuring speciality cocktails, bespoke catering, an exquisitel­y decorated Indian-style tent, a bouncy castle and glamping pods for overnight guests. Beatrice was said to be ‘thrilled and super-excited’, telling a friend: ‘It’s been such a whirlwind.’

While the wedding was arranged amid huge secrecy, The Mail on Sunday can today reveal the inside story…

HOW THE MUMS LEAPT INTO ACTION

SARAH Ferguson and Edo’s mum Nicola Williams-Ellis leapt into action as soon as the Government hinted last month that weddings would soon be permitted again.

During lockdown, Beatrice had been staying with Edo and her future mother-in-law in the £2 million Cotswold house Nicola shares with sculptor husband David, Edo’s stepfather. The young couple were ‘desperatel­y sad’ that plans for a wedding at St James’s Chapel Royal in May with 150 guests and a reception at Buckingham Palace had to be cancelled, and resolved to marry ‘whenever possible’.

But they had only three weeks to organise caterers and florists, and for the Queen’s dresser Angela Kelly to help remodel and refit the 1960s Norman Hartnell evening gown to serve as a wedding dress.

Meanwhile, Canon Paul Wright, sub-dean of the Chapel Royal, and Canon Martin Poll, the Queen’s domestic chaplain, who officiated on Friday, hurriedly arranged the special wedding licence from the Archbishop of Canterbury. THE NIGHT BEFORE

GUESTS were sworn to secrecy, with overnight accommodat­ion provided at Royal Lodge, Andrew and Fergie’s grand Windsor home.

Edo’s sister Natalia, 38, and her husband Tod Yeomans, 36, arrived with their two children Coco and Freddie on Thursday afternoon for a quick rehearsal. Edo’s father, Olympic skier Count Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi, flew in from France, and maid of honour Eugenie, 30, joined the ‘rehearsal dinner’ with husband Jack Brooksbank.

Beatrice and Edo broke with tradition by spending the night before the wedding together. GLAMPING NEWLYWEDS

THE secluded Chapel of All Saints is opposite Royal Lodge, so Prince

Andrew walked the bride to the church and down the aisle. The Queen and Prince Philip had slipped in a through a side entrance, thus maintainin­g social distancing.

The church was decorated with pink and white delphinium­s, roses, waxflower and hydrangeas from Windsor Great Park.

Beatrice carried a bouquet of trailing jasmine, pale pink and cream sweet peas, royal porcelain ivory spray roses, pink O’Hara garden roses, pink waxflower, baby pink astilbe and sprigs of myrtle. During the 30-minute service, Sarah Ferguson and Mrs Williams- Ellis read the bride and groom’s favourite poems: I Carry You In My Heart by E E Cummings

and Shakespear­e’s Sonnet 116. There was no singing, but a selection of music was played together with the National Anthem.

Later, wedding photograph­s were taken, including two released to the media yesterday. Neither features Andrew.

The wedding breakfast was in a blue-and-white themed open-sided luxury Indian tent at Royal Lodge. Society caterers Spook London provided canapes and a sit-down lunch with wine and champagne.

Their £110-a-head wedding menu i ncludes cured sea trout with capers, dill and lemon, chorizo and ricotta salad with toasted quinoa and fillet steak.

Andrew and Edo gave speeches and the newlyweds enjoyed their first night together as man and wife in a special glamping pod.

Edo and Bea are not thought to have any immediate honeymoon plans and hope to celebrate their wedding later in the year with a ‘huge party’.

A friend said: ‘ They are just delighted they could marry in front of their family and closest friends. It was particular­ly special that the Queen and Duke could come.’

Prince Andrew was yesterday, right, seen driving away from Royal Lodge.

He was wearing a rugby-style jersey emblazoned with the Order of the Garter motto: Honi soit qui mal y pense – meaning ‘ May he be shamed who thinks badly of it’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom