The Scottish Mail on Sunday

THAT’S SERVICE

At 5pm, hours before Harry and Meghan’s interview airs in the US, the Queen, Charles, Camilla, William, Kate and Sophie will pay tribute to the Commonweal­th’s courageous response to the coronaviru­s pandemic...

- By Emily Andrews ROYAL EDITOR

THE Queen will praise the fortitude of the global response to the Covid-19 pandemic this evening, just hours before Meghan’s bombshell interview is aired.

In a rare personal message as part of a Commonweal­th Day television special, the monarch – supported by five senior Royals – will pay tribute to the way communitie­s and countries united to support each other.

Footage of her walking last week down an avenue of Commonweal­th flags in St George’s Hall at Windsor Castle, where Harry and Meghan’s wedding reception was held, will also feature.

Dressed in a delphinium blue dress and jacket, she wore her sapphire chrysanthe­mum brooch in a touching gesture to Prince Philip, who is still in hospital recovering from heart surgery. She wore it in their honeymoon photograph­s and again for their

‘The timing, just hours before Oprah, is undeniably awkward’

commemorat­ive wedding anniversar­y portrait last November.

Prince Charles, filmed giving an address in Westminste­r Abbey, will also applaud the ‘extraordin­ary determinat­ion, courage and creativity’ of people in the face of ‘heartbreak­ing suffering’, while the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge praise healthcare workers from around the world.

While the Royals’ appearance in the BBC programme, airing at 5pm today, was planned some time ago, its timing just hours before Meghan and Harry’s interview with Oprah Winfrey goes out in North America is undeniably awkward.

The Family’s broadcast was suggested by the Royal Commonweal­th Society and Westminste­r Abbey in early January because they recognised this year’s Commonweal­th Day Service would be cancelled due to lockdown.

The Queen then agreed to narrate her annual Commonweal­th message, usually printed in the service programme.

Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall, talking to Clare Balding about children’s literacy, were filmed in Westminste­r Abbey, while the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Sophie, Countess of Wessex, were filmed on video calls talking to medical and charity staff from South Africa, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Australia and Malawi. Harry and Meghan, who handed back their roles as Commonweal­th ambassador­s, do not feature.

In an extract from the programme, A Celebratio­n for Commonweal­th Day, Kate and William chat in a video call with Dr Zolelwa Sifumba, an advocate for the rights of health workers in South Africa. The Duchess tells the medic: ‘Here in the UK there’s been masses of public recognitio­n of the amazing work the front line are doing and it’s sad, almost, that it’s taken the pandemic for the public to really back and support all those working on the front line.’ The Duke of Cambridge has also been making weekly phone calls to NHS staff up and down the country to thank them for their work.

It was at the Commonweal­th Day service last year when the Sussexes were last seen with their family.

 ??  ?? SYMBOLIC: The Queen walking past flags of the Commonweal­th erected at Windsor Castle
SYMBOLIC: The Queen walking past flags of the Commonweal­th erected at Windsor Castle
 ??  ?? SUPPORT: The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on Zoom
SUPPORT: The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on Zoom
 ??  ?? PRAISE: Prince Charles at Westminste­r Abbey
PRAISE: Prince Charles at Westminste­r Abbey
 ??  ?? VIDEO CALLS: Sophie Wessex
VIDEO CALLS: Sophie Wessex

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom