The Standard (St. Catharines)

The return of the royal heartthrob

Prince William’s visit to B.C. draws memories of frenzied 1998 trip

- LAURA KANE THE CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — The screams were deafening.

It was March 24, 1998, and hundreds of teenage girls were crammed behind barriers outside a suburban Vancouver high school. The girls weren’t squealing for the Backstreet Boys or Leonardo DiCaprio — they were there to see a real-life prince.

“You thought it was a rock star coming,” said Monika Vriend, former business services co-ordinator for Burnaby South Secondary School, recalling the day that Prince William visited.

“Like back in the day when the Beatles came through, people were just going crazy and swooning and couldn’t believe their own eyes that the princes were there.”

The frenzied female reaction to William, then 15, during his 1998 vacation with his father and brother, Prince Harry, cemented his status as a teen heartthrob. Canadians’ warm welcome also undoubtedl­y comforted him on his first official trip abroad after his mother’s death.

So when William returns to British Columbia on Saturday for a week-long visit with his wife and two young children, observers say it will be a homecoming of sorts after his star power was proven in the province two decades ago.

“Prince William was the original One Direction,” said Keith Roy, Western Canadian spokesman for the Monarchist League of Canada, referring to the British-based boy band.

“He was always a nice kid. Then to watch him go through the tragedy of his mother dying and still hold himself together and be stately, be strong and be vulnerable — that’s quite the threat when girls are looking for characteri­stics in a guy.”

The “Wills mania,” as it was dubbed by the British press, appeared to surprise and embarrass the young prince. One devoted pack of girls vowed to follow him to every tour stop, carrying signs that proclaimed, “William. It’s me you’ve been looking for.”

One 14-year-old jumped a barricade outside his hotel to try to deliver a teddy bear and bouquet, but she was caught by a police officer.

The princes and their father only spent about 24 hours in Vancouver before going to Whistler for four days of skiing and mostly private time, as the boys were still grieving their mother’s death the previous August.

But their brief stay in Vancouver was memorable.

There was a visit to a high school, which administra­tors believe was chosen because it contains a school for the deaf. Princess Diana was passionate about deaf education, and it appeared Prince Charles wanted his sons to share that interest, said former vice-principal Steve Bailey.

Bailey recalled that Harry, then 13, was more outgoing than his shy, older brother and assured William at one point, “Don’t worry about this. It’ll all be fine. All you have to do is smile and wave at the people.”

The brothers also visited the city’s astronomy museum, now called the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre, playing competitiv­ely with each other on a computer simulator to land a space shuttle.

“They were kidding each other, if one was doing better than the other one,” said Gayle Seaman, an administra­tive assistant. “But staff noticed William was protective. He could kid Harry, but he wasn’t going to let anybody else say anything about him.”

A friendly competitio­n also emerged on the ski hills, recalled Barrett Fisher, president and CEO of Tourism Whistler. All three princes were expert skiers, but there was an ongoing joke about who was best, she said.

“I think a journalist had asked, ‘Was Harry the best skier?’ And William said, ‘Oh, I don’t know about that.’ ”

Royal historian Carolyn Harris said the 1998 visit not only attracted fawning teenage girls but also many Canadians who had admired Diana and wanted to make sure her sons were all right following her death.

There was speculatio­n that the princes were being eased into a greater degree of public life, as Canada is thought to be a safe and welcoming destinatio­n for royal visits, Harris added.

Roy said the upcoming trip comes at a much happier time in William’s life. “We’re going to see enormous crowds of people out to support William and Catherine on this tour. It’s going to be the same level of frenzy and excitement that we saw in ’98.”

 ?? BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN ?? Prince William was greeted by rows of cheering students at Burnaby South Secondary School during his visit in 1998.
BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN Prince William was greeted by rows of cheering students at Burnaby South Secondary School during his visit in 1998.

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