Hawke's Bay Today

Royals light up faces as NZ turns back time

- Steve Braunias

Our best friends Prince Harry and his gestating wife, the Duchess of Sussex, shot through New Zealand this week in the third car of their seven-car convoy, the silver BMW marked with a little Union Jack stuck on an antennae, travelling south, travelling north, always on the go, 19 engagement­s in four days, he weighed down with pomp and ceremonial cloaks, she weighed down with baby, and they absolutely smashed it. They charmed. They wowed. They said nothing of interest but they said it so very winningly. Royalty is forever being built to last; the tour of 2018 secured the palace gates and tied a bow on it.

To traipse after Mr and Mrs Mountbatte­n-Windsor since they arrived last Sunday was at once a mindless exercise and the chance to witness that rarest of things in New Zealand public life — happiness. We reserve it for special and essentiall­y childish occasions. The royal tour as the A&P show, as the Santa parade, as Halloween. Actually, I went to see Halloween in Wellington on Monday afternoon, during a gap in royal engagement­s and came out of Reading Cinema on Courtenay Place with the distinct feeling that the world was meaningles­s and awful. I think I must have watched the film as a metaphor for our ordinary, everyday lives, where the struggle to survive is paramount, and it’s always dark. The royal family exists as an escape. They mean no harm and move in light. Harry and Meghan came in springtime, glowing.

It was the baby on board tour, the holding hands tour, the Karen Walker jacket tour — it was the Meghan Markle tour. Shirley Hamilton, 69, who recently had a stroke but was back on her feet to join the crowds at the royal walkabout in Rotorua’s Government Gardens on Wednesday, said: “She’s the bomb.” Hannah Brooking, 16, set eyes on the Duchess on Sunday, at Wellington’s war memorial, and whispered: “Oh my God.” And then, louder: “Oh my God.” And then, screeching: “OH MY GOD I SAW HER I SAW HER I SAW HER!!!” From lower case to full caps in approximat­ely 0.3 of a second, inspired by a 37-year-old retired American actress.

Research shows that 19 people in New Zealand actually watched Suits, the Netflix series Markle starred in from 2011-17. Her fame is due to her luminous performanc­e as the lead bride in last year’s royal wedding production.

Harry played second fiddle on the tour but he seemed a good egg. He had a lovely smile. He’s just what the royals need right now: his older brother has turned into a bald coot and full-time bore, forced to sit next to Sir Peter Jackson and suffer his movies.

Harry was visible from miles away with his copper top, and there was something touchingly vulnerable about him: the boy who lost his mother.

“I’m glad he’s found a woman who can stand by his side,” said Kam Mellars, 62, when we stood among a crowd of about 500 at Wellington airport to catch a fivesecond glimpse of Harry and Meghan walk from the plane into Jacinda Ardern’s arms. A crowd of about 300 waited for 45 minutes outside Rotorua’s Novotel Hotel on Wednesday to catch a three-second glimpse of Harry and Meghan walk from the front door to their car; I stood next to Chimmyma Kiriona, 46, who had driven from Tauranga with her mum, Janie, and she said, “He’s got a lot of Diana in him.”

Will New Zealand ever want to tear itself away, and become a republic? Right now the chances range from approximat­ely zero to minus zero. What’s not to like about Harry and Meghan? They smiled and waved, smiled and waved, and listened carefully in meaningful conversati­ons about mental health. They survived a spot of rain. They survived the Taumarunui quake as they weren’t anywhere near it. They survived the sternest test of all, engagement 3, scheduled from 1845 to 1905 on Sunday at Government House, where they had to meet Simon Bridges.

All else was flowers and Burger King cardboard crowns, balloons and Union Jacks brought to you by The Breeze.

When did we become so docile? Was it those brain-dead years of the Key regime, nine years hypnotised by Key’s smile and wave, smile and wave?

It felt more like ancient forces were at work. NZ always finds comfort in itself as a benign, conservati­ve island nation still operating on 1953 time, when Hillary knocked the bastard off and the young Queen and her cohort made their epic visit, travelling to 46 towns. It was a summer of love. We revisit it with every royal tour. Harry and Meghan, the newlyweds, expecting their first child — the royal visit of 2018 returned us to the British Empire’s warm, needy embrace.

"Her great fame is due to her brilliant, luminous performanc­e as the lead bride in last year’s royal wedding production when she married Prince Whats his face.

 ?? PHOTO /AAP ?? Harry plays second fiddle as he and Meghan receive traditiona­l cloaks at Saint Faith’s Church on Te Papaiouru Marae in Rotorua.
PHOTO /AAP Harry plays second fiddle as he and Meghan receive traditiona­l cloaks at Saint Faith’s Church on Te Papaiouru Marae in Rotorua.

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