Chicago Sun-Times

CHARLES IN CHARGE?

BIO FILLS OUT PORTRAIT OF THE KING- IN- WAITING ‘ Passions and Paradoxes’ finds fresh insights into the idiosyncra­tic Prince of Wales

- Maria Puente @ usatmpuent­e USA TODAY

When Prince Charles becomes King Charles III of Great Britain, he’ll be the oldest ever to be crowned and the one who waited the longest. And, as a new biography suggests, he may be the most improbable, even peculiar, monarch to ascend the throne in nearly 1,000 years and after 40 predecesso­rs.

Britain’s second longest- serving Prince of Wales ( he will surpass Edward VII’s record in September) has been waiting to fulfill his destiny for 65 years. You would think there could hardly be anyone left in the United Kingdom who is unaware of his strengths and flaws, his quirks and passions, his many entreprene­urial and philanthro­pic endeavors, his outspoken and opinionate­d approach to royal duty.

But you would be wrong, because Sally Bedell Smith, the acclaimed American biographer of Charles’ mother, Queen Elizabeth II, and his tragic first wife, the late Princess Diana, has found new details and insights about the life story and character of the man who will be king, and has wrapped them up in her new book Prince Charles: The Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable Life ( Random House, on sale April 4).

Why should Americans care? For one thing, there is the Yankee yen for behind- the- scenes tittle- tattle about the lifestyles of the rich and royal. And there is the lingering interest, not to say obsession, in the U. S. for anything having to do with lost Diana.

It can’t be a bad thing to know as much as possible about the man who will be the next head of state of America’s closest ally, succeeding a long- reigning queen ( 65 years and counting) whose engagement with the U. S. over the decades has been at least as crucial to the “special relationsh­ip” as that of whoever happens to occupy 10 Downing St. So, good news: Prince Charles

really likes America. “He’s drawn inspiratio­n from this country, and he’s comfortabl­e here,” Smith said in an interview.

And unlike the queen, Charles, 68, has met Donald Trump, Smith reports, when the new president was merely a flamboyant real estate developer. In 1988, Charles went to West Palm Beach to stay with rich friends, raise charity funds and play polo. Trump squeezed into the royal schedule by hosting a tea for the prince at Mar- a- Lago, now the weekend White House.

What are some of the things we learn from Smith that we didn’t know much about before?

1. WHY DID CHARLES MARRY DIANA?

It wasn’t for love. In effect, he was bullied into it — or so he thought — and that sheds light on sensitive Charles’ fraught relationsh­ip with his brusque father, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, 95. Charles, then 32, and Lady Diana

Spencer, a besotted 19, had only a few dates by 1981, but the media pack was stalking her, convinced she was the one.

Philip wrote Charles a letter — because that is the “regrettabl­e” way they communicat­ed, Smith writes — telling him it was unfair to Diana’s reputation to dawdle: Either propose or release her, he advised.

“It was measured and sensitive,” said Charles’ cousin, Pamela Hicks, who read the letter. Charles did not see it that way. “He wasn’t in love, he wasn’t ready,” Hicks told Smith. “He saw it as a ghastly threat. Psychologi­cally he assumed his father bullied him, so he read it as a bullying letter.” If only Philip and Charles had talked it through, laments Smith.

2. TALES FROM THE WAR OF THE WALESES

This is well- trod ground, but Smith delves deeper into the emotional, psychologi­cal, social and age reasons this was the most catastroph­ically mismatched royal couple since George IV — who detested his wife, Queen Caroline — locked the doors of Westminste­r Abbey to bar her from his 1821 coronation.

Diana, aggrieved about Charles’ relationsh­ip with his long- time mistress, Camilla Parker Bowles ( now his second wife, the Duchess of Cornwall), fought back in ways an unbalanced and insecure girl would recognize: They had regular blazing rows, and when Charles knelt down at night to say his prayers ( yes, he does this), Diana would hit him on the head and continue shouting at him.

She banished many of his old friends, and even his dogs. She taunted him that “You’ll never be king!” and ridiculed him as “ridiculous” when he wore one of those gold- encrusted military uniforms royal men routinely wear.

Diana was a mess, psychologi­cally damaged but “high functionin­g” and able to put up a good front in public. Charles tried to find her a therapist for her issues ( acute anxiety, bulimia, depression, self- mutilation, attempted suicide), but she resisted. He was clueless about helping her and, along with everyone else in her life, eventually gave up on her. Meanwhile, Smith found, Charles himself was in various forms of therapy for years.

3. ALL HAIL QUEEN CAMILLA

What does he see in her? Smith answers this longstandi­ng question by showing how different 69- year- old Camilla is and was compared with Diana. Handsome, not beautiful and definitely not virginal when she and Charles met in a friend’s apartment in 1972 ( a moment Smith pinpoints for the first time), she was seen as unsuitable royal marriage ma- terial at the time.

Camilla is earthy and lusty, confident and self- assured, especially on a horse. She is warm and fun, supportive and nurturing, even media savvy. She understand­s Charles, knows how to steady him, likes what he likes. Since they married, he has never been happier.

Will she be called Queen Camilla and be crowned his consort? Smith leaves little doubt that legally and automatica­lly Camilla will be queen, and that Charles will seek to ensure she is called that.

4. GURUS AND SPIRITUAL QUESTS

Their names will mean nothing to most Americans but over the decades, Smith found, Charles has metaphoric­ally sat at the feet of a remarkable number of gurus of various stripes. He was so close to one of them, Laurens van der Post, he named him one of Prince William’s godparents.

Despite his loopy reputation, Charles is “a deeper thinker, especially in spiritual matters, than we thought,” says Smith. “Not even his close friends have any idea of the degree of interest he has in Sufism ( mystic Islam), for example.”

5. HOW DOES HE LIKE HIS EGGS?

Cooked for three minutes, full stop. His chef, who often accompanie­d him on weekend visits to friends’ homes, customaril­y boiled several batches and tossed those that didn’t fit his precise instructio­ns.

His typical breakfast: a handful of his specially mixed wheat germ and cereal grains, with honey and preserves on a silver tray, a few pieces of fruit, and tea. He never eats lunch.

A typical dinner consists of salad with a soft- boiled egg. And a dry martini. If invited to dinner, his security team carries the martini in a special case.

6. A MAN OF CONTRADICT­IONS

He is by turns charming and witty, petulant and stubborn. His office is wildly disorganiz­ed and his thinking often is, too, but his various charities and businesses ( such as his line of organic products) have been wildly successful.

His friendship­s include women of the age of his beloved grandmothe­r, the late Queen Mother, plus a long list of celebritie­s ( the late Joan Rivers, Emma Thompson, Phil Collins, Joanna Lumley, Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry, to name a few). His personal enthusiasm­s include classical music and architectu­re, painting and art museums, polo and hunting, and especially, gardens and gardening.

He is stiff, eccentric and set in his royal ways, always dressed in a doublebrea­sted suit ( no pocket flaps, handkerchi­ef billowing from breast pocket, flower in button hole) and Turnbull & Asser shirts with French cuffs.

Unlike his mother, a woman who never breaks royal rules nor reveals her thoughts, Charles is forever doing both. Will he be an activist “philosophe­r king” blurting out opinions he shouldn’t and firing off memos to government officials?

Never mind the plot line of the popular stage play, King Charles III: Charles has been schooled in British constituti­onal tradition from an early age, writes Smith. “After years of doing what he pleased as an individual with the royal family, he would be transforme­d into a national institutio­n, obliged to do as he was told.”

If he wants to pass on a stable monarchy to his son and grandson, Prince William and Prince George, he will have no choice.

 ?? NICK KNIGHT, AP ?? Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles share a portrait, taken in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle in May 2016, before the final night of the Queen’s 90th birthday celebratio­ns.
NICK KNIGHT, AP Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles share a portrait, taken in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle in May 2016, before the final night of the Queen’s 90th birthday celebratio­ns.
 ?? MAX HIRSHFELD ?? Sally Bedell Smith, author of Prince Charles: The Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable Life.
MAX HIRSHFELD Sally Bedell Smith, author of Prince Charles: The Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable Life.
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 ?? DANIEL LEAL- OLIVAS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla Duchess of Cornwall, attend a Commonweal­th Day Service last month at Westminste­r Abbey in London.
DANIEL LEAL- OLIVAS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla Duchess of Cornwall, attend a Commonweal­th Day Service last month at Westminste­r Abbey in London.
 ?? AP ?? The biography reveals that Prince Philip wrote Charles telling him to propose to Diana or let her go.
AP The biography reveals that Prince Philip wrote Charles telling him to propose to Diana or let her go.

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