“Royal secrets”, will Kate Middleton really be the best queen consort ever?

April 29, 2011: William and the bourgeois Kate Middleton they look out from the balcony of Buckingham Palace – in front of a million people and almost two billion live on TV – and exchange the first kiss as husband and wife. They had become so shortly before during a solemn ceremony at Westminster Abbey. Ceremony that the queen herself has not refrained from defining “amazing”. ORtoday, 10 years later, it is not hard to say that the royal wedding is proceeding well. Kate and William are fine.

After a couple of close scandals, three heirs to the throne (George, 7 and Charlotte, 5, and Louis, 3), thousands of official engagements, and the “escape” of Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are yet very much in love. Or so it seems to look at them every time together.

E Kate is increasingly imagined by the tabloids and the British people as “Perfect queen consort”, when William becomes king. Indeed recently the Times he called her “the true revolutionary of Buckingham Palace”. And even a survey of the Daily Express at the end of 2020 defined it more popular than Queen Elizabeth, with 42% of the votes. Everyone’s crazy about Kate.

But what makes her relationship with William work so well? How did you manage to integrate at court, right from the first meeting with Elisabetta? What mom is it? How much does Mother Carole Middleton’s influence still weigh on you? And finally, will it really be her turn to act as peacemaker between William and Harry? And Meghan Markle.

In fourteenth episode of “Royal Secrets”, the first Italian royal podcast dedicated to the Windsors, let’s try to answer all these questions, in the company of a special guest: the passionate British royalty Lorenzo Farina, creator of the social page with millions of followers Baby George despises you and now among the voices of the second edition of The Royals – Amori a Corte, broadcast on Sky and Now.

The Vanity Fair “Real Secrets” podcast is available on iTunes, Spreaker and Spotify.

You may also like