They have already bought their sapphire-and-diamond engagement rings from the Home Shopping Network, found wedding gowns at local thrift shops and planned their rehearsal dinner and wedding day events. Never mind that Gigi Baay and Marianne Swanson of New Orleans are married with children. The two friends have been planning a celebration of Kate Middleton and Prince William’s nuptials for months. Though neither has an invitation to Westminster Abbey, what they do have are plane tickets to London, where they plan to spend the royal wedding weekend celebrating in regal fashion.
“It sort of began as a joke over lunch last December,” said Baay, explaining that she and Swanson were discussing whether they should visit a third high school friend who now lives in London. “Suddenly we thought, ‘Let’s go for the wedding,’ and that was it,” she said, adding that the two of them planned to spend that very afternoon making toile veils to wear with their gowns around London on the big day. “Sure it is an excuse to go to London,” Swanson said, “but we are also going to take part in a very elegant part of history.”
They are hardly the only tourists heading to England for the royal wedding on Friday, April 29, a day that has been declared a national holiday throughout Britain. Visit Britain, the official tourist organization, is anticipating more spectators in town for Will’s wedding than those who came to the capital 30 years ago for his parents’ marriage at St Paul’s Cathedral. “We expect at least an extra 600,000 visitors,” said Mark Di-Toro, a spokesman for Visit Britain. “But it could be as many as a million this time.”
photo: AFP
So how can one celebrate the couple’s union beyond watching it at home with what is predicted to be three-quarters of the world’s television viewing audience? Easily, with this unofficial Royal Wedding Guide to London:
A room fit for a queen: Those wanting to “splash out,” as the Brits call splurging, may want to sign up for Kensington Tours’ Eight-Day London Royal Wedding in Luxury tour. At about US$7,560 a person, the package includes not just a five-star hotel and private viewing of the crown jewels, but also access to an area along the procession where guests can wave to the future king and queen as they travel from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace. Hotels throughout London are also offering royal wedding deals; for example, at the Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington, a minimum of three nights’ stay starts at US$1,395. Those not wanting to spend a king’s ransom should check out crashpadder.com, which has more than 500 hosts in London renting out rooms in their homes at an average cost of about US$50 a night.
A photo session with William: What better way to celebrate the wedding than to have an engagement photo taken with the prince himself. The Stephen Friedman gallery, in Mayfair, has a life-size wax statue of William, complete with a replica of Kate’s engagement ring attached to his forearm. Link your arm through his, slip your finger through the ring, and in an instant, become Kate.
Walk like a royalist: Celebrity Planet, a London-based tour company, is offering two Will & Kate Royal Wedding tours. The first, which costs US$24, is a two-hour walking tour where visitors stop by the shop where Charles bought Diana’s engagement ring, the former offices of Kate’s paternal great-grandfather, the club where Charles spent his stag night before marrying Diana and, of course, Westminster Abbey, among other places. The second is a chauffeur-driven tour (US$120) that includes sites like Kate’s former apartment house and William’s first school. London Walks has a two-hour royal wedding tour for US$13 that includes “glamour, tradition, intrigue, scandal, insider info, royal nuptial bliss (or otherwise) down through the centuries.”
Ride royally: Even though Buckingham Palace, where Kate and William are expected to kiss on the balcony, is currently closed to the public, one can visit the Royal Mews next door. It houses, among other transport treasures, the two carriages they are expected to use that day — the Glass Coach and the 1902 State Landau. Both will be on display before and after the wedding. Information: royal.gov.uk. Make sure to stop at the Buckingham Palace gift shop, where the only “official” royal couple merchandise is being sold — a pale blue-and-white line of bone china that includes a plate (US$64), tankard (US$56) and pillbox (US$40).
A trousseau like Kate’s: To get a better sense of Kate’s style, or to copy it completely, head to King’s Road, where one can visit many of her favorite shops, including a branch of Jigsaw, the clothing company where Kate worked as an accessories buyer until a few years ago; Whistles, where she bought the cream blouse she wore in one engagement portrait; Reiss, where she picked up her dress for another engagement portrait; and BCBG Max Azria, where she found the turquoise gown she wore to the Boodles Boxing Ball three years ago. And of course, hit Harrods, a 10-minute walk away, where Kate bought the outfit she wore the day their engagement was announced — a blue wrap dress by the designer Daniella Issa Helayel.
Eat like a king: Though Kate and Will have been spotted at various restaurants, two in particular seem to be favorites: for Will, Foxtrot Oscar, a clubby Gordon Ramsay restaurant in Chelsea; and for Kate, the Ebury Brasserie in nearby Pimlico, where she is frequently seen. For tea, reserve a table at the Goring Hotel, though if the rumor is true, that may be impossible, as Kate’s family is supposed to be staying at the 100-year-old hotel that was once a favorite haunt of Winston Churchill’s. Alternatively, head to the Langham Hotel, which is offering a celebratory royal wedding tea throughout next month that includes a glass of champagne to toast the couple, and costs US$82 a person.
A royal brunch: Those wanting to celebrate in truly royal style may want to attend the Royal Wedding Brunch at the Ritz hotel, where Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her 80th birthday. For US$244 per person, guests can enjoy themed food stations, an outdoor grill on the terrace, champagne and live streaming of the event on television screens, as well as a “decorative keepsake” with the initials of the royal couple and their wedding date. From 10:30am to 3:30pm. For reservations by e-mail: enquire@theritzlondon.com.
Party on, Will and Kate: It is hardly a secret that the royal couple’s favorite nightclubs are Mahiki, a tiki bar in Mayfair, and Boujis, a club in South Kensington, but a new favorite is 86, a sleek cocktail bar and restaurant in a Georgian town house in Chelsea — a place many think might feature in Kate’s bachelorette night plans, though it is hard to imagine her ordering their Pornstar Martini.
The Big Day: The best place to be on the actual wedding day, weather permitting, should be outside, whether in a park, at a local street party or on the procession route. Look to the Royal Parks for a picnic option as huge television screens are supposed to be put up there (St James and bordering Green Park are probable spots) as well as farther afield (perhaps Hyde Park and Regents Park). Those who prefer a more sophisticated indoor event should stroll over to Janet’s Bar (30 Old Brompton Road, tel: +44-20-7581-3160), a favorite South Kensington drinking spot of Kate’s sister, Pippa, as well as Princess Beatrice, where a wedding reception is being held all day beginning at 10:30am, complete with live television coverage of the event, canapes and drinks. Guests are expected to dress in their wedding best.
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