Thursday, April 28, 2011

Prince William and Kate Middleton Live on TV Schedule

TV channel transmit the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. Prince William and Kate Middleton Live on TV Schedule. Starting on the middle of this month (April 2011), There Will Be Some exclusive tv show about this Royal Wedding ..

All details of the marriage will be broadcast live by television networks. It will be a unique event, the biggest event to be held at the global level, Prince William and Kate Middleton will join his fiancee lives. So see the TV schedule below. As you know, Prince William and Kate Middleton wedding date is on April 29, 2011. Special programming throughout the week, Prince William and Kate Middleton Hours Live on TV ..


Prince William and Kate Middleton

Sunday, April 24: "Marry Divinity"

From 16:30 pm, Channel Divinity offers a collection of chapters from various series in which the marriage were the great protagonists Diego links with Eva Lucia and Raul in "Los Serrano" Dr. Burke and Cristina Yang on "Grey's Anatomy" links to Charlotte and Trey and Steve and Miranda on "Sex and the City" and the culmination, the miniseries "Felipe and Letizia."

Six documentaries in three days

Monday April 25

- "William and Kate, a history of commitment" (22:00 pm): a BBC production that focuses on the eight-year engagement between Prince William and Kate Middleton.

- "Wills and Kate, the wedding of the century" (23:00 pm) a documentary that traces the evolution of the contracting parties through previously unseen footage and other factors, such as studying their body language or the testimony of journalists and friends of the couple.

Tuesday, April 26

- "Royal Wedding of a lifetime: Kate's Gown of Renown" (22:00 pm): a report that addresses the transformation and evolution of the personal style of Kate Middleton.

- "Royal Wedding of a Lifetime: A Tale of Two Princesses" (23:00 pm): work that focuses on the parallels and differences between the lives of Kate Middleton and Princess of Wales.

Wednesday, April 27

- "Princess commoners" (22:00 pm): Telecinco documentary replenishment issue on Tuesday April 26 late night

- "Royal Wedding of a Lifetime: The Future King & Queen" (23:00 pm): a production that explores how the private lives of the spouses from the marriage, particularly that of Kate Middleton, who will have to adapt to a whole new life.

Prince William and Kate Middleton visit Princess Diana's grave


Prince William and bride-to-be Kate Middleton have visited the grave of Princess Diana ahead of next week's royal wedding, it was reported today.

The couple are believed to have laid flowers at Diana's final resting place at the Althorp Estate in Northamptonshire.

The revelation comes after Miss Middleton's parents, Michael and Carole, had lunch with the Queen yesterday in what is believed to be the first time the monarch has met her grandson's future in-laws.

Bride-to-be Miss Middleton, 29, was also pictured stepping out on London's Kings Road for her second pre-wedding shopping trip in the space of two days.

During the couple's visit to Diana's 14,000 acre family home, William, 28, and his long-term girlfriend took a boat to his late mother's island memorial, The Daily Mirror reported.

They then visited the arboretum nearby where William and younger brother Harry planted trees when they were children, it was claimed.

A source told the paper: "It was very important for William to take Kate to visit his mum just before their wedding day.

"Diana is still a huge part of her boy's everyday life and always will be.

"Even though Kate never met Diana she knows what an incredible woman she was and it is very important to her she can share and understand William's love and grief for his mum."

The island burial spot, known as The Oval, was provided as a shrine to Diana by her brother Charles Spencer following her death. The Althorp estate has been home to the Spencer family since the 16th century.

A St James's Palace spokesman declined to comment on the visit saying they would not discuss any "private matters".

Prince William has also honoured the memory of his mother by using her blue sapphire engagement ring to propose to Miss Middleton.

After the engagement was announced, he said: "It's my mother's engagement ring so I thought it was quite nice because obviously she's not going to be around to share any of the fun and excitement of it all - this was my way of keeping her close to it all."

His fiancee also paid tribute to the mother-in-law she never had the opportunity to know.

She said: "Obviously I would have loved to have met her and she was obviously an inspirational woman to look up to - to this day and going forward."

Miss Middleton's parents travelled to the Queen's Windsor Castle home yesterday and enjoyed lunch along with The Duke of Edinburgh and a small number of members of the Royal Household.

There had been speculation that the Middletons would not be introduced before the marriage ceremony on April 29.

In another wedding development, Cardinal Sean Brady, the head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, took the unprecedented step of accepting an invitation to the couple's Westminster Abbey ceremony.

It is the first time an Irish churchman in his position will have attended a royal wedding.

Memory of Diana looms large as William's big day arrives.


LONDON — They've come from across the capital and around the world to watch history unfold. But for many lining the processional route in anticipation of Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding, the emotional pull is rooted in previous royal moments.

There's a palpable sense of hope that this fairy tale will have a happier ending than the last one — and so many others in this family.

Many in the crowd can't forget the two grieving boys who trailed their mother's casket into this same church in 1997, and the one person who won't be in the front row on Friday.

"Everyone wants to hug them, quite frankly. They're like everyone's kids," said Christine Seymour, who travelled from southwest England to camp out in front of Westminster Abbey.

She and her friend Anne Bell have watched royal weddings on TV and always thought they needed to be part of it. This time they couldn't resist.

William and Kate have inspired the same happy, optimistic feelings as any young couple in love, Bell says, but this time it's writ large on a national scale.

"When any couple gets married, hope is there. You want to be here to make sure they know the country is behind them. Everyone wants them to succeed," she says. "It's a hard thing, being married, it's not easy. And being married to a prince and suddenly becoming a princess will not be easy."

Tony Allman, who was also camped out after travelling from Cheshire in northwest England, said this new chapter for the Royal Family could be a chance to right the wrongs of the past and hope for the future.

"I think for many people, Harry and William are a link with Diana and the realization of things we got wrong then and won't replicate in the lives of two young people," he said. "Whatever else was wrong with Charles and Diana, the one good thing that came out of that was William and Harry and the future of a younger monarchy."

Ottawa's Sheila Ward, camped out in front of the abbey with her 12-year-old daughter Sarah Janson, said she expects to need tissues on the wedding day. Her late father was from England, she said, and after being exposed to monarchist traditions for her entire life, she wanted her daughter to be part of this once-in-a-lifetime experience.

"We all have faced tragedy in our pasts and I embrace their happiness and I think it is a true love story," she said.

Carole Birnie's reason for flying to London from Glasgow with her 10-year-old daughter Alex was simple: Diana.

"I adore Diana and I always did," she said. "The fact that he handed over that ring to Kate — it makes my heart melt."

Birnie said she was "devastated" when Diana died and the loss is still a raw one in many ways, but seeing William happily in love with a woman who would have made his mother proud brings closure.

"We always adored them anyway because they were her sons, but because they lost her in such tragic circumstances, I think we'll all be here to support them," she said.

Suzanna Mihakis said she didn't hesitate when it came to making a round-the-globe trek from Auckland, New Zealand to be part of "a dream, a fairy tale."

"I'm here for William, and for Diana," she said. "She's not here, but she is."

Mihakis sees the princes as Diana's walking legacies and emblems of a new generation of royalty who will fare better in matters of the heart, echoing the hopefulness of many along the procession route.

"We all want to believe in the dream, that when we get married, we're getting married for life. So they are bringing that hope to the ordinary person," she said. "I truly, truly hope it's a marriage to last."


Good luck to Prince William and Kate Middleton.


WEDDING days are a nerve-jangling moment for any happy couple. But for Prince William and Catherine Middleton, today is an especially daunting prospect.

Few newlyweds share this most intimate of moments with a million people on the streets of London and two billion more watching on TV around the world.

But Wills and Kate have conducted their courtship and preparations for the big day with grace and modesty. Part out of seeking to avoid the three-ring circus that surrounded other royal weddings. Part out of the realisation that the country’s relationship with the monarchy as an institution has changed irrevocably.

The Royal Family are no longer at the centre of public life. And for “The Firm” to survive, it needs to make further changes to reflect how Britain has changed.

In 1923 the BBC were asked not to broadcast the marriage of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (later the Queen Mother) and the Duke of York in case men “might hear the service, perhaps even some of them sitting in public houses, with their hats on”. How times have changed.

While wedding fever has gripped the United States, our own interest has been as relatively low-key as the couple themselves. It reflects not only a change in our regard for the monarchy, but also a reflection of these difficult economic times.

One day Wills and Kate will be King and Queen. But from the moment they become husband and wife, the responsibility for taking the monarchy to its next, more modest, stage rests on their shoulders. But that is a debate for another time.

Today, even the cynical among us should enjoy the pomp and circumstance, the colour and majesty, and cheer two young people who are declaring their love in time-honoured tradition.

Good luck to them both.