royal family. the bbc s special correspondent katty kay went to meet her. how many years for the new yorker? seven. from her new york apartment tina brown keeps a close eye on events in buckingham palace. those 3000 miles give this british american author are different, more global perspective on the royal family. for her new best selling book the palace paper, she interviewed over 320 people to tell the story of the women of the house of windsor. brown herself has met the queen several times and was awarded the commander of the british empire for contribution to journalism. she has edited both tatler magazine and the new yorker. she knows the clintons well. she has metjustin trudeau, theresa may. suffice to say you don t get a lot better connected than tina brown in politics or in all things royal, which is why we went to visit her in manhattan. congratulations on the book, it is great. i passed a very delightful plane ride from london reading it. when you look as we celebra
Deborah James mum says Prince William was like a son in BowelBabe s final weeks
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Deborah James mum says Prince William is like a son-in-law
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and the mother and a grandmother or and the mother and a grandmother or a friend. she is able to compartmentalise in ways i think are extraordinary. at times frequently the personal and the private have collided. the time of diana s death of course. and in such difficulty with andrew 5he of course. and in such difficulty with andrew she has had to cancel her own son. but there are times when she then has to choose over mother ver5u5 sovereign and the queen has always chosen in the end sovereign. she has always chosen the protection of the crown a5 a consumer duty, even if it means making very difficult, personal decision5. making very difficult, personal decisions. we saw it at the very beginning when she had to tell margaret that she could not marry the man she loved because he was divorced, he was older than her, he was completely, in those days, inappropriate for market, but her sister loved him. the fact is she 5i5ter loved him. the fact is she has had to make the very painful deci
really know how they can actually bear to live the way they are going to live, but like the queen they seem to have embraced it. it is more remarkable that kate has embraced it. she comes from a middle class family and is not to the manor born and when she married william there was a lot of how will this girl from a middle class origins fit in and become a future queen? the answer to the question now is how can the house of windsor survive without kate? she has absorbed her role with such kind of remarkable poise. it is interestin: such kind of remarkable poise. it is interesting because this is a time so different from the 19505 when the queen became queen, where everybody puts their opinions about everything everywhere. and yet it is a job and a role that demands that you do the opposite. will the monarchy inevitably with the next generation, charles and beyond him william, who will be the first digital noble i