Royal family wears blue in first Easter since Queen Elizabeth’s death

Something blue.

King Charles and his family were spotted Sunday wearing blue at Windsor Castle as he and several other senior members of the royal family attended the first Easter church service since Queen Elizabeth’s passing in September.

Alongside Charles, 74, stood Queen Consort Camila, 75, and behind them walked the future king’s sister Princess Anne and brother, disgraced royal Prince Andrew, reports The Independent.

Prince Edward and his family trailed the senior royals followed by Prince William, Kate Middleton and their three children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.

Bringing up the rear of the group were Princess Eugenie — who is pregnant — and her husband Jack Brooksbank.

The service was held at the 15th-century Windsor Castle which served as the final resting place for Charles’ mother and father as well as his grandparents.

In September, the Royal family revealed a new ledger stone was placed on the tomb.

“A ledger stone has been installed at the King George VI Memorial Chapel, following the interment of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth,” reads a tweet alongside a photo. “The King George VI Memorial Chapel sits within the walls of St George’s Chapel, Windsor.”

This is also Charles’ first service as the Supreme Governor of the Church of England.


Alongside Charles (right), 74, stood Queen Consort Camila (left), 75, and behind them walked the future king’s sister Princess Anne (back right) and brother, disgraced royal Prince Andrew (back left).
YUI MOK/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

This is also Charles' first service as the Supreme Governor of the Church of England.
This is also Charles’ first service as the Supreme Governor of the Church of England.
Yui Mok/Pool via REUTERS

The senior royals followed by Prince William, Kate Middleton and their three children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.
James Whatling / MEGA

The Easter service comes as Charles and Camila prepare for their coronation on May 6.

In the past, the then-Prince Charles issued a statement to the country — last year’s addressed the millions of displaced people “wounded by the past, fearful of the future,” however, the king has yet to release one as a reflection of his new station.

Keeping with his mother’s tradition, the future king and queen handed out Maundy money to 74 men and women as thanks for their outstanding Christian service.

The family outing comes after a brand new revelation that King Charles refused to put Meghan Markel on the royal family’s payroll.


The service was held at the 15th-century Windsor Castle which served as the final resting place for Charles’ mother and father as well as his grandparents.
James Whatling / MEGA

Bringing up the rear of the group were Princess Eugenie — who is pregnant — and her husband Jack Brooksbank.
James Whatling / MEGA

Royal correspondent Robert Jobson made the revelation in his new book “Our King.”

Jobson claims the then-prince made the jab in 2016 when Harry announced his intention to marry the “Suits” star.

According to Jobson, Charles said he couldn’t bankroll Markel, 41, since he was already paying for Camila and William’s growing family.

“This infuriated Harry,” wrote Jobson, “When the Queen asked Charles why he hadn’t given in, he told her that he wasn’t a bank.”

Jobson theorized this was the inciting incident that led to Harry and Meghan leaving the royal family.



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Camilla will be Queen, not Queen Consort after Charles’ coronation

Queen Consort Camilla is simply going to be Queen Camilla, according to a report.

The change in title will likely come after the May coronation of King Charles III, the Daily Mail reported, citing unnamed sources.

The former Camilla Parker-Bowles has been married to King Charles since 2005 and had been known as the Duchess of Cornwall until Queen Elizabeth II’s death in September.

When Charles ascended to the throne, she became Queen Consort.

The latest change in title goes against the dictate of the late queen, who outlined her wishes for Camilla in a February 2022 letter.

 “And when, in the fullness of time, my son Charles becomes King, I know you will give him and his wife Camilla the same support that you have given me; and it is my sincere wish that, when the time comes, Camilla will be known as Queen Consort as she continues her own loyal service,” the queen wrote.


King Charles III and Queen Consort Camilla have been married since 2005.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images
The late Queen Elizabeth II made her wishes known for how her daughter-in-law would be titled.
Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images
The coronation of King Charles III will be held in May.
Samir Hussein/WireImage


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The statement seemed to settle the issue of how Camilla would be addressed.

A signal of an impending change came last week when Camilla’s charity was rebranded as the “Queen’s Reading Room” rather than the “Duchess of Cornwall’s Reading Room.”

“There’s a view in the Palace that Queen Consort is cumbersome and it might be simpler for Camilla to be known just as the Queen when the time is right,” a source told the Daily Mail.

Charles and Camilla will be crowned together on May 6 at Westminster Abbey. Camilla’s grandchildren from her first marriage, who have been kept away from the spotlight, are expected to have a role in the ceremony.

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‘The Crown’ Season 5 Episode 10 Recap: “Decommissioned”

The Season 5 finale of The Crown is a finale in name only. Though we already know some of what’s to come in season six (Dodi and Diana’s relationship and their deaths, mostly), the final episode of the season acts as pure setup for the tragic events that we know are going to unfold. It’s just a shame we’re going to have to wait who-knows-how-long for The Crown Season 6 to come out.

Dodi Al-Fayed, now a big-time Hollywood producer, is living the life in California, light years away from London where his father Mohamed lives with his second wife, Heini. Dodi’s in a bidding war with Michael Douglas for a Malibu mansion, and he’s found love with a model and aspiring actress named Kelly Fisher. Dodi wants the new house (which he needs his father’s money to buy) for him and Kelly, who he loves and wants to marry, but first, he wants to introduce her to Mohamed. Dodi and Kelly take the private jet to London while Seal’s cover of “Fly Like An Eagle” serves as a reminder that not everything about the ’90s deserves a second life.

When Mohamed meets Kelly, he declares, “She’s cute,” but coarsely asks Dodi, “Isn’t it enough just to fuck her?” This conversation happens in Arabic, Mohamed wouldn’t be so rude as to say this in front of her if she could actually understand him. But she finds the fact that the two men are carrying on in another language a little rude. Don’t worry, Kelly will be out of the picture soon enough! (It remains to be seen if she’ll actually appear next season, but it’s safe to say she’s not a long-term concern for anyone here.)

Around this time, a TV special about the merit of having a monarchy airs, with private citizens making a case for or against maintaining a British monarchy. (Watching Diana redial the “NO” phone number a hundred times is petty and also pure ’90s phone nostalgia at its finest.) Also pure ’90s nostalgia is the Big Mouth Billy Bass that Prince Andrew gives his mother for her birthday at a quiet family celebration. Though Charles has painted his mother a watercolor landscape, his mother is dismissive of his artistry and, upon opening Andrew’s gift of the singing fish, she tells him, “You always buy the best presents!” Resting Charles Face resets to angry once more. Over lunch, the family discusses the TV program about them. While the queen seems to have gotten the impression that the public still favors the monarchy, Charles saw things differently, telling his family that the polls on that show, coupled with the fact that Tony Blair and his Labour Party are a shoo-in for the upcoming elections, are an indicator that changes are coming in Britain.

Blair does win the election by a landslide, which means that this is the last we’ll be seeing of John Major. Major lamented in the first episode of the season that the royal family’s vision of themselves was deluded, saying, “It’s a situation that cannot help but to affect the stability of the country. What makes it worse is it feels it’s all about to erupt… on my watch.” And while the family did self-destruct in many ways, and confidence in Major did eventually wane (after seven years, so not a bad run), I’d say that Major still came out of it all intact, and with the respect of the queen, too. “You will always rank highly in my personal table of prime ministers,” she tells him after his defeat. “Very highly.”

“I am still frustrated that I was never able to resolve the issue of the royal yacht,” he tells her, bringing us all the way back to episode one when the queen asked Major for the funds to refit her most favorite royal residence, the HMY Britannia. But you’ll recall from that episode – and every other one this season – that everything is a metaphor, and the ship is perhaps the biggest, most heaving metaphor for the queen. And sadly, it’s ready to be decommissioned. Blair, this bright shining beacon of modernity and progressive values, has declared it so. In it’s place, he offers the queen a solution, that a new yacht, to be privately owned by a corporation, will be leased out anytime travel is required. (“Like a rental!?” Margaret says aghast. Worse still, Blair suggests that the name of the boat will be called “New Britain,” which is also the motto of the Labour Party. Charles doesn’t hate it. The rest of his family does.)

As Major hands the nation over to Blair, Britain readies itself to hand over Hong Kong to China. It has been decided that Charles will preside over the occasion, and while he’s there, he’ll travel on Britannia, in what will be her final voyage before it’s decommissioned and the SS New Britain replaces it. But on the flight over, Charles learns that he and Camilla have been bumped to business class, as all of the politicians attending have snatched all the first class plane tickets. (On the plane, Charles gives 100% “Elaine in coach class” vibes while Jerry pops champagne and smothers himself in hot towels in first class on Seinfeld. The flight attendant even goes so far as to close the curtain to avert pauper Charles’s snooping eyes.)

While Charles is halfway around the world, Diana is in London attending a performance of Swan Lake where she reunites with Mohamed, with whom she has had a long-term friendship since they met at the racetrack in episode 3. He insists she join him and Heini for a post-show meal, and she reluctantly agrees. On the drive to the restaurant, her car is assailed by paparazzi, whose flashbulbs are dangerously blinding. I understand foreshadowing, sometimes I wish this show was just more subtle about it, you know?

This being the beginning of the summer on 1997, Diana tells Mohamed that she’s longing to get out of the country, especially since Charles plans to throw Camilla a grand 50th birthday party that will no doubt be the talk of the town. Mohamed invites Diana to Saint Tropez to vacation with his family. Bring the boys, he tells her, “There will be speedboats and jet skis and movies and burgers and French fries!” Mohamed can be a real asshole sometimes, but Salim Daw’s delivery of this line is the greatest.

After Charles hands Hong Kong over to China, he’s given an audience with Tony Blair, with whom he finds a kinship. Blair, at 43, is the youngest Prime Minister the country has seen in a century, and with his relative youth and forward-thinking disposition, Charles finds kinship. Or so he hopes. They meet aboard Britannia, and Blair explains that only now that he’s seen the ship’s majesty does he regret decommissioning her. Charles scoffs, telling Blair that “there’s no point clinging to the past.” Are we talking about the ship or the queen? You decide the meaning, Blair!

Charles launches into a diatribe about how he wishes to renovate the royal family and its values, but he’s really a single-issue politician, and his campaign hinges on his own right to remarry. He asks for Blair’s help, to form a quiet alliance, and while Blair sees right through Charles’s agenda, he pities him, too. “Can’t be much fun being the Prince of Wales if you’re an impressive man,” he tells his wife.

Upon hearing about Charles using the yacht for a vacation with Camilla, the queen eviscerates him when he returns, insulting their relationship and asking Charles, “What good can ultimately come of it when the public is so against it?” Charles’s anger throughout the years is certainly justified when you consider moments like this. Charles tells his mother that she adheres to Victorian-era ideals – about marriage, about life, about all of it – which she thanks him for and takes as a compliment. But the lingering silence and staring into space that follows is the unspoken indicator that she’s willing to acknowledge that maybe she is a little old-fashioned.

No time to dwell on your kids though, when you’ve got a decommissioned yacht to bid farewell to! Off the queen goes to say one last goodbye to Britannia where she tearfully salutes every last sailor, mast, and porthole she can. Ah, the great metaphorical ship, it’s sad to see you go! This would all seem so much poignant if the queen were in fact, about to abdicate or die, but we all know she has 30 more years left, and it’s hard to get too lost in the metaphor of it all, honestly knowing that she’s just getting started.

While the queen is aboard her ship, Mohamed and Diana ready themselves for their trip to the South of France on his. As the episode ends, there are still so many stories that are only just getting ready to unfold, and so many looming questions about what’s in store for season six. In reality, the time frame between the Saint Tropez vacation and Diana and Dodi’s deaths was only three weeks, which means that even though we see Dodi propose to Kelly in the final moments of this episode, everything will change for everyone when he meets Diana. Every moment from here on out counts more than ever, and the rest of the story will become a thing of legend, a tragic fairy tale without a happy ending.

Liz Kocan is a pop culture writer living in Massachusetts. Her biggest claim to fame is the time she won on the game show Chain Reaction.

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The Crown Season 5: Netflix Teases First Look Ahead of Release on November 9

The Crown season 5’s first look have been released by Netflix, featuring a brand new cast. The stills from the latest season depict a despondent-appearing Princess Diana (played by Elizabeth Debicki, who replaced Emma Corrin in the previous season), dressed in a sparkling gown and bowing her head as she enters a lavish evening engagement.

In a different shot, Prince Charles (played by Dominic West, who steps in for Josh O’Connor from seasons 3 and 4) and his friend Camilla Parker Bowles (played by Olivia Williams, who takes over for Emerald Fennell) are smiling and cuddling up together outside as they appear to be watching fireworks.

However, in a different, happier photo, Diana and Charles may be seen vacationing with their young boys Prince William (Timothee Sambor) and Prince Harry on a speedboat (Teddy Hawley).

“That’s the amazing thing about playing these people at this time, because, in the journey of The Crown so far out of all the seasons, this is the most visual content we have of the royal family,” Elizabeth Debicki told Netflix’s fansite Tudum, as reported by Variety.

“In the ’90s everything had started to be filmed and also it was the birth of the 24-hour news cycle so there’s just this incredible amount of content that we have access to. Diana was the most photographed person in the world at that time. As an actor, you open the portal and this huge tsunami of information comes at you. I happily swam around in it,” said Elizabeth, as per Variety.

On November 9, The Crown season 5 will be out on Netflix. The series will take the viewers through the late 1980s and early 1990s, one of the most challenging decades for the royal family.

Three of the Queen’s four children separated or got divorced in 1992, which she infamously referred to as her “annus horribilis.”

The sixth and presumably the last season of The Crown, which is supposed to focus on Diana’s death in 1997, is presently in production.


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Princess Charlotte wears horseshoe brooch gifted to her by Queen to funeral

Princess Charlotte paid a sweet tribute to her “Gan Gan” at Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral today.

The 7-year-old royal — who is said to share the late monarch’s love of horses — sported a diamond brooch in the shape of a horseshoe, a piece which was reportedly a gift from Queen Elizabeth, according to People.

The late monarch, who died on September 8 at the age of 96, was famous for her love of horses and rode well into her nineties.

It was a glimpse into the future of the young princess’ style and was the first time we’ve seen Charlotte wear a brooch or a significant piece of jewelry.

Princess Charlotte, who joined her brother Prince George for the funeral service, looked grown-up in an elegant black boater by Jane Taylor topped with a bow at the back.

She added a black coat by Spanish childrenswear label Ancar, black tights and black buckled dress shoes.

Charlotte walked down the aisle of Westminster Abbey with her parents, Prince William and Kate Middleton, who were recently given the titles of Prince and Princess of Wales following Queen Elizabeth’s death.

While the young royal chose a diamond brooch to honor the late sovereign, her mother chose Queen Elizabeth’s pearls and a black Alexander McQueen coat dress for the occasion — a black version of the same coat she wore for the Platinum Jubilee this summer — along with a dramatic black veiled hat.


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Following today’s state funeral at Westminster Abbey, Princess Charlotte will attend the committal ceremony at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor, where Queen Elizabeth will be buried alongside her parents, King George VI and the Queen Mother, her sister Princess Margaret and husband Prince Philip.

Princess Charlotte and Prince George rode with the Princess of Wales and Queen Consort during today’s events.
REUTERS

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Prince William, Prince Harry reunite at Queen Elizabeth’s funeral

Estranged Princes William and Harry were once again united in grief Monday as they appeared for a final farewell to their late grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.

The once-tight brothers put their feud behind them as they walked behind their father, King Charles III, and their aunt and uncles, in a solemn procession conveying the monarch’s flag-draped coffin to Westminster Abbey.

However, new heir apparent William, 40, and his woke California-based brother Harry, 38, avoided eye contact as they stood next to one another looking stone-faced.

The Prince of Wales was wearing his uniform, while his brother was forced to don a morning suit after being denied the privilege of wearing military garb because of his decision to step back from being a working member of the royal family.

Harry was also banned from saluting during the procession to Westminster Abbey – standing out while other royals including the new monarch, his brother and Princess Anne all performed the gesture.

Princes Harry, left, and William, right, united in grief while taking part in their grandmother’s funeral procession in London on Monday.
REUTERS
Prince Harry looked somber, standing beside his estranged older brother.
AFP via Getty Images
Prince Harry was not permitted to wear his uniform and donned a morning suit.
REUTERS

The feuding siblings’ reunion came two days after they took part in a vigil for their grandmother at Westminster Hall, where Harry wore his uniform by a special permission of the King.

After entering the Abbey ahead of the funeral service, Prince William took his seat in the front row along with his wife and their two oldest children, George, 9, and Charlotte, 7, while Prince Harry settled into the second row on the other side of the aisle behind his father and other senior royals.

For many royal watchers, seeing them in funeral events painfully evokes 1997, when the brothers — then just 15 and 12 — walked behind the casket of their mother, Princess Diana, after her car-crash death.

William, Prince of Wales (left) and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex (right) walk behind the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II.
Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Prince William, Prince of Wales and Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex walk behind the coffin during the procession for the Lying-in State of Queen Elizabeth II.
Karwai Tang/WireImage
Prince William is seen in the first row next to his wife and children.
Reuters
Prince Harry and wife Meghan sit in the second row behind the King and his uncles.
Reuters

That includes future king William, who admitted that events for his grandmother “brought back memories” of his mother’s funeral.

The queen’s death has also forced together the brothers, who stopped talking after Harry quit the UK and life as a senior royal, joining wife Meghan Markle, 41, in a series of damning interviews accusing his family of bullying and even racism.

The estrangement continued right up to the queen’s death, when William made no plans to see his brother even though he was staying just a short walk from him during a rare UK visit.

The brothers also made their separate ways to Scotland to try to see the dying queen, with Harry forced to go alone without Markle — and first to leave the next morning, reportedly without seeing his brother and father.

It made it all the more surprising when the brothers and their wives — Markle and new Princess of Wales Kate Middleton, 40 — went on a walkabout together Sunday last week to view tributes left at Windsor Castle.

Body language experts noted clear tensions between the group, however, with royal watchers questioning if it is a genuine attempt at healing their shattered relationship or just a show of unity in honor of the queen.

The same applies to Harry and his father, King Charles III, 73, whom he accused of passing on the “pain and suffering” that forced him to quit royal life.

But in one of his first acts as king, Charles made a concession to his youngest son, allowing him to wear his military uniform at events for his grandmother — despite being stripped of the right after quitting his royal duties.

Harry, meanwhile, insisted that he would “now honor my father in his new role as King Charles III.”

The Queen’s death has forced the brothers back together.
CHRIS JACKSON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

However, he and Markle are now reportedly again “furious” at the royals after allegedly being told their children will not be made His and Her Royal Highness despite the shift in the order of succession, which leaves them sixth and seventh in line for the throne.

The royal family and their staff will remain in mourning for another seven days after Monday’s funeral, the new king has said.

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Queen Elizabeth funeral live updates: Westminster Abbey opens for funeral


Follow the New York Post’s live coverage of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral at Westminster Abbey in London.

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Queen Elizabeth II death: Operation London Bridge: What is happening today

After Queen Elizabeth II’s death at 96 years old after 70 years of service to the United Kingdom, preparations are in motion for the transition of power and elaborate funeral proceedings for Her Majesty.

As the nation of the United Kingdom and its respective providences prepare for mourning, here’s what is expected today following her death:

The King will return to London

King Charles III and Queen Consort Camilla will travel to London on Friday, where the King will meet with new prime minister Liz Truss.

The King and Queen Consort have remand at Balmoral on Thursday in the wake of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, death.

There will most likely be 12 days of mourning before the Queen’s funeral.
BACKGRID

Funeral planning and royal accession

King Charles will likely meet with the Duke of Norfolk, who is Earl Marshal, and is in charge of the accession of power and the funeral proceedings for Queen Elizabeth II.

As Earl Marshal, the job entitles them to make the arrangements for state functions.

A confirming time of National Mourning

The United Kingdom will then confirm the length of the national mourning period leading up to the Queen’s funeral. This will likely be 12 days, The Guardian reports.

King Charles III is driven through Ballater as he leaves Birkhall in Scotland and travels to London following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
Andrew Milligan/PA Images/Alamy

Royal mourning period

King Charles will then select the number of days the royal family and members of the royal household will be in mourning. This court mourning is expected to last one month.

When King George VI died in February 1952, the royal family and associates spent 16 weeks of Court Mourning.

National flag status

It will be announced that the national flag of the United Kingdom will remain at half-mast until the day following The Queen’s State Funeral.

Bells across England 

Westminster Abbey, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and Windsor Castle will ring their bells, along with churches across England, at noon today.

King Charles III and the Queen Consort drive through Ballater as they leave Birkhall in Scotland and travel to London following the death of Queen Elizabeth II on Thursday.
Andrew Milligan/PA Images/Alamy

Gun Salute

96 rounds will be fired off in a gun salute at 1 pm at Hyde Park and other stations around the country to honor each year of the Queen’s life, the BBC reported.

The King’s address

King Charles will address the nation with a pre-recorded speech at around 6 pm. He will pledge his duty of service to the United Kingdom as the country’s new sovereign and pay tributes to his mother, Queen Elizabeth II.

Service of remembrance

Following the King’s speech, the British parliament’s prime minister and senior ministers are expected to attend a public service of remembrance for the Queen at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London.

The service will begin at 6 pm BST, with a first-come-first-served basis for 2,000 guests, according to the BBC.

Flowers placed to next to pictures of Queen Elizabeth are pictured outside the British Consulate-General, after she died aged 96, in Hong Kong, China September 9, 2022.
REUTERS

Her coffin will then be taken to Buckingham Palace on Tuesday.

Queen Elizabeth II will be taken to Windsor Castle for a committal service ahead of her burial in the castle’s King George VI Memorial Chapel.

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Queen Elizabeth II tributes continue to pour in from world leaders

Tributes to the late Queens Elizabeth II continued to pour in from leaders all over the world.

Country heads from Australia, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, New Zealand, Nigeria, Brazil, Jamaica, and more offered their condolences to the monarchy and the United Kingdom after learning of the queen’s passing Thursday afternoon.

Remembrances and kind words came from all corners of the world, including former British colonies that fought for freedom from the monarchy.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese noted that the Queen was the only British monarch to visit the island nation.

“This is a loss we feel deeply in Australia,” Albanese said in a Thursday night video message. “… Her Majesty celebrated our good times and she stood with us during trials and hardships.”

Australia’s neighbor, New Zealand remembered the Queen, who was also its monarch and head of state under constitutional arrangements, as an extraordinary woman and leader.

“Here is a woman who gave her life, utterly, to the service of others,” New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters. “And regardless of what anyone thinks of the role of monarchies around the world, there is undeniably, I think here, a display of someone who gave everything on behalf of her people, and her people included the people of Aotearoa New Zealand.”

President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria — which gained independence from the British in 1960 — expressed “immense sadness” over Her Majesty’s passing.

Queen Elizabeth II greets President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria during a Heads of Government reception at the San Anton Palace on November 27, 2015 near Attard, Malta.
Getty Images

“The story of modern Nigeria will never be complete without a chapter on Queen Elizabeth ll, a towering global personality and an outstanding leader,” Buhari said. “She dedicated her life to making her nation, the Commonwealth and the entire world a better place.”


Get the latest on Queen Elizabeth II’s passing with The Post’s live coverage


In Latin America, leaders in Brazil and Argentina spoke highly of Queen Elizabeth II after learning of her death.

Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro announced the country would go into three days of national mourning to remember the 96-year-old royal.

He added that Elizabeth II “wasn’t the queen for the British only — she was a queen for all of us.”

Argentina’s government also grieved for the monarch.

“The government of the Argentine Republic expresses its sorrow for her passing and accompanies the British people and her family in this moment of grief,” its foreign ministry posted on Twitter.

In Asia, South Korea and Japan expressed their sympathy.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol tweeted that the Queens’ kind heart and good deeds will be remembered.

“She had a strong belief in the cause of human freedom and left great legacies of dignity,” he said.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said the loss of the royal is felt around the world.

“The loss of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II is a great loss not only to the British people but also to the international community,” he said. “Japan’s thoughts are with the United Kingdom as the British people overcome this deepest sadness.”

With Post wires



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‘The Crown’ will halt production in wake of Queen’s death

In the wake of the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, “The Crown” is expected to take a production hiatus for Season 6.

The longest-reigning monarch in British history, whose dedication to royal tradition and stiff upper lip in the face of family scandals endeared her to generations of Britons, died on September 8. She was 96.

The royal family announced her death from Balmoral Castle, her beloved summer residence in Scotland, where members of the royal family had rushed to her side after her health took a turn for the worse.

“’The Crown’ is a love letter to her and I’ve nothing to add for now, just silence and respect. I expect we will stop filming out of respect too,” Peter Morgan, writer of the popular Netflix show told Deadline.

Season 6 is slated for release in 2023. Meanwhile, Season 5 is set to premier on the streamer in November.

Morgan, who also wrote the iconic 2006 film “The Queen” starring Dame Helen Mirren as Her Majesty, has declined to comment further on the monarch’s death.

Netflix has not responded to The Post’s request to comment.

The Queen was portrayed by Claire Foy in the first two seasons of the popular show.

Seasons 3 and 4 saw Olivia Coleman step up to play the role of her Majesty in her middle age.

Queen Elizabeth II the longest-reigning monarch in British history.

Producers for “The Crown” had been prepared for Operation London Bridge, the protocol that establishes what will happen from the moment of the queen’s death to when Prince Charles would be pronounced king.

“We have our own version of Operation London Bridge,” a series insider told The Post. “This is particularly pertinent for if we are filming. Filming will shut down immediately if we are in production, for at least a week. There would also be lots of discussion about when to restart.”

The award-winning television show also recently announced that Rufus Kampa, 16, will play Prince William, now 40, from the age of 15, while actor Ed McVey, 21, will play him during his late teens and into his early 20s, Deadline reported last week.

As for Duchess Kate Middleton, also 40, Meg Bellamy will portray her as a young woman.

The upcoming season will show Princess Diana, Prince Charles and the rest of “the Firm” as they deal with the issues that befall them in the 1990s, while Season 6 will move into modern times, chronicling the conflicts they encounter in the 21st century.



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