2022年10月13日木曜日

《ウィリアム皇太子&キャサリン妃 メンタル・ヘルス・デーに、BBCラジオ1をジャック!》《新国王チャールズ3世の戴冠式の日程が発表!》



《ウィリアム皇太子&キャサリン妃 メンタル・ヘルス・デーに、BBCラジオ1をジャック!》

10 / 10 (月)

Kate turns interviewer! Princess of Wales joins Prince William to quiz mental health campaigners on BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat - and says there is 'no right or wrong way' to ask for help

  • Prince and Princess of Wales, both 40, have recorded a special programme for BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat
  • Kate said there is 'no right or wrong' way to seek help and added 'we all have mental health' just like physical  
  • Show was aired on Radio 1, Radio 1Xtra and the Asian Network at 12.45pm today and will air again at 5.45pm 
この日は
 -- a global day to raise awareness and perhaps take a moment to ask someone in our lives, or indeed ourselves, "How do you feel?" 
It's a reminder to check in on someone who may need a reassuring hug or just a chat with a friend or relative over a coffee. 
You'll all remember marking the day became a staple for the royals before and after Heads Together. 
To mark World Mental Health Day 2022, the Prince and Princess of Wales took over BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat programme to record a special which will air at 12.45pm tomorrow.

'The royals-turned-reporters visited Radio 1's Live Lounge to hear from four guests about their experiences.

They included a young mental health advocate who recently advised writers on TV soap EastEnders about a schizophrenia storyline.

The full show, recorded on World Mental Health Day, airs on Tuesday on Radio 1, 1Xtra and Asian Network.

During the discussion, the prince and princess spoke about stigmas around mental health, the pressures of social media and ways to equip young people with the tools to open up about how they're feeling.'

翌日、11日
The Prince and Princess of Wales' special episode of Newsbeat to mark World Mental Health Day is now available to listen to on the BBC Sounds Player

”メンタル・ヘルス・デー”
ウィリアム皇太子&キャサリン妃ご夫妻が
BBCラジオ1の”Newsbeat” 
をジャック

メンタルヘルスについて
インタビュアーさながら
ヒアリング&議論をされました。

ファッションは
クリーム色のジャケット+パンツ

ノーカラーのロングJKは
着回しの《ザラ》
ですね〜

 黒のパンツと合わせてシックなワーキングスタイルに。

この日の注目は、ネックレス!!!

NEWのアイテム登場ですが、
これまでと全く異なるタイプの
チャンキーネックレス❤️

ゴールドのゴツめチェーンに❤️の
ぽってりチャームが付いたもの

結構大ぶりだけど、
意外にもサラリとお似合い。

絶対ご自身では選んでない、一品だな。

トレンドでもあるけど
それにしても、これをチョイスされたとは
なんだか嬉しい❤️


ジャケット《ZARA》(=2022年6月 @Little Village in Brent)
クリーム色のトップス《》
黒のパンツ《》
NEW チャンキー❤️ネックレス《Laura Lombardi》”Luisa Necklace   $260


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(BBC)

'Their guests were 24-year-old mental health advocate António Ferreria, Emma Hardwell from charity The Mix, music therapist Ben Cowley and Dr Abigail Miranda from the Anna Freud Centre for Children and Families.

During the discussion, they spoke about stigmas around mental health, the pressures of social media and the importance of opening up.

Panel guest António told the prince and princess he was a "model student" and high achiever growing up but the pressure and expectation became a "boulder on my back".

He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and emotionally unstable personality disorder as a teenager after a teacher noticed a change in his behaviour.

He was treated on a psychiatric unit over a two-year period and "came out of there a different man", he told Prince William, saying it was during this time and through talking to fellow patients that the importance of looking after his mental health hit home.'






speak to young people and campaigners on BBC Radio 1 




The Prince and Princess of Wales with Emma Hardwell, Ben Cowley, Antonio Ferreria, Dr Abigail Miranda and Pria Rai in a photograph taken to mark their special programme for BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat for World Mental Health Day


William and Kate have previously appeared on Radio 1. 
The couple appear on the Scott Mills show in 2017



Transcript: Prince and Princess of Wales speak about mental health on Radio 1's Newsbeat

Pria Rai: 'How are you doing? No, really, how are you doing? It's a simple enough question, but one that can spark a really meaningful conversation. Yesterday was World Mental Health Day, and as part of a special recording, we had two very special Newsbeat reporters to help.'

Prince William: 'Thanks Pria. It's great to be here on World Mental Health Day. We are joined by four young people who are doing amazing things on mental health.'

Antonio Ferreria: 'I was diagnosed with schizophrenia and emotionally unstable personality disorder when I was a teenager around the ages of 15, 16. A lot of it came from, you know, coming from an African background. Mental health isn't a topic of discussion, it's not something I was aware of or had any knowledge of. And so, we, our only sort of help… when we're at crisis point, because it's a thing I call over-resilience. We've been made to be so over-resilient that we push away those vulnerabilities and those weaknesses.'

Kate: 'The last time we were here was to launch the Heads Together campaign which was to get people to start opening up and talking about mental health. Since then obviously we've had the pandemic and everything like that. Do you feel that there's been a shift in what people are speaking about around mental health?'

Emma Hardwell: 'Yeah and I think especially we're seeing this at a younger generation, my generation and younger coming up, definitely less scared to talk about mental health, and it's becoming more acceptable. And I think through the pandemic there was a lot around feeling lonely. You know, a lot of us were isolated in our houses by ourselves. There was a lot of students who were literally in small university accommodations by themselves through that time. And talking about feeling lonely and what that can then lead to, I think because it's become such a universal feeling, that a lot of people have grouped together. We all feel lonely right now, especially during that time, or we’re all lacking the connections that maybe we need. And so I think when we’re all feeling the same thing and we start to admit that, it makes it easier then for more people to say: "Oh yeah, me too."’

Kate: ‘That’s one of the messages we are trying to encourage is the fact that everyone has mental health, and in the same way as their physical health we have to look after, in the same way we go to the gym, we need to look after and nurture our minds as well. You were saying it’s really important to reach out and connect with people... Expression through music or through art or through other forms of expression, it’s a really great way isn’t it of experiencing mental health.’

Ben Cowley: 'Absolutely, self-care is being unapologetic about what you need, and it could be all these fun things like giving yourself an hour of gaming or going to the theatre, but it can also be giving yourself permission to say that you're not coping and to ask someone what to do.' 

Prince William: 'Abigail, just, maybe you could touch on, I liken, a lot of the work we've done on mental health and listening to lots of people talk about it, is everyone likes a toolbox - particularly for men. A toolbox is quite a useful analogy to kind of use. How much in your work do you see, because you alluded to the fact that big family networks and support networks around people are really important, but a lot of people don't realise what they need until it actually comes along. You can be living one life one minute and something massively changes and you realise you don't necessarily have the tools or the experience to be able to tackle that.'

Abigail Miranda: 'To have, I suppose, in your toolbox, communication would be key and I think kind of some of the myth-busting as well around attachment. We know now through studies that actually any parent who spends a significant amount of time - or any caregiver - with the child will also form similar attachments and have those similar patterns as well.'

Kate: 'I would love to know, and Pria maybe the listeners also would be interested as well, is knowing how do you look after your own mental health.'

Antonio Ferreira: 'That's a big question. I know not every day is going to be roses and sunflowers, you know, I know some days I'm going to have to push against the clouds to see that sun again and, you know, I know that you know when you have a bad day it doesn't mean it will be a bad week or a bad month. So that's the type of awareness I'm talking about, you know, coming to accept these things. Because when you can accept these things and you know, you know, on your bad day, what you have to remember is to remain humble and, you know, stay hopeful. Because after bad the good follows, and you know, after good bad follows, after night comes day, after day comes night. So, you know, you want to keep pushing, you want to, you know, however much that hope is, you want to hold onto that hope. You know, you can't always run away from the issue, sometimes you have to really face them and conquer them and so, you know, with practice there's progress, and that's, I guess, in a nutshell how... it was a big question!'

Kate: 'Sorry! There's no right or wrong, that's the thing as well. Different things will work for different people and it's just sometimes trying isn't it, as well.'

Antonio Ferreira: 'That's it, yeah.’

Kate Middleton: 'Different methods, different opportunities that arise as well to help best support you.'

Antonio Ferreira: 'Exactly.'

Prince William: 'I'm conscious we might run out of time and Pria [Rai] might say this is the worst Newsbeat production by two interviewers she's ever seen'.

Pria Rai: 'Do you know what, you can come back, this seat, I've kept it warm, I think you've done a very good job, you can come back, carry on.'

Prince William: 'Well as we've said at the start of this special Newsbeat, this is all about having a meaningful conversation on mental health, but it shouldn't stop here.'

Kate: 'Yep, absolutely, because talking about mental health is so important and it's definitely the first step for us all, is to keep talking, having those conversations and reaching out for help.’




***********************

OUTFIT

ジャケット《ZARA》(=2022年6月 @Little Village in Brent)




(=2022年6月 @Little Village in Brent)


クリーム色のトップス《》

黒のパンツ《》

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-11301997/Prince-Harry-Kate-Middleton-BBC-Radio-One-World-Mental-Health-Day.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-11300377/Prince-Princess-Wales-record-special-programme-BBC-Radio-Ones-Newsbeat.html


-------------------------------------------------------

《新国王チャールズ3世の戴冠式の日程が発表!》

後ほど整理します〜〜

King Charles's coronation will be at Westminster Abbey on Saturday May 6: Monarch and Queen Consort Camilla will both be crowned in ceremony lasting just ONE hour on Harry and Meghan's son Archie's fourth birthday - but there's NO promise of a Bank Holiday

  • Ceremony at Westminster Abbey will be conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury, currently Justin Welby 
  • Service on Saturday May 6 next year will be eight months after accession of Charles III and the Queen's death
  • Palace says it will be 'rooted in longstanding traditions and pageantry' but also 'reflect monarch's role today'
  • Charles III will be anointed with holy oil, receive the orb, coronation ring and sceptre and be crowned king

The Coronation of King Charles III and the Queen Consort will take place on Saturday, 6 May 2023 at Westminster Abbey. The service will be conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The Palace said the Coronation "will reflect the monarch's role today and look towards the future, while being rooted in longstanding traditions and pageantry".


'The coronation is to be staged just a few weeks before the 70th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, which took place on 2 June 1953.

Coronations have taken place at Westminster Abbey for the last 900 years and since 1066, the service has almost always been conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

And for over a thousand years, the ceremony has followed a similar structure.

King Charles III's coronation however, will be "shorter, smaller and less expensive" amid the cost-of-living crisis, the Daily Mirror reported in September.

The paper also reported that the King plans a "slimmed down" monarchy, with the number of working royals cut to seven.'



They are expected to see the guestlist slashed from 8,000 to just 2,000 with a more relaxed dress code with peers possibly allowed to wear lounge suits rather than ceremonial robes.



When Queen Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953 there was a carnival of celebration as millions rejoiced in the display which provided a morale boost to a nation on its knees after the war.

For a day, street parties banished the hardship of post-war rationing and shortages, and even atrocious, unseasonal weather could not dampen the enthusiasm.

People began to bed down in the streets of London as early as 48 hours before Tuesday June 2 1953, just to make sure they had a standing place to watch the Queen pass by.

By Monday evening, in pouring rain and driving wind, half a million people were already lining the procession route.

The public were not the only ones making preparations.


In a tribute, Charles - now King - paid to his mother on her 80th birthday, he recalled the night before the big day when he was four years old.

'I have vivid memories of the coronation; of my mother coming to say goodnight to my sister and me while wearing the crown so that she could get used to its weight on her head before the coronation ceremony; of thousands of people gathered in The Mall outside Buckingham Palace chanting 'We want the Queen' and keeping me awake at night,' he said.

Despite initial reservations, the Queen eventually agreed to the TV cameras being present in Westminster Abbey to capture the event.

Licence holders doubled from one and a half million to three million in anticipation and many people rented a set for the day.

An estimated 27 million people in Britain alone watched the coronation live on their black and white televisions and the images were beamed around the world.

At Buckingham Palace after the ceremony, the Queen, wearing her crown, and Philip appeared on the balcony with the other members of the royal family.

Their children, Charles and Anne, were greeted with great excitement by the crowds.

In her broadcast address to the nation the same evening, the young Queen thanked the public for their support.

All of you, near or far, have been united in one purpose. It is hard for me to find words in which to tell you of the strength which this knowledge has given me,' she said.

She added: 'I have in sincerity pledged myself to your service, as so many of you are pledged to mine.

'Throughout all my life and with all my heart I shall strive to be worthy of your trust.'

The night came to an end as hundreds of thousands on Victoria Embankment watched a spectacular coronation fireworks display.

Organisers and royals will be hoping for a similarly effusive display of affection from the public in less than seven months when the King is crowned.


----------------------------------------------------



2022年5月10日
@ the ceremonial state opening of Parliament 
@ the Palace of Westminster 




Palace insiders said that while the Coronation will include the same core elements of the traditional ceremony which has retained a similar structure for more than 1,000 years, it would recognise the 'spirit of our times'. It is expected to be much 'smaller and simpler' than the three-hour spectacle of the late Queen's momentous Coronation in 1953
 (Pictured: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in her coronation dress and Robe of Estate holding the spectre and orb and and wearing the Imperial State Crown)


Queen Elizabeth II riding with the Duke of Edinburgh in the State Coach through Trafalgar Square on the way from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey for her coronation on June 2, 1953


Queen Elizabeth II wears St Edward's Crown during her coronation in June 1953. This was the view as seen by television viewers immediately after the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Geoffrey Fisher, had placed the crown upon the Queen's head


Queen Elizabeth II receives the homage of her husband Prince Philip at her coronation in Westminster Abbey 


Prince Charles looks solemn as he stands chin on hand between the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret in the Royal Box at Westminster Abbey, from where he saw Queen Elizabeth II crowned


Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles, Princess Anne and the Duke of Edinburgh after the coronation


Queen Elizabeth II wearing the Coronation dress in the Throne Room at Buckingham Palace after her coronation in June 1953


The then Duke and Duchess of York in a carriage on The Mall leaving for Westminster Abbey, for the Coronation ceremony, after which they became King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on May 12, 1937


Queen Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother), Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II), Princess Margaret and King George VI after his coronation on the balcony of Buckingham Palace


King George VI and Queen Elizabeth with their daughters Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret Rose after the coronation of The Duke of York as King George VI on May 12, 1937 



What will happen stage by stage at King Charles's coronation in May 2023

The crowning of a sovereign is one of the most ancient ceremonies, and is deeply religious and steeped in pageantry.

The Crown Jewels' coronation regalia will play a starring role when the King is crowned on Saturday May 6 next year in Westminster Abbey.

There are six basic phases to the coronation: The recognition, the oath, the anointing, the investiture which includes the crowning, the enthronement and the homage. Here is what is expected to happen:

Recognition: This rite dates back to ancient procedures of the Witan - the supreme council of England in Anglo-Saxon times. The sovereign stands in the theatre - the central space in Westminster Abbey - and turns to show himself 'unto the people' at each of the four directions - east, south, west and north. The Archbishop of Canterbury will proclaim Charles the 'undoubted King' and ask the congregation and choir to show their homage and service by crying out 'God Save King Charles', with the order of service urging them to do so with 'willingness and joy'.

Coronation Oath: The form and wording of the oath has varied over the centuries. The King will promise to reign according to law, exercise justice with mercy and maintain the Church of England. The King, with the Sword of State carried before him, will go to the altar and declare: 'The things which I have here before promised, I will perform, and keep. So help me God.' He will kiss the Bible and sign the Oath.

The Anointing: After the oath, the sovereign is then 'anointed, blessed and consecrated' by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The anointing with holy oil is the central act of the religious ceremony. The King will remove his crimson robe and sit in King Edward's chair, which was made in 1300 and has been used by every monarch since 1626, under a canopy of silk or cloth of gold held by four Knights of the Garter.

The archbishop will use the golden eagle-shaped ampulla - which pours the oil from its beak - and the 12th century silver-gilt anointing spoon which is the most ancient treasure of the Crown Jewels, to anoint the King in the form of a cross. Traditionally the choir sings the anthem Zadok The Priest at the anointing is carried out. Under the chair is expected to be the Stone of Destiny. The ancient, sacred symbol of Scotland's monarchy which was once captured by King Edward I of England now only leaves Edinburgh Castle for coronations.

Investiture including the Crowning: Having been sanctified, the sovereign puts on a sleeveless white garment - the Colobium Sindonis - and then a robe of cloth of gold - the Supertunica. The King is presented with a jewelled sword and the golden spurs - the symbol of chivalry - and the armills - golden bracelets of sincerity and wisdom.

He will put on the Robe Royal of gold cloth and will be presented with the orb, the coronation ring on the fourth finger of his right hand, the sceptre and the rod. Then Charles, sitting in King Edward's Chair, will be crowned by the archbishop with St Edward's Crown, with the congregation shouting out 'God Save the King'.

Enthroning: After a blessing, the King will go to his throne and be 'lifted up into it by the archbishops and bishops, and other peers of the kingdom'.

Homage: The archbishop, royal blood princes - likely to include the Prince of Wales - and senior peers pay homage to the monarch, placing their hands between the King's and swearing allegiance, touching the crown and kissing the King's right hand. The House of Commons does not pay homage.

The Queen's Coronation: Camilla as Queen Consort will also be crowned, in a similar but simpler ceremony which follows the Homage. After Charles's marriage to Camilla, the royal family's website added the get-out clause 'unless decided otherwise' to the phrase: 'A Queen consort is crowned with the King, in a similar but simpler ceremony.'

At George VI's coronation, Queen Elizabeth was anointed and crowned. She knelt down with the archbishop pouring holy oil on the crown of her head, and the Queen's Ring was placed on her hand, and her crown on her head. Her coronation crown was made especially for the 1937 coronation and features the famous but controversial Koh-i-noor diamond. She was presented with a sceptre and the ivory rod with the dove, before rising to sit in her own throne, after bowing 'reverently' to her husband.




King's coronation will clash with the day Archie turns four, Sir Tony Blair's birthday and a potentially decisive weekend of Premier League football 

The coronation of Charles III falls on the birthday of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's son Archie, who will turn four on the day his grandfather is crowned King amid great pageantry in Westminster Abbey. 

It has not yet been confirmed who will be at the ceremony and whether or not Harry and Meghan will be among those invited, or whether they will be able to attend considering it will be Archie's special day. 

More than 2,000 people are set to fill the Abbey to see both Charles and Harry's stepmother, the Queen Consort, being crowned.

Harry has faced difficult times in his relationship with his father, telling US talk show host Oprah Winfrey he felt 'really let down' by Charles, who had stopped taking his calls in the run up to the Megxit crisis, and how there was a 'lot of hurt'.

The duke later lambasted Charles's skills as father, criticising him for expecting his sons to endure the pressures of royal life, and suggesting his parenting left him with 'genetic pain and suffering'.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex pictured with daughter Lilibet and son Archie shortly before Christmas last year

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex pictured with daughter Lilibet and son Archie shortly before Christmas last year

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex with their baby son - whose name was later announced as Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor - during a photocall in St George's Hall at Windsor Castle in Berkshire on May 8, 2019

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex with their baby son - whose name was later announced as Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor - during a photocall in St George's Hall at Windsor Castle in Berkshire on May 8, 2019

Charles's accession to the throne means Archie, who lives in California with Harry and Meghan and his one-year-old sister Lilibet, is technically now a prince. But it has not been confirmed by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex or Buckingham Palace whether he will use the title of prince or whether Lili will use that of princess.

The date for the coronation will also fall on other famous birthdays, including that of former Labour prime minister Sir Tony Blair, who will be turning  70. 

Hollywood legend George Clooney will also be blowing out the candles as the actor turns 62. 

The day will also see 10 Premier League fixtures taking place on the same date, although fans hoping to see Tottenham Hotspur V Crystal Palace, or Fulham v Leicester City, may need to plan ahead for likely disruption to London travel. 

Other matches include Manchester City v Leeds United, West Ham v Manchester United, Liverpool v Brentford and AFC Bournemouth v Chelsea. 

May 6 was also the wedding anniversary of the late Queen's sister, Princess Margaret, who married in 1960. Margaret divorced her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, in 1978.

The King's grandfather, George VI, had his coronation on May 12 1937. The ceremony also featured the crowning of Charles' beloved grandmother Queen Elizabeth, later known as the Queen Mother.

Other anniversaries include the death of Charles's great-great grandfather King Edward VII - Queen Victoria's son - on May 6 in 1910.

In 1954 on May 6, Roger Bannister ran the first sub-four-minute mile on the Iffley Road track in Oxford, in three minutes 59.4 seconds.

In 1994, the Queen and France's then president Francois Mitterrand opened the Channel Tunnel, and Nelson Mandela and the ANC were confirmed as the winners in South Africa's first post-apartheid election.

In 1997, the Bank of England was given independence from political control, the most significant change in the bank's 300-year history.

It is also the anniversary of the birth of the founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, in 1856, and of Italian silent screen heartthrob Rudolph Valentino in 1895.



https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11303991/Coronation-King-Charles-III-held-Saturday-6-year-Westminster-Abbey.html


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『STORY & 婦人画報 11月号発売中』

現在発売中の
《STORY》
《婦人画報》

でお仕事させて頂きました。

どちらも、
今年25周忌をむかえた
ダイアナ元妃に関する特集です。

STORYでは、
ダイアナ元妃ファッションがトレンドに再来!
なかなか興味深くて
とっても新鮮で楽しかったです。

婦人画報では、人生について。
原稿も書かせて頂きました。

ぜひご覧ください。


『婦人画報』
10ページの特集❤️









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4ページの特集です❤️





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『25ans 動画チャンネル Royal Scoop " 』
新たな動画が公開されております!

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行ってたらここに居たなあ、、と思いつつも、
私がオススメした場所を含め
ディレクターが可愛い町並みやショップを
超可愛く撮影&編集してくれて感動

そして、代わりに頑張って頂いてしまった新宅さんに
一の木シェフまで、、、ご迷惑と参加いただき
しかも現地では、クリスシェフやスタッフの方達まで超協力して頂き
それだけで泣けます。

そして、次回は、アフタヌーンティーだけでなく
宿泊しておもてなしを!
と思った私でございます。

皆さんも、行った気になってお楽しみ頂けると嬉しいです❤️

動画




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