© 2024 KMUW
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

England's Las Vegas Awaits Royal Wedding Day

STEVE INSKEEP, Host:

Preparations are underway in Britain for the biggest national celebration in decades. The British have declared a national holiday for Friday's wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton. They're planning a big party - or so we're told - but remember, this is the country that invented the stiff upper lip. NPR's Philip Reeves reports that the word party means different things to different people.

PHILIP REEVES: If you think the British are reserved and aloof, there's a woman you need to meet.

SUE GARNETT: (Unintelligible)

REEVES: Her name is Sue Garnett. She's what you might call a party person.

GARNETT: I love partying. Look at me, I love it. And if people look at me and say, oh God, she's got a short skirt, I don't give two monkeys. I'm me. If you don't like it, then it's tough (bleep). You either like me or you don't.

REEVES: Garnett's 53. She's a housekeeper in a hotel in an English town that specializes in parties. Garnett lives in Blackpool and she loves the place.

GARNETT: I came to Blackpool 22 years ago and I would never go back to my birthplace ever. If you want a good time, come to Blackpool. It's brilliant.

REEVES: We're on the sidewalk outside a cabaret club taking a breather from the karaoke. Garnett has with her a friend called Jason Dafydd. It's mid-evening, mid-week, in mid-April. Tonight's dull by Blackpool standards. Garnett and Dafydd are certain the royal wedding won't be.

GARNETT: You know, the big day of the royal wedding will be absolutely fantastic here in Blackpool.

JASON DAFYDD: I mean, we've got street parties. We've got entertainment in all the venues. All day it's going to be absolute royal wedding day.

REEVES: Blackpool is in England's north. People here do things differently.

ADRIAN THORNTON: The only thing I've gotten ready apart from putting my nails (unintelligible)...

REEVES: Zoe, also known as Adrian Thornton, is preparing to go onstage. She's wearing a pink dress and a huge blonde wig that makes her look like Ivana Trump. Sequins glitter from her eyelids. For 17 years, Zoe's fronted a transvestite cabaret called Funny Girls, one of Blackpool's most famous shows. She knows what the British are really like.

THORNTON: Come on there, ladies and gentlemen, let's hear it...

REEVES: Zoe's show begins.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

REEVES: And soon the party's starting.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

REEVES: No town is more British. No town loves the monarchy more.

(SOUNDBITE OF HORNS)

REEVES: Blackpool has yet to forget another royal wedding. Thirty years have elapsed since Prince Charles married Diana Spencer. To Sue Garnett and Jason Dafydd, it could have been yesterday.

GARNETT: I remember it plain as anything. It was a gorgeous day. She looked gorgeous, didn't she?

DAFYDD: The sun was shining. I remember that, yeah. She turned up in that carriage, she came out in that Emmanuel dress, she walked up those steps, St. Paul's, yeah, and she looked absolutely stunning.

GARNETT: She did.

DAFYDD: And we all thought, that is our future queen.

REEVES: Diana's divorce and then her death in a car crash in Paris in 1997 left deep scars among many of the British. For some, these still haven't healed.

GARNETT: Charles, for what he did to Lady Diana, I hate, I hate him. The queen, sorry. She hasn't been for us, has she?

DAFYDD: I can't say that the queen has not been for us. She does have a lot to answer for with Diana.

GARNETT: Yeah.

REEVES: What about Kate? What do you make of Kate?

DAFYDD: I think Kate is a very beautiful woman.

GARNETT: Yes, she is.

DAFYDD: Yeah.

GARNETT: Yes, she is.

REEVES: Afternoon tea is served on Blackpool's beachfront in the busy reception of the Queen's Hotel. The proprietor, Pat Mancini, is reclining in a red leather armchair, eating sandwiches and talking about her hometown.

PAT MANCINI: I think this is, yeah, this is a working class town, and all the money I've had over the years, I'm still working class, you know.

REEVES: Are you?

MANCINI: Absolutely. I have a Rolls in the back and a Jag in the back. A white Rolls.

REEVES: This hotel has made Mancini rich, so rich that people here call her the queen of Blackpool. Mancini has no time for criticism of the other queen, the one in London.

MANCINI: She's never put a foot wrong. She's always kept up there and kept the family together as much as she can. It's been very, very hard work for her. However, she's had a bit of a rough time with them all, hasn't she?

REEVES: Mancini produces a package and begins to unwrap it.

MANCINI: I've got the MBE(ph) in a lovely box. It's got MBE on the front, it's navy blue. Beautiful box. Inside when I open it, there's an orange bow.

REEVES: It's an award from Queen Elizabeth.

MANCINI: It's for the good work I've done for charity and it makes me a member of the British empire. You know, we had a British empire. We've not got a lot left now, but I'm a member of it.

REEVES: Mancini's 72, and though battling with cancer, she still sings praises of her town - literally.

MANCINI: (Singing) Come down to Blackpool this year. Take a walk on the pier. Have some fun. See the stars and the shows. Take a walk down the Prom, have a trip on the Ride to Remember. Plenty of fun for the children. Tower and circus in town.

REEVES: Back on the sidewalk outside the cabaret club, Sue Garnett and Jason Dafydd settle their argument about the failings of the royal family. On one fundamental issue they agree.

DAFYDD: We people, we do want royalty, yeah? That's who we look up to. We're proud to be British. We are proud of our heritage and we are proud that William is going to marry Kate.

GARNETT: Oh yeah. I can't wait for that wedding day.

REEVES: Philip Reeves, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Philip Reeves is an award-winning international correspondent covering South America. Previously, he served as NPR's correspondent covering Pakistan, Afghanistan, and India.