Camilla opens up about her royal struggles like never before

Publish Date
Monday, 29 May 2017, 2:25PM
Photo / Getty

Photo / Getty

The rain is bucketing down in Aldershot as the Duchess of Cornwall inspects and greets soldiers for two hours at the grimmest of army barracks on a bleak February day. She is here as Royal Colonel of the 4th Battalion The Rifles, who have recently returned from Iraq. ‘Speaking as an army officer’s daughter, may I say that I sometimes think the unsung heroes are the families?’

There is warm applause as she speaks, reading glasses perched on her nose, at a parade ground created by her husband’s great-great-great grandmother Queen Victoria. The unspoken question on many people’s lips is whether, as she nears her 70th birthday, the former Camilla Parker Bowles will one day follow in Victoria’s footsteps and also be titled Queen.

Today, however, monarchical matters are not on her mind. In fact, she cheerfully replies if asked that she merely takes each day as it comes and never thinks about such things. What she does think about a lot, she tells the troops, is family – more so as she gets older. Family for her essentially means her children Laura and Tom, her five grandchildren, her sister Annabel and her husband of 12 years, the Prince of Wales – and, of course, his side of the family, which is always more complicated. After all, like her, they work for ‘The Firm’. Towards the Queen she has total reverence and devotion.

Although frightened of flying, she arrives in Aldershot by helicopter from her home in Wiltshire, but with no Prince Charles to hold her hand, as he often does when the ride gets bumpy. Their extraordinary love affair has propelled her to this extreme public position as the number two royal lady in the land; she has suffered more than a little turbulence since they first met almost half a century ago.

Since then she has endured the cruellest vilification when Princess Diana hysteria was at its highest, but is now firmly established in the public’s affection. Tourist shops display Camilla thimbles, mugs and tea towels; her in-tray overflows with requests for public appearances. What has never wavered is the deep affection Prince Charles has towards the woman to whom he refers in public as ‘my darling wife’, and nor has her reciprocal love for him. It has at times been a traumatising process replacing Diana to become wife to the future king. All the more difficult as Diana died in tragic circumstances aged just 36, and remains forever young.

Yet this spring, as Camilla carried out a nine-day official tour of Europe with Prince Charles – 20 years after Diana’s death – there were scenes of adulation day after day, with the crowd in Naples standing ten deep. Photographs show Camilla smiling warmly; the constantly used description for her is ‘down to earth’. Never has there been such a reversal of fortune for a royal paramour since Prince Albert went from being a despised German outsider to revered Prince Consort upon his marriage to Queen Victoria more than 150 years ago.

Camilla’s 70th birthday on 17 July will be a pivotal moment for the royal family. The Queen will be 91, the Duke of Edinburgh 96; the succession to King Charles III is no longer unimaginable. For Camilla, the days of duty stretch ahead – not what most women imagine they will be taking on at 70 – but it is a state of affairs she accepts with good humour and unassuming grace.

Her schedule is relentless for a senior royal, constantly on show beneath the watchful gaze of as many as 100 journalists – not to mention the public. Every detail is scrutinised – her outfit, her make-up, her jewellery, her small talk – as well as the big gestures. Camilla conducts more than 200 engagements a year. ‘Sometimes you get up in the morning and think you can’t do it, and you just have to,’ she tells a friend. ‘The minute you stop it’s like a balloon, you run out of puff – you sort of collapse in a heap.’ A bit like being on the stage? Not exactly, she says wryly. ‘I was the most ridiculous actor as a child and had a complete dread of school plays. Nightmare!’ she laughs.

From her earliest days, Camilla has been happy-go-lucky, with a keen sense of mischief. ‘Her warmth is what everyone catches,’ says a former Diana courtier, completely won over; indeed, it’s hard now to recall the bitter national divide that once lay between Diana and Camilla.

Keeping it light is key, even when on parade, as she told a close friend; her saving grace is her sense of humour: ‘You’ve got to laugh through most things, and sometimes I do laugh a bit too much. There are situations where it’s very difficult not to lose it completely, especially, you know, if something goes terribly wrong and everybody sits there for a split second [not sure how to react]. You do have to swallow and pinch yourself very hard to not laugh.’

Her daughter Laura, now 39, remembers how she and her brother Tom have always tried to stay sunny through good times and bad, even before Camilla rose to prominence, and fondly tells a story of a typical Camilla faux pas. ‘We’d gone to Sainsbury’s in Chippenham. Most of the parking spaces were filled, but Mummy saw an empty one right outside the front door and nipped in there. The parking space was “Reserved for the Mayor of Chippenham”. When we came out a man stopped her and asked what she was doing in the mayor’s parking space? Mummy smiled and said, “I’m so sorry, I’m the mayor’s wife…” and hurried me into the car. The man followed us and said, “What a joy to meet you for the first time – I’m the mayor!”’

The young Camilla Shand never sought the limelight; that was more for her younger sister Annabel and her charismatic late brother Mark. Camilla tells friends: ‘Annabel was a really good actor at school, so she usually had the leading role. I was always the maid who had to come in and say, “Would you like a cup of tea?” and I even got that upside down. I’d drop the tray!’

The strange thing for Camilla is that as she reaches 70 and takes on a greater workload than ever, she knows it’s a time when most of her friends are taking a step back. ‘Am I not young? Is that what you are saying?’ she joshes when a reporter asks about the stamina needed. ‘They’re going to have to invent a jab of some sort to keep me going,’ she jests. On her hectic European tour, she fulfilled engagements from morning till night. ‘I think you live on adrenalin,’ she says.

And curiosity. At one official dinner she explained: ‘I genuinely like people and I’m so curious about them. Other people’s lives are so much more interesting than one’s own. It’s like going to a dinner where I almost feel like I am a psychiatrist. 

‘When I sit down with my team before an engagement, sometimes they are horrified as I say I don’t want to read the biographical brief because I prefer to prise information out of people. It becomes like a game…the stories that come out, I could write a book about.’

And it is the people she meets who motivate her. Such as Freddie Knoller, aged 96, to whom she and Prince Charles are introduced at the Jewish Museum in Vienna. Originally from an Austrian family, Knoller – who now lives in Bexley – was rescued from Bergen-Belsen concentration camp by British soldiers.

The Holocaust survivor – the only member of his family to survive the death camps – shows Camilla faded photos of himself, the distinctive striped prisoner’s uniform hanging off his skeletal frame. ‘You are heroic,’ she tells him quietly as he beams.

In 24 hours she toured the museum, where she had this emotional meeting; she heard the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra rehearse Beethoven’s Ninth, tasted Austria’s former imperial pastry chef’s apple strudel and fed sugar lumps to white lipizzaner stallions at the famous Spanish Riding School – all part of her royal tour to boost UK trade post-Brexit. ‘If you are a positive person, you can do so much more. People are either glass half-empty or glass half-full. I always think hopefully. You just have to get on with it. Being British!’ The velvet charm along with her smoky voice hides a steely resolve, often employed to ensure her workaholic husband’s programme is not too full. She is tiger-like in protecting him, which she does with the quiet suggestion that dictates everything.

By referring to family she is not sentimental or slushy – in fact she and her brother and sister were noisy, robust and competitive. The Shands are talkative and warm, sometimes hot-headed, and they always say what they think.

A big gap in her life is her much-loved brother Mark, who died after a fall in New York in 2014, aged 62. She is touching and funny about him, telling friends, ‘Mark always wanted something. When I heard his voice on the phone saying, “Camillsy…” I knew immediately he wanted something. But God, I miss him.’ Her closest confidante remains Annabel, to whom she speaks every day.

Camilla has always kept her sense of being connected by stepping out of the royal bubble and maintaining her own private sanctuary, Ray Mill, a charming house in Wiltshire where she regularly retreats to recharge her batteries. In the kitchen hang portraits of Laura and Tom by Hattie Young, plus lots of pictures of chickens, and near the Aga is an assortment of dog baskets and toys for her two jack russells, Beth and Bluebell, who seem to rule the house. A friend explains: ‘That house is where she can cook scrambled eggs in her dressing gown and be among those she loves with not a jot of ceremony or anyone looking at her. It is home.’

And at times she has needed a secure bolthole more than most. At the height of her unpopularity she was chased and besieged by the press. While the more extreme stories – such as bread rolls being thrown at her in Sainsbury’s – are untrue, she was for a time a hate figure for Diana obsessives. Tatler magazine even had to call in the police as the hate letters were so cruel and deranged.

Tom Parker Bowles recalls, ‘The paparazzi used to follow us everywhere and lurk around like spooks. We used to keep binoculars in my mother’s bathroom [when the family were living in their previous home, Middlewick House], and one of us would look out every morning to see how many paparazzi were hiding in the bushes. We could tell by the flash of sun on their camera lenses. At the peak [of interest in Camilla], there would be half a dozen hiding outside. It seemed entirely normal.’

And ‘normal’ is what Camilla does best. She kicks off her shoes to watch Nordic TV series, such as The Killing; she reads Robert Harris and Susan Hill and all the Booker-nominated novels.

Home is where she potters about, goes on walks with her dogs, and watches a lot of TV. Time and again she emphasises how friends have been her life support. ‘For about a year, when we lived at Middlewick, I couldn’t really go anywhere. But the children came and went as normal – they just got on with it – and so did great friends.

‘I would pass the time by reading a lot – more than I’d ever have been able to in a normal life. I thought, well, if I’m stuck here I might as well do something positive like read all the books I want to read, and try to learn to paint – though that wasn’t a huge success! – and after a while, life sort of went on.’

It has often been bruising. ‘I don’t think I’m tough but I do think I’m quite a strong character. You have to be, but I think it also comes from my upbringing. We were brought up in a very happy family and I can’t whinge about my childhood because it was idyllic.

‘Our parents gave us a certain amount of freedom, and we had a really good time. We’ve brought up our children in vaguely the same way. They’re very rooted, but I think that we were much more respectful of our parents, certainly than Tom and Laura are of me,’ she explains to a friend with a laugh. The Parker Bowleses are tightly loyal but always abruptly candid.

‘She has been an exceptional mother,’ says Tom. ‘Always. She never got cross about bad school reports, getting into trouble and so on. She would come to Eton and take me out to McDonald’s.’

Camilla has never complained about the difficult times when she was reviled by the press, only stating without a scintilla of self-pity what happened. ‘It was horrid. It was a deeply unpleasant time and I wouldn’t want to put my worst enemy through it. I couldn’t have survived it without my family.’ Is she good at putting things that are difficult in a box and saying, ‘I’m moving on?’ ‘Most definitely, yes,’ she replies.

Among her gifts is an extremely good emotional radar and intelligence. When pushed by friends to explain how she makes her role work, she says that staying grounded is the only way to remain sane on the royal circuit. ‘And you also have to laugh at yourself because if you can’t, you may as well give up. I sometimes think to myself, “Who is this woman? It can’t possibly be me.” And that’s really how you survive. Also, having so many friends who, if I ever even vaguely look like getting uppity, which touch wood I never have, they would just say, “Look, come on, pull yourself together! Don’t be so bloody grand!”’

She follows the example set by her father, the late Major Bruce Shand. ‘He was so brilliant and he always came to the rescue. I remember once when he was staying with me at Middlewick and the press were outside. Every couple of minutes they’d be rattling the door, coming down the chimney, banging on the window; they were out of control in those days. They’ve changed a lot since.

‘After a while, my father calmly went to the front door and he summoned them all. They came clustering round thinking there was about to be some great statement about me, and he said, “Gentlemen, in our family, we keep our traps shut, thank you very much,” and walked in again. He closed the door with a smile and that was it. I don’t think the press could believe what they’d heard but that was always how we were brought up: never complain and never explain. Don’t whinge – just get on with it.’

Camilla’s nephew Ben Elliot admires in particular this quiet determination. ‘As you know, she’s witty; she doesn’t suffer fools gladly. Camilla makes up her own mind about people. She and my mother [Annabel] are quite like their mother in that they’re very direct. They want to get to the heart of somebody and what that person cares about.’

Camilla feels that her upbringing somehow prepared her for her royal duties alongside Prince Charles. ‘Thank goodness I was brought up with the grounding of my parents, and taught manners. It sounds, especially in this day and age, sort of snobbish but we left school at 16, nobody went on to university unless you were a real brainbox. Instead, we went to Paris and Florence and learned about life and culture and how to behave with people, how to talk to people. This was very ingrained in my upbringing and if I hadn’t had that, I would have found royal life much more difficult.

‘My mother could be quite fierce sometimes. I remember once there was a dinner party at home with some of the most boring neighbours in the world and we were dragged down to join them for dinner. We used to complain and say, “Can’t we stay here and watch the television over fish fingers?” and she’d sit us down at the dinner table, and the minute there was silence, she used to say, “Talk! I don’t care what you talk about, talk about your budgie or your pony but keep the conversation going…” And so I’ve never been able not to talk. It’s in the psyche, not to leave a silence.’

The 70th birthday at Clarence House will be part duty and part gathering of those who have stood by her in the past 20 years, from charity workers to former policemen. There will be a quieter family celebration, too. Tom might cook her dinner as he often does, which she will enjoy with a glass of red. She always makes sure everyone has a good time. She embodies the perfect combination of sound judgment, strong duty, family loyalty, laughter and deep love for her husband. Not that different from the present Queen, in fact. 

Source: Daily Mail.









Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you