A special documentary to mark the seventieth birthday of HRH
the Prince of Wales.
For this observational documentary, film-maker John Bridcut
has had exclusive access to the prince over the past 12 months, both at work
and behind the scenes, at home and abroad. He speaks to those who know him
best, including HRH the Duchess of Cornwall and the Dukes of Cambridge and
Sussex. His sons discuss their upbringing and their feelings about the prince's
working life.
As the prince reaches his seventith birthday, he has been
involved in public affairs for 50 years, championing environmental and social
issues long before they reached the mainstream, from plastic waste and global
warming to lack of opportunity for young people.
The documentary charts the prince's working life at a time
when he is taking on an increasing amount of duties in support of the Queen. He
is seen on working visits to County Durham, Cornwall and the Brecon Beacons,
and at home at Highgrove in Gloucestershire and Birkhall in Aberdeenshire.
The film features behind-the-scenes footage of the Prince
with the Queen in Buckingham Palace at the time of the Commonwealth Heads of
Government Meeting in April, when the prince was named as the next head of the
Commonwealth.
Also included is the stunning ceremonial welcome given to
the prince in the Pacific island republic of Vanuatu, when he was invested as a
high chief, and his visit to three Caribbean countries struggling to recover
after hurricanes Irma and Maria a year ago.
What emerges is a revealing and intimate portrait of the
longest-serving heir to the throne, who still feels he has a lot more to do
BBC
“I Don’t Really See Any Value in Saying, ‘I Told You So,’”: Prince Charles on His Climate-Change Fight, Life with Camilla, and Becoming King
“I Don’t Really See Any Value in Saying, ‘I Told You So,’”:
Prince Charles on His Climate-Change Fight, Life with Camilla, and Becoming
King
by JAMES REGINATOphotographs by ALEXI LUBOMIRSKI
NOVEMBER 1, 2018 12:00 AM
“Anyone of my age knows that days pass at a far greater
speed than when they were young,” a man nearing his 70th birthday recently told
me. “But in my case there are so many things that need to be done.”
“Things that need to be done” takes on a strikingly
different quality if you are on the verge of ascending the British throne. Past
the age at which many people retire, Charles Philip Arthur George, the Prince
of Wales, is still waiting to begin the job he’s been in line for since he was
three years old, when his mother, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, began her
monarchy in 1952. As she has become the longest-reigning sovereign in British
history, he’s become the longest-waiting heir apparent. While the Queen, at 92,
still vigorously carries out the major elements of her role as head of state,
her reign is inexorably beginning to wind down. At her request, the Prince of
Wales has begun to ramp things up.
“Charles figured out a very long time ago that he was going
to be Prince of Wales for a very long time,” an English peer intimate with the
royal family says. “He planned his life accordingly, and he wouldn’t have been
able to accomplish half of what he has if he had become King earlier.”
Dodging the sovereign’s constitutionally mandated
straitjacket and muzzle, the Prince of Wales has been able to express strong
opinions on many issues—including climate change, alternative medicine, and
architectural preservation—for which he has been harshly criticized.
He has also been a prolific worker bee in the Windsor hive,
his work constituting charity appearances and other public forays for the
greater good. A tally of “jobs” attended by the royal family in 2017 attests to
the amount of heavy lifting Charles is doing. With 546 under his belt, Charles
was at the top of the list, while the Queen came in fourth (behind Princess
Anne and Prince Andrew) at 296. Prince Harry and Prince William, future King
himself, notched considerably fewer: 209 and 171, respectively.
As the United Kingdom lurches toward Brexit and relations
with the European Union fray, the royal family’s soft power may be Britain’s
trump card. They charm, they command respect; they impart a sense of stability
and continuity. Meanwhile, the Commonwealth states—home to 2.4 billion
citizens, a third of the world’s population—are ever critical. It was not just
an act of fashion when Meghan had her 16-foot veil embroidered with flora from
each of the 53 member nations. In April, the heads of these countries—which
include India, New Zealand, and Nigeria—officially voted that Charles will
succeed his mother as leader.
While his relatives and his subjects tiptoe around the mere
thought of the Queen’s death, Charles has become a proxy head of state for his
mother, while his own children have helped garner massive positive press for
the royal family. (Some two billion people around the world tuned in to watch
Meghan and Harry’s wedding and their baby news is a global preoccupation.) So,
on May 7, when I boarded a plane with the Prince of Wales and his wife of 13
years, the Duchess of Cornwall, bound for an official royal tour through France
and Greece, the couple was in high spirits.
ON THE ROAD
Since 2016 the royal family and the prime minister have
shared a jumbo jet for long-haul flights. (Previously, they had to charter
aircraft or, worse, fly commercial.) The RAF Voyager, a massive military tanker
based on an Airbus A330 capable of air-to-air refueling and missile detection,
was ordered by David Cameron and refitted at a cost of £10 million.
Impressive yet discreet, the aircraft is gray and blue
inside and out, with 158 seats in three cabins on one deck. As it sits on the
tarmac of R.A.F. Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire, and its two pilots and eight
cabin crew prepare for flight, what would be the business class on a commercial
plane fills up with Clarence House staff members: dark-suited, solemn-looking
private secretaries, personal protection officers (P.P.O.’s), the royal doctor,
a valet, Communications Secretary Julian Payne, and the Prince’s equerry, Major
Harry Pilcher, as well as Hugh Green and Jacqui Meakin, the Duchess’s longtime
hairdresser and stylist. In the rear cabin are dozens of uniformed military
personnel—engineers, soldiers, baggage handlers, and other tactical
officers—along with about five members of the British press who regularly
report on the royals. And me. All journalists are later invoiced for their
flights—the cost being comparable to an equivalent full-fare coach seat.
Finally, after about an hour, a large black car pulls up to the front stairs of
the plane. As soon as Their Royal Highnesses climb aboard, into the first-class
cabin, the Voyager roars into the sky and cabin attendants in blue military
uniforms offer beverages, including good Moët, to passengers. The atmosphere is
one of restrained elegance. Typically, midflight, Camilla will appear for a few
moments in the rear cabin, prompting all military personnel to immediately
stand at attention.
“He figured out a very long time ago that he was going to be
Prince of Wales for a very long time.”
Though he’s not yet a head of state, the Prince of Wales is
received like one wherever we land. In Nice, a military band plays the British
and French national anthems and an honor guard stands at attention as T.R.H.
disembark onto a red carpet at the end of which stands a long convoy of
official vehicles.
Our first stop is Villa Masséna, an ornate Belle Époque-era
art museum, where a memorial to the 86 victims of the 2016 Bastille Day attack on
the Promenade des Anglais has been erected. Payne jumps out of a car. “The
first rule of royal tours is don’t get left behind!” he cautions me as he
sprints ahead.
T.R.H. have come to meet survivors, their families, first
responders, and other Nice citizens in the villa’s garden. They lay a bouquet
composed of Camassia leichtlinii (Caerulea Group), Narcissi ‘Actaea,’ Viburnum
x carlcephalum, and lilies of the valley, all gathered from the Prince of
Wales’s garden at Highgrove, his country house.
Next, the convoy speeds off to Èze, perched in the hills
outside Nice, for a walkabout through the narrow, winding cobblestone streets.
Citizens and tourists pour out of shops, cafés, nooks, and crannies, treating
Charles and Camilla as impeccably suited rock stars, which is how it goes all
week.
While their agenda includes many stately private events at
palaces, embassies, and such, the action unfolds in open streets and squares,
where they shake hundreds of hands. (No germophobes here: I never saw any hand
sanitizer deployed.) These walkabouts are often mapped out in advance by the
Prince’s security detail, but can be unexpectedly fluid. The plan for a visit
to Nice’s bustling flower market, for example, calls for “three designated
points” for T.R.H. to visit, but allows for “some off-piste walking.” Meaning:
Charles goes wherever he wants.
“He has complete confidence in his protection officers,”
says a staff member, “so he dives right into the crowds.”
At a food market in Lyon, an urgent, almost alarming cry—“Your
Highness! Please!”—stops the Prince in his tracks, resulting in a pileup of
trailing entourage. A butcher in a white apron is desperate for him to sample
his sausages.
“Qu’est-ce que c’est?” Charles inquires, and is quickly
passed a bit of saucisson. A hush descends; the butcher is on tenterhooks
before the royal opinion is issued: “Excellent! Incroyable!” says the future
King. The butcher’s face registers ecstasy. Charles beckons the Duchess from
the cheese aisle. “Try this, darling,” he coos, as onlookers smile and
photographers click.
“The people in the crowds are usually great, it’s just the
press who can get too pushy sometimes,” one of the P.P.O.’s tells me. “We guard
Cabinet ministers, too. They’re never a problem because they don’t want to go
out into the public. But Prince Charles really wants to.”
Charles assiduously reads the lengthy briefings that are
prepared in advance of all engagements. “So, if he’s meeting an elderly veteran
he can say, ‘I know you flew Spitfires in the war,’” a former staff member
tells me. “They’re like, ‘Holy shit, how did he know that?’” (“The bullet
points I remember,” the Duchess says.)
In Greece, there are visits to the presidential palace, a
battleship, a monastery, and the Yacht Club, for swanky cocktails with shipping
magnates. On Aiolou Street, Athens’s busiest shopping thoroughfare, the royal
couple sample koulouri, traditional Greek pretzels, then repair to an outdoor
café—a planned photo op, of course. But when the Prince declines the plastic
straw that comes with his freddo cappuccino—a cause célèbre for the likes of
Adrian Grenier, Brooklyn Decker, and Neil deGrasse Tyson—the rejection becomes
front-page news in Greece, where sipping your cold coffee from a plastic straw
is de rigueur. (A few weeks later, McDonald’s will announce plans to phase out
plastic straws across its 1,361 restaurants in Britain.)
During the foreign tour, I travel in an anonymous black van
with about a dozen of the British photographers and correspondents who are
dedicated to covering the royals at their nearly every turn. (Some are salaried
employees of news organizations and some are independent operators; the British
government does not pay any of their travel expenses.) There is fierce
competition among these fellows—and most are men. But they are great mates, addressing
one another often by nickname, and with salty language. (Which some of them
requested I refrain from printing, indicating that royals are not the only
people sensitive about their coverage.) “We sometimes have our elbows out, but
we’re like brothers,” says Shutterstock photographer Tim Rooke, who has been on
the beat for 28 years. “We’ve spent more time with each other than we have with
our wives,” says Chris Jackson, who has the clout that comes with being the
royal photographer for Getty Images.
A week before Harry and Meghan’s wedding, everybody is
champing at the bit for a sound bite from T.R.H. about the event. Word goes
around that there will be a brush-by—a quick, pre-arranged moment, often when a
royal is about to get in a car, when they answer seemingly spontaneous
questions lobbed at them. But this brush-by keeps getting delayed, leading to
frazzled nerves and vociferous complaints among the pack. “This is arse
backwards, tits up!” carps one passenger on the van, whatever that means.
At last, the brush-by transpires in Nice. “Obviously . . .
it’s going to be marvelous,” says His Royal Highness. “I’m sure it will be a
special day for everyone.” “It’s all very exciting. Can’t wait,” Her Royal
Highness adds. The press corps are always eager for a quote from Camilla.
Occasional grumbling aside, these royal-watchers esteem
Charles and Camilla. “She’s my favorite royal, by a country mile,” I’m told by
one correspondent. “She knows all our names, she fosters a sense that we’re all
in this together. She always gives you a little gleam in her eye and will find
a moment to look at our cameras,” says another. William and Kate, by
comparison, go out of their way not to look at the “fixed point” where
photographers gather. In general, this correspondent goes on, the younger
generation of royals are “control freaks” about their coverage, whereas Charles
is “far more relaxed.” As is Camilla.
“We think the world of her, we adore her. She’s an amazing
woman,” says Sun photographer Arthur Edwards. “She always shows up with a great
smile and is never, ever, grumpy.”
Edwards, 78, speaks with authority. The dean of the royal
camera corps, he’s been shooting the Windsors for 41 years. In 2003, Queen
Elizabeth bestowed an M.B.E. on him at Buckingham Palace. (“It means ‘much
bigger expenses,’” he jokes in his Cockney accent.)
Edwards shot one of the most iconic, and prophetic, royal
images ever, in February of 1992: the so-called lonely princess photo of Diana
sitting alone on a bench in front of the Taj Mahal, in India.
“All right, Arthur, where do you want me?” he recalls her
asking him when she arrived at the site. But the location was hardly as empty
as it appears in the photo. “There were 50 people around—we said, ‘Get out of
the way!’” recalls a correspondent, who was also there. Diana, they agree, was
far savvier than the public gave her credit for. “‘It’s very healing,’” Edwards
remembers the Princess commenting after the shot. “We were all trying to work
out what she meant.” “She and Charles did separate 10 months later—so we
weren’t wrong,” says Edwards.
“Everything that is too political he is transitioning out
of.”
Among this troop, there is unanimous agreement that since
Camilla has come aboard, “the boss” is a helluva lot easier and happier. “She’s
made a massive difference in him,” a longtime correspondent observes. “He’s
much more relaxed now. They are always laughing and chatting, they have great
affection and humor between them.”
Photographer Alexi Lubomirski, who shot Harry and Meghan’s
official engagement and wedding pictures, says as much, when Charles and
Camilla greet him in the morning room at Clarence House to pose for the
portraits in this story. “As soon as they looked at each other, there was a
sparkle in their eyes—that’s when the magic happened,” he says. “You feel like
they are a young couple in love.”
THE FUTURE QUEEN
Friends agree that, 13 years on from their wedding, Charles
and Camilla have never been in a better place. “They’re a rock,” says a
longtime friend of the couple’s.
Their saga, told by every tabloid, is well known: They met
in the summer of 1971 and were smitten with each other. But according to the
customs of the time, Camilla Shand wasn’t considered a royal-bride candidate,
having been the on-and-off girlfriend of Andrew Parker Bowles for more than six
years. Camilla married him and they had two children before they divorced.
Meanwhile, the public fairy tale of the royal romance between Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer was privately in tatters from the start.
Though they were pilloried in the press, Charles and Camilla
just couldn’t quit each other. And on April 9, 2005, almost nine years after
the dissolution of Charles’s marriage to Diana, he and Camilla were married in
a civil ceremony at Windsor Guildhall. At the time, it was announced that when
Charles does accede to the throne she will be given the title princess consort.
In subsequent years, public opinion of her has turned around. According to
recent reports, she will eventually become queen consort, the customary title
for the wife of a reigning king.
“They’re in a very good place right now,” says Mark Bolland.
As deputy private secretary to the Prince of Wales from 1997 to 2002, Bolland
masterminded the campaign to win public acceptance for Camilla and rehabilitate
Charles’s reputation.
“We have a prime minister and government distracted by the horror
of Brexit,” says Bolland. “It makes the monarchy stronger, as it is a beacon of
stability and hope.” Meanwhile, Camilla has brought to the House of Windsor
refreshingly natural warmth and taste. The Duchess’s father was a wine expert
and her son is a food writer, Bolland points out, so when Charles becomes King
“the flowers at Buckingham Palace will be a lot better, and the food and wine
too.”
Camilla seems constitutionally suited to being Queen. “She
never complains, she never explains,” says a London man-about-town who
socializes with the royals. “She’s not an intellectual, but there’s nothing
lightweight about her. She’s not a bullshitter and she doesn’t take any
bullshit.”
The shadiest comment comes from an aristocratic dowager, who
says that “she’s a bossy woman.” But this source hastens to add that “she’s
been very good for him. She gives him all the love and support he needs.” Payne
seconds that. “She can change his mind in a way nobody else can,” says the
communications secretary. “Every so often, I can go to the Duchess, cap in
hand. She’s your last card. If she thinks it’s the right thing, she’ll say,
‘Leave it with me. . ..’”
“They are both clearly great on their own. But two and two
makes five in a big way here,” says Camilla’s nephew, Ben Elliot, a co-founder
of the Quintessentially Group. “You can see it when they are together. They
enjoy each other’s company so much. You can see it best when they are dancing
together—such genuine, deep-down affection and love. They both get the giggles—she
first, then he tries to hold it together.
“She knows that he is the boss, the star. She does
everything she can possibly do to support him. At the same time, he’s very
proud of her. She’s very sharp and perceptive,” Elliot adds. And no need to
worry that the future King and Queen won’t be able to keep up with their
duties, notwithstanding their septuagenarian status: “They are both—he
particularly—unbelievably physically fit. I’ve never seen a man his age who is
as strong as he is. I’ve gone stalking with him in Scotland. He walks soldiers
off the Highlands.”
The Duchess has retained her old house, Ray Mill, to which
she escapes periodically. “She doesn’t wake up in the morning thinking about
what her title will be,” Elliot adds in jest. Instead, she likes to cook simple
English fare, keep her bees, and enjoy visits from her five grandchildren.
Charles and Camilla’s happy place, though, is Birkhall, the Scottish estate
formerly owned by the Queen Mother. “It’s a lodge—not particularly grand. It
has a wonderful, warm coziness,” where the couple can indulge in the
“relentless” reading they enjoy, and watch some TV, Elliot elaborates. He begs
off the million-pound question as to whether they watch The Crown. But the
chatty London man-about-town quoted earlier says Camilla has privately
confessed to having enjoyed the program, though she hastened to add that she
“wasn’t looking forward to the bits to come.” The young Camilla will be
introduced in Season Three, which covers the royals from 1964 to the early 70s.
Elliot was an adolescent when wall-to-wall coverage of
“Camillagate” made his aunt the most unpopular woman in Britain. “Her children
are like brother and sister to me—we’re all very close,” he says. “It was
bloody hard. She was a prisoner in her own house. For everyone involved it was
not a happy time. In the breakdown of any marriage, you want privacy to deal
with it, but they didn’t have any of that.”
WORK, WORK, WORK, WORK
Camilla’s popularity turnaround may have been strategic, but
it would have fallen flat without a genuine personality underneath. Maintaining
the dignity of the royals while trying to engender affection for them, and
keeping them dutifully engaged—that’s the tightrope on which Palace staff walk.
Not only did the Duchess burn rubber, but she also delivered
a winning message during the event, at Hampton Court Palace, where awards were
given to schoolchildren for short stories they had written. Another day found
the Duchess at the Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace, with none other than Her
Majesty. Any joint engagement between the Queen and another royal signifies
that the other royal is in her good books, and also that she approves of the
cause. Read into that everything you want about the Duchess of Sussex’s
giggle-filled jaunt with Her Majesty to Cheshire in June.
The sovereign and the Duchess of Cornwall have teamed up for
an event to mark the 10th anniversary of Medical Detection Dogs. The
organization has been at the forefront of a nascent field that trains dogs to
recognize the odors of various diseases. The theory holds that dogs are such
extraordinary biosensors, they have the ability to detect diseases at very
early stages, which could aid treatment options.
A day later, T.R.H. visited the Royal Cornwall Show, which
is something of a Coachella of British country life: heifers, horses,
sheepshearing, tractors, chainsaw-carving, flowers, Cornish wrestling,
blacksmithing, bees and honey, ferret racing, a pig-of-the-year contest,
fly-fishing. T.R.H. worked their way through jam-packed crowds for about three
hours, and there wasn’t a man or woman who didn’t appear to be hugely admiring.
A fearsome-looking big guy of around 30, covered in tattoos and holding a baby,
beamed when the Prince shook his hand and the baby’s. The mass affection for
Charles isn’t just a product of public-relations efforts. His vast charitable
endeavors have personally touched a huge portion of the British population.
Charles has long been a champion of traditional
craftsmanship and rural values. “Traditional crafts have always defined the
character and beauty of a civilization’s particular culture. They underpin the
rich tapestry of cultures that make up the world,” he says. “So if you think
them irrelevant and worth abandoning, then you abandon the richness of human
civilization. You submit to the dehumanized, reductive approach of the lifeless
machine. . .. What a sorry world that would be!” As for the charities, last
March, Charles created a new umbrella entity, the Prince’s Foundation, to
oversee and streamline his vast empire of them. Since it was set up in 1976,
the Prince’s Trust has helped more than 870,000 disadvantaged people aged 11 to
30 move into work, education, or job training. In the past decade, the Prince
of Wales Charitable Foundation has given away more than £52 million in grants.
“As he nears his 70th, it’s all to do with making things leaner, neater. . ..
The tidying-up process has started,” says his cousin David Linley, the Earl of
Snowdon, who is vice president of the Prince’s Foundation.
“He’s a great connector—the ultimate networker,” says Dame
Julia Cleverdon, the former C.E.O. of one of Charles’s outreach initiatives.
“He creatively swipes ideas from all over the world. Then he’ll say, for
example, Why hasn’t this one been implemented in Dorset?”
“There’s a lack of dot-joining today,” Prince Charles says
to a group of young people in Athens. “I’ve spent my whole life trying to join
the dots.”
CHANGE AGENT
Charles puts a lot of elbow grease into connecting the dots.
He adheres to a strict schedule: He’s at his desk at 8:30 A.M. and spends two
hours on correspondence. Then it’s steady meetings until breaking for tea at
five—he doesn’t eat lunch—followed by a walk. After dinner, he generally goes
back to his study to write letters or read for a couple hours.
In years past, many of those letters might have been to
harangue politicians or editors, venting his opinions or dispensing advice on
his pet issues. “He’s been expressing his views less and less,” a former
Clarence House courtier says. “Everything that is too political he is
transitioning out of.” Nevertheless, in written correspondence to me, Charles
elaborated on climate change and other crises that “keep me awake at night.”
“I don’t really see any value in saying, ‘I told you so,’”
he wrote. “As a teenager, I remember feeling deeply about this appallingly
excessive demolition job being done on every aspect of life. . .. In putting my
head above the parapet on all these issues, and trying to remind people of
their long-term, timeless relevance to our human experience—never mind trying
to do something about them—I found myself in conflict with the conventional
outlook which, as I discovered, is not exactly the most pleasant situation to
find yourself.
“One of [my] duties has been to find solutions to the vast
challenges we face over accelerating climate change. . . . However, it seems to
take forever to alert people to the scale of the challenge. Over forty years
ago I remember making a speech about the problems of plastic and other waste,
but at that stage nobody was really interested and I was considered
old-fashioned, out of touch and ‘anti-science’ for warning of such things,” the
Prince wrote. “If we don’t engage with these issues, and many other related and
critical problems that they inevitably compound, we will all be the victims.
Nothing escapes.”
SUCCESSION
Charles has outspokenness in common with his new
daughter-in-law. According to an attendee at the Sussexes’ wedding, Charles and
Camilla’s presence was very much felt and appreciated: “He seemed like the
settling hand on the whole day—he carried the thing together, while she seemed
like she had been doing this forever.”
He escorted Meghan Markle’s mother, Doria Ragland, during
the ceremony, and it was Charles who suggested that the phenomenal Kingdom
Choir perform at the service. Meanwhile, the Duchess of Cornwall and the
Duchess of Sussex get along “aces,” according to a close family friend. “They
clearly really like each other. There is real warmth and support. Camilla has
been very helpful to Meghan.”
It is verboten for the royal family or anyone who works for
them to address what will happen when the Queen dies. But there is a
meticulously detailed secret plan: Operation London Bridge will be activated to
steer Britain for 10 days, down to the moment, following her passing. According
to The Guardian, it takes effect when the Palace informs the prime minister:
“London Bridge is down.” At the BBC, a cold-war-era alarm system, the “radio alert
transmission system” (RATS), will be deployed, and its correspondents will don
black suits. Meanwhile, blue “obit lights” will flash at radio stations,
signaling them to begin playing solemn music and to switch to news. Charles
will address the nation on the evening of his mother’s death and then will
immediately tour the country, visiting Edinburgh, Belfast, and Cardiff to
attend services and meet leaders.
Operation London Bridge will be followed by Operation Golden
Orb, the top-secret plan for Charles’s coronation. Preparation for both stepped
up after Christmas 2016, when the Queen did not appear for church services at
Sandringham. “A heavy cold” was the reason given by Buckingham Palace, but
according to a Palace insider, her condition was quite grave. As that source
said, “It put everybody on notice that they have to be ready whenever it does
happen.”
The Queen recovered, though, and enjoys robust health.
“She’s absolutely marvelous—better than the two of us put together,” says a
friend of the Queen’s who has been her guest in the past year at both
Sandringham and Buckingham Palace. “She never sits down! Before dinner in the
salon, she stands the whole time with a drink in her hand, while we’re
collapsed on the sofa. And her mind still works so fast. At the table, she was
listening to three different conversations going on—jumping back and forth
between them.” This source also recalls the Queen saying after the Pope
resigned, in 2013, something that may mean Charles has a long wait yet: “I
would never do that.”
I agree that Prince Charles has been involved in public affairs for 50 years, championing very important environmental and social issues. But while he is taking on an increasing amount of duties in support of his elderly mother, it is about time Queen Elizabeth retired and let Charles get on with the job properly. Even if she is still totally alert, 92 is too elderly. Even 70 is becoming a bit elderly.
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