UNITED KINGDOM: Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge dominates British newspaper headlines
Record ID:
702328
UNITED KINGDOM: Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge dominates British newspaper headlines
- Title: UNITED KINGDOM: Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge dominates British newspaper headlines
- Date: 15th September 2012
- Summary: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM (SEPTEMBER 15, 2012) (REUTERS) BRITISH NEWSPAPERS CARRYING HEADLINES ABOUT THE DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE PLANNING LEGAL ACTION AGAINST FRENCH MAGAZINE FOR PUBLISHING TOPLESS PHOTOGRAPHS OF HER HEADLINE READING: "ROYAL PATIENCE SNAPS", PAN TO HEADLINE READING: "KATE TO SUE OVER TOPLESS PICTURES", PAN TO HEADLINE READING: "GROSTEQUE!" HEADLINE READING: "WILLS BLOWS HIS TOPLESS" PICTURE OF CATHERINE, THE DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE, ALSO KNOWN AS KATE, PAN TO HEADLINE READING: "ROYAL OUTRAGE: I WON'T LET KATE SUFFER LIKE MY MOTHER" BRITISH NEWSPAPERS WITH HEADLINES ABOUT THE DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE
- Embargoed: 30th September 2012 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: United Kingdom
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Royalty,Royalty
- Reuters ID: LVAEUQD3PGCCTR5S0L8XGTW088S0
- Story Text: News that the British royal family is planning legal action against a French magazine for a "grotesque" breach of privacy after it published topless photographs of Prince William's wife Kate Middleton dominated headlines in the UK on Saturday (September 15).
Celebrity gossip magazine Closer published a dozen shots of the Duchess of Cambridge on holiday in southern France as she slipped off her bikini top, relaxed on a sun lounger and at one point pulled down the back of her bikini bottoms while William rubbed sun cream on her lower back.
"St James's Palace confirms that legal proceedings for breach of privacy have been commenced today in France by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge against the publishers of Closer Magazine France," the couple's office said in a statement.
A court in Nanterre near Paris said the royal couple's lawyer had filed a motion to expedite the procedure, and Closer's publishers would be heard on Monday (September 17).
Under the headline "Oh my God!", the photos show the couple, whose regal yet natural conduct since their April wedding has won them fans worldwide, soaking up the sun on the balcony of a 19th century hunting lodge, oblivious to lurking paparazzi.
The spread is a blow to Buckingham Palace as it tries to move on from a scandal over naked shots of Prince Harry that tarred an image bolstered by William and Kate's wedding, the Queen's 2012 Diamond Jubilee and her Olympic Games appearance.
While Closer defended its decision to publish the photographs, a royal spokesperson said it had upset the royal couple, who are currently touring southeast Asia.
"Their Royal Highnesses have been hugely saddened to learn that a French publication and a photographer have invaded their privacy in such a grotesque and totally unjustifiable manner," a spokesperson for St James's Palace said.
"Their Royal Highnesses had every expectation of privacy in the remote house. It is unthinkable that anyone should take such photographs, let alone publish them."
British Prime Minister David Cameron's spokeswoman also said the royal couple should be entitled to their privacy.
Closer's editor-in-chief Laurence Pieau described the photos as a "beautiful series" that showed a couple in love and were in no way degrading. She said the magazine had more intimate shots from the same series that it opted not to publish.
Closer is published by Mondadori, an Italian company partly owned by former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and chaired by his daughter Marina. Lawyers said it is likely to find the case difficult to defend, although profits from the issue would likely far exceed any fine faced, probably just a few thousand euros.
The publication -- which set off a stream of mostly angry commentary on twitter -- reopens a debate over the privacy of Britain's royal family and the freedom of the press weeks after a U.S. website published grainy photos of William's younger brother Harry cavorting naked in a Las Vegas hotel room.
"Harry started the fashion: these days the Windsors take their clothes off," the French magazine quipped in the photo spread, which it claimed as a world exclusive on the couple's mini-vacation in early September.
William and his younger brother Harry are the sons of heir-to-the-throne Charles, whose 86-year-old mother Queen Elizabeth has enjoyed enormous popularity in her diamond jubilee year.
Many in Britain felt there was a difference between exposing laddish antics by a royal in Las Vegas and intruding on William and Kate's private holiday.
The photos of Harry stained a positive image the Royal family has carefully crafted as it worked to turn the page on Princess Diana's death in 1997 and a raft of scandals at the time including Prince Andrew's ex-wife Sarah Ferguson having her toes sucked by a U.S. businessman as she sunbathed topless.
William and Kate were staying at the Chateau d'Autet near Aix-en-Provence in the Luberon region, whose picture-postcard villages, rolling lavender fields and vineyards have made it a favourite getaway spot for wealthy foreigners. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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