Current:Home > FinanceEthermac|British royals sprinkle star power on a grateful French town with up-and-down ties to royalty -Wealth Evolution Experts
Ethermac|British royals sprinkle star power on a grateful French town with up-and-down ties to royalty
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 00:12:16
SAINT-DENIS,Ethermac France (AP) — As they do every day at noon, the town hall bells played a cheeky little tune about a king who put his pants on back to front. Perhaps a good thing then, for French-British friendship and all of that, that King Charles III and Queen Camilla arrived a little too late to hear it.
The British royal couple swept into Saint-Denis just after its midday chimes, coming to sprinkle a little of their star power on the town north of Paris that drank up the attention on Thursday.
After all, it’s not every day that VIP visitors venture out here — one of the poorest and toughest parts of the Paris region. Residents were thrilled, welcoming the royals as a boost for the town with a reputation for crime, deep pockets of economic hardship, and where many are deprived of the wealth and opportunities that nearby Paris enjoys.
“When people speak of Saint-Denis, they say, ‘Oh ! Don’t go!,’” said Yannick Caillet, an assistant mayor. “We want to de-stigmatize the town.”
Charles and Camilla didn’t stay long — roughly an hour. They stuck to Saint-Denis’ prettiest parts — around its centuries-old basilica and the adjacent town hall with its quirky bells that twice-daily play tunes linked to France’s rich history of insurrection, challenging authority, and dethroning royals.
Heavy downpours in Saint-Denis, metal barriers and the security detail also kept crowds small and largely away from the royal party.
Still, the stop on the second day of their engagement-packed state visit offered Charles and Camilla a quick look at a world far removed from the lavish splendor France treated them to the previous day.
On day one, they got a grand dinner at Versailles Palace with Mick Jagger and actor Hugh Grant among guests, a parade down the Champs-Elysées, a flyover by jets trailing red, white and blue smoke in the Paris sky and lots of attention from French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte.
Macron didn’t join the royals in Saint-Denis but Brigitte did. She and Camilla played a bit of table tennis when meeting with kids.
At the Le Khédive cafe, owner Sid Ould-Moussa was told that the king planned to drop by and could he please prepare a table outside, with a chair for Charles — a history and architecture buff — facing the basilica?
“It’s excellent for the town, for us,” said Ould-Moussa. “It’s fabulous.”
Inside the cafe, language teachers Corinne Le Mage and Claire Pellistrandi were just tucking into lunches of veal and salmon when the king finally sat down, just a few feet (yards) away, to chat with a group of young job-seekers.
Gulp. The teachers said it would be a meal they’d long remember.
“We’re proud for the town,” said Le Mage.
“You can feel his sincerity,” Pellistrandi added. “It doesn’t seem like PR, which is what you generally get with politicians.”
The town of Saint-Denis has a long relationship with royalty — and it hasn’t always been kind. In all, 42 kings, 32 queens and 63 princes and princesses were buried over the centuries in its basilica — only to be dug up again during the French Revolution and tossed into mass graves.
The towering basilica itself is built on the spot where a 3rd-century bishop, Denis, is said to have staggered to after he was executed in Paris, supposedly carrying his decapitated head as he walked six kilometers (nearly 4 miles) to what is now Saint-Denis.
The first king buried in the basilica was Dagobert. He’s remembered in a popular children’s song, “The Good King Dagobert,” that opponents of King Louis XVI sang to poke fun at him. The song tells how the king supposedly wore his pants back to front.
Louis was guillotined during the French Revolution. “The Good King Dagobert” is now played at noon by the bells of Saint-Denis’ town hall — seemingly a cheeky wink at the town’s royal history.
But Thursday was more about looking ahead and royals making new history.
Residents said Charles and Camilla’s visit put a positive light on the town.
“A lot of people are poor and it has a reputation as a cutthroat place,” said Yasmina Bedar, who was born in Saint-Denis and has lived there for 50 years.
“For a king in real flesh and blood to come to Saint-Denis of course can only help our image.”
veryGood! (698)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Climate Science Discoveries of the Decade: New Risks Scientists Warned About in the 2010s
- Abortion bans drive off doctors and close clinics, putting other health care at risk
- Trump Proposes Speedier Environmental Reviews for Highways, Pipelines, Drilling and Mining
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Niall Horan Teasing Details About One Direction’s Group Chat Is Simply Perfect
- We Finally Know the Plot of Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling's Barbie
- Lake Mead reports 6 deaths, 23 rescues and rash of unsafe and unlawful incidents
- 'Most Whopper
- Every Time Lord Scott Disick Proved He Was Royalty
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Reese Witherspoon Debuts Her Post-Breakup Bangs With Stunning Selfie
- Lab-grown chicken meat gets green light from federal regulators
- Homelessness rose in the U.S. after pandemic aid dried up
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- State of the Union: Trump Glorifies Coal, Shuts Eyes to Climate Risks
- National Eating Disorders Association phases out human helpline, pivots to chatbot
- Meet the teen changing how neuroscientists think about brain plasticity
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Billions of Acres of Cropland Lie Within a New Frontier. So Do 100 Years of Carbon Emissions
An abortion doula pivots after North Carolina's new restrictions
Priyanka Chopra Reflects on Dehumanizing Moment Director Requested to See Her Underwear on Set
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Maine Town Wins Round in Tar Sands Oil Battle With Industry
South Carolina is poised to renew its 6-week abortion ban
Helping a man walk again with implants connecting his brain and spinal cord