
Nine million french viewers for coronation’s ‘royal fête des voisins’
- Select a language for the TTS:
- French Female
- French Male
- French Canadian Female
- French Canadian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - FR
Play all audios:

FESTIVITIES IN FRANCE INCLUDED A SPECIAL VIEWING AT THE BRITISH EMBASSY IN PARIS WHICH THE CONNEXION ATTENDED ALONG WITH ROYAL FAMILY ENTHUSIAST NOÉ, AGED EIGHT, FROM NORMANDY Almost nine
million people in France watched the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla this weekend with several French television channels screening the event. The ceremony attracted 70% of
the audience on French channels that showed it and there were two million more spectators than for Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral. Several French people who watched it on TV have told _The
Connexion_ team that they were “moved” by the occasion, which attracted significant coverage in the French press as it did around the world. EMBASSY MARKED OCCASION WITH SPECIAL VIEWING The
British Embassy in Paris marked the occasion with a special big screen viewing at the Ambassador’s Residence, with a ‘Coronation quiche’, smoked salmon and scrambled egg brunch followed by
an afternoon tea with cakes and scones. _The Connexion _attended along with French schoolboy Noé Patrel, eight, from Normandy, who has written and spoken to us on several previous occasions
of his love for the British Royal Family and his correspondence with royalty. READ MORE: FRENCH BOY, SEVEN, EXCHANGES LETTERS WITH THE QUEEN READ MORE:FRENCH ROYAL CORRESPONDENT, AGE SEVEN,
RECEIVES LETTER FROM AMBASSADOR We also enjoyed meeting friends and contacts old and new including British Ambassador Menna Rawlings, Christopher Chantrey of the British Community Committee
of France (BCC), the chaplain of Saint George's Anglican Church, Paris, the Rev. Mark Osborne, and the vice president of the National Assembly’s Franco-British friendship group,
Constance le Grip. Noé told us he enjoyed watching the Coronation and meeting Dame Menna, drinking English tea and seeing the Residence – including its garden and the grand bedroom of former
owner Napoleon’s sister Pauline. President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte were among the invitees in Westminster Abbey for the Coronation, which was described by _Le Monde_ as “a
Christian ceremony full of pomp and solemnity”. POSITIVE REACTIONS REPORTED IN FRENCH PRESS The French relayed mostly enthusiastic quotes from the crowds in London, with Charles and Camilla
said to be “doing their best to show more modern ideas,” according to one Briton interviewed by Europe 1. Another said: “They form a team, and the country is going to get behind them. We’ve
got to move forward now. We applaud them because they’re our monarchs.” “I adored every minute,” was one headline on the website of BFMTV, while _Le Figaro_ noted that “service to others”
was stressed in the ceremony. It also wrote about the King’s wish to include other religions in the ceremony and the fact that the guest list had been based more on merit than titles, with
many “exemplary figures from civil society.” Le Monde noted how women bishops took part in the liturgy for the first time and “the dignitaries carrying the royal insignia reflected the
diversity of origins of the British”. Royalty magazine P_oint de Vue_ said Charles was likely to be a king who would focus more than his mother on closeness to the people, “benevolence and a
certain simplicity”, as opposed to his mother’s “iconic and almost deified image”. A French attendee called the day “super and very festive” in _Le Figaro_, which also ran a punning
headline inspired by street party celebrations in the UK, calling it the _fête (royale) des voisins _(a play on France’s annual 'neighbours' festival' and also the fact that
the UK is a neighbour to France). Among other points the French press, however pondered Prince Harry’s rapid departure and low-key attendance, considered whether the British have a
‘nostalgia for the Empire’ (_Le Monde_) and raised questions over whether this might be the last coronation of such a formal and traditional kind (Gala). READ ALSO: CHARLES III CORONATION:
WHAT DO YOU THE FRENCH THINK OF THE UK’S NEW KING? ‘HISTORIC DAY UNDER A PERFECTLY BRITISH RAIN’ _Le Monde_ wrote of “a historic day under a perfectly British rain” in an article which also
noted some arrests of Republication protestors, while_ Le Figaro_ also quoted disapproval from far-left politician Jean-Luc Mélenchon of Les Insoumis who said it made him feel
"queasy" to see “all this song and dance about a man covered up in fancy dress, jewels and precious stones.” Other than the British Embassy event, “a big picnic” in the Somme, with
British foods such as Victoria sandwich cake and scones, was among festivities reported from the Coronation day in France. The British Association of the Côte d'Opale also held a
picnic, while Paris’s Standard Athletic Club organised a grande fête, the English-speaking community celebrated in Chantilly at the Polo Club and the Association France-Grande Bretagne,
Quercy had a Coronation garden party yesterday. The BCC is STILL SELLING TICKETS for its forthcoming Coronation cocktail party at Paris’s Les Salons Hoches on May 22. Noé meanwhile is hoping
for a response to his latest royal letter, congratulating the King and he has also written to Dame Menna, to whom he presented flowers at the Residence on Coronation Day. He recently
received a thank-you card from Prince William and Princess Catherine, for a letter of condolences on the Queen’s death. RELATED ARTICLES HELPFUL VOCABULARY TO TALK ABOUT THE CORONATION IN
FRENCH FROM ROYALIST TO REPUBLICAN: READERS IN FRANCE REVEAL CORONATION PLANS