logo
Ruby Wax jokes William and Kate disturbed her silent retreat on Scottish island

Ruby Wax jokes William and Kate disturbed her silent retreat on Scottish island

STV News01-05-2025

Comic Ruby Wax joked about the Prince and Princess of Wales interrupting her silent retreat when she unexpectedly met them on a remote Scottish island.
William and Kate chatted to the celebrity as they ended their two-day visit to the Scottish isles by making a private trip to Iona, famed for being the cradle of Christianity in Scotland.
Wax, who has a career as a mental health campaigner alongside her comedy work, was pictured with the royals and said later: 'I think it's funny because I'm on a retreat here and I thought 'why are they interrupting my silent retreat' – you know what I mean?' PA Media Ruby Wax met the royal couple during their private visit to Iona.
But she suggested the meeting was worthwhile 'you could break the silent retreat for this'.
Wax was a friend of Diana, Princess of Wales and had praise for her son William: 'I didn't realise (he) was so good-looking, he looks like his mother'.
The couple spent more than two hours on Iona with Kate photographed in the gift shop and the couple seen walking past Iona Abbey and walking off the public ferry.
When they boarded the vessel for the short journey to Iona the couple spoke about the 'fantastic' time they had on the Isle of Mull where they had spent much of their two-day visit and celebrated their 14th wedding anniversary. PA Media William and Kate speak to a child from the Ardura Acorns group during a visit to the Ardura Community Forest.
Earlier, Kate was said to have been in her element when she spent time with an early-years outdoor play group learning about nature in the Ardura Community Forest on Mull.
The princess, who was joined by her husband, has made highlighting the development of children a central element of her public work and nature has played an important role while she was being treated for cancer.
With the youngsters aged up to five running around, she reportedly spoke of the value of them getting 'outdoors as much as they can'.
William told one father about the importance of communities: 'That's what we've lost, the ability to come together and know your neighbour,' and he went on to say: 'You can get lost in the cities.'
Kate crouched down to speak to some of the children learning about their environment through simple tasks such as gathering flowers, and she later played with the youngsters by the neighbouring River Lussa, as they threw sticks into the water.
Jan Dunlop from the Mull and Iona Ranger Service hosted much of the visit, and she said later about the couple: 'I think they loved it, I think they really did.
'Catherine would have stayed all day and you could see when she got to the water, that was it.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brazilian Piper Pipe Band is coming to Edinburgh this summer
Brazilian Piper Pipe Band is coming to Edinburgh this summer

Edinburgh Reporter

time42 minutes ago

  • Edinburgh Reporter

Brazilian Piper Pipe Band is coming to Edinburgh this summer

In August the Brazilian Piper Pipe Band, a group of young men from the tough suburb of Rio de Janeiro, São Goncalo, will set off on a life- changing adventure to one of the official events celebrating the 200th UK-Brazil anniversary here in the capital. Their journey will take them to Lisbon and London, and the Edinburgh Festival where they will play at the Ross Bandstand. The Brazilian Piper Pipe Band was founded in 1999 by Pipe Major José Paulo Pereira as a social project using the discipline of a pipe band to train underprivileged teenagers from a violent area of Rio De Janeiro dominated by drug traffic to become responsible citizens. They have performed their rich repertoire of traditional Scottish pipe tunes, theme music from famous TV series and Brazilian popular music all over South America – including a foot-tapping samba finale always guaranteeing a standing ovation. Their 'Daily Ceilidh' show will be a prime example of the peaceful fusion of culture between Brazil and the UK and will run from 12 to 19 August 2025 between 15.30 and 17.30. Every afternoon the band will gather at the Ross Fountain in West Princes Street Gardens. At 15.30, there will be a parade behind the Brazilian Piper Pipe Band 200 metres from the fountain to the Ross Bandstand entrance. A Grand March into the area for dancing in front of the stage, where the Iain MacPhail Ceilidh band will start off each ' Daily Ceilidh' show with the 'Gay Gordons' dance. The show will continue by inviting the audience to join in easy ceilidh dances led by the Iain MacPhail Pipe Band and RSCDS dancers, interspersed with presentations by the Brazilian Piper Pipe Band and Batucada Brasil Percussion Group. The show will end with general samba dancing for all to the Brazilian Piper Pipe Band, Batucada Brasil Percussion and the Iain MacPhail Ceilidh Band, followed by Auld Lang Syne. The show will include the Iain MacPhail Ceilidh Band. For over thirty years Iain MacPhail provided the music for Caledonian Balls in South America and the Ghillies' Ball for the Royal family at Balmoral Castle. It will also include dancers from the Royal Scottish County Dance Society (RSCDS) and a carnival group from Edinburgh's Brazilian community with the Batucada Brasil percussion band. Capt James H Frew said: 'I'm a native of Edinburgh, and have been 42 years in Brazil. I'm a retired Merchant Navy captain with a marine surveying business. I've been working on this project since March 2024 – and we'll be staying in Port Seton Holiday village caravans, using the 26 bus to get to Princes Street Gardens every day for the show. 'The Brazilian Piper Pipe Band social project is supported by the British consulate in Rio de Janeiro and the Consulate General of Brazil in Edinburgh. The band raised their own travelling expenses from presentations at shipping malls, local community events and the Rio passenger cruise ship terminal.' During their run they will play along with the Royal Scottish Country Dance Society (RSCDS) dancers and Batucada Brasil Percussion Group. Edinburgh's Brazilian community is organising a BBQ for them. On 11 August the band will be one of 17 international pipe bands which has been invited by the National Piping Centre, Glasgow, to participate in the annual 'Piping Live' parade to demonstrate the versatility of the Great Highland Bagpipe. On 17 August the band will be received by the Consulate General of Brazil in Edinburgh and on 25 August they will return home. Like this: Like Related

Children's character Zog is celebrated on Royal Mint 50p coins
Children's character Zog is celebrated on Royal Mint 50p coins

STV News

timean hour ago

  • STV News

Children's character Zog is celebrated on Royal Mint 50p coins

Children's character Zog is being celebrated with the launch of a Royal Mint 50p coin. The collectable coin marks 15 years since since Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler's enthusiastic but accident-prone dragon first captured readers' hearts. The design features Zog flying, complete with tiny wings and a determination to earn a golden star at Dragon School. The 50p joins the Mint's childhood characters collection, which also includes The Gruffalo and The Gruffalo's Child. Rebecca Morgan, director of commemorative coin at the Royal Mint, said: 'We're thrilled to welcome Zog onto an official UK 50p and as part of our childhood characters coin series. PA Media The new 50p coin is one of a series that celebrates children's characters (Royal Mint/PA) PA Media 'As the dragon who tries his very best – despite his mishaps – Zog represents determination and perseverance, qualities we can all admire. 'This coin celebrates a character who has become a firm favourite in households across the UK and continues our tradition of honouring beloved children's literature on our nation's coinage.' Zog author Ms Donaldson said: 'I'm delighted that Zog is being celebrated on a UK coin. When I wrote his story 15 years ago, I never imagined he would fly so far into people's imaginations. Seeing our determined dragon on a 50p piece would definitely earn him a golden star from Madam Dragon.' Illustrator Mr Scheffler said: 'Drawing Zog with his big friendly face and clumsiness has always been such a joy. To see my illustrations transformed onto a coin is an incredible honour.' Previous character coins from the Royal Mint also include the Snowman, Paddington Bear, and Wallace and Gromit. The Zog 50p coin was created in partnership with Magic Light Pictures, the company behind the animated adaptation of the story. Its release on Thursday coincides with Zog Day 2025, celebrating the character's qualities. The coin is available to buy from the Royal Mint's website in a range of precious metal finishes, with colour versions also available in Zog's orange hue. The range starts at £15 with colour version 50ps priced from £25. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Work by one of Scotland's best loved contemporary artists on show
Work by one of Scotland's best loved contemporary artists on show

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Work by one of Scotland's best loved contemporary artists on show

The exhibition, Elizabeth Blackadder and the Poetry of Memory, is on show by appointment at Lyon & Turnbull's Glasgow showroom on Bath Street until Friday, June 20. Gillian Raffles was one of the few women to own and run her own gallery in London's hugely competitive 'art strip' of Cork Street in Mayfair. She set up the Mercury Gallery in 1964 as a space for both emerging artists and for the more established. READ MORE: The gallery also championed overlooked figurative artists, helping to establish the art world positions of figures including Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and Alfred Wallis. Raffles' most enduring professional relationship was with Blackadder, who was the first Scottish woman artist to be a fully elected member of both the Royal Scottish Academy and Royal Academy, London, and the first woman, to be made Her Majesty's Painter and Limner in Scotland. Mercury Gallery held 14 solo shows of the artist's work every two years, from 1965 to 1998, with the two women carefully avoided inflating prices, ensuring accessibility for collectors. Raffles once said of her quietly famous client: "You never read about Elizabeth in the gossip columns or hear her work is selling for record prices... but I don't think she has any regrets." Katie Hannah, of Lyon & Turnbull Glasgow, with works by Elizabeth Blackadder (Image: Julie Howden) The new exhibition also includes the work of Blackadder's husband, John Houston, a successful and much-loved artist in his own right, exploring the impact travel had on their work; most notably showcasing their passion for Japan. Although the Mercury Gallery was one of London's most significant and enduring private galleries of the second half of the twentieth century, Raffles expanded to Edinburgh in August 1982, opening a branch on The Mound in the heart of the Capital. The Edinburgh gallery provided a vital platform for Scottish artists and reinforced Raffles' commitment to supporting figurative art beyond the London art scene by showcasing a diverse range of works, including paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, with a particular emphasis on Scottish artists. Gillian Raffles closed the Mercury Gallery in 2001, but continued to work with artists on selling and promoting their work from her home in Essex. Her Mercury Gallery archive is now in the safekeeping of the Tate archive. Gillian Raffles died, aged 90, in November 2021. Elizabeth Blackadder died in August 2021, aged 89.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store