Kate Middleton practises to make royal wedding perfect
ROYAL bride Kate Middleton was hard at work in Westminster Abbey  yesterday...determined not to drop a wedding day clanger like Prince  William’s mum.
Diana, just 20 when she exchanged vows 30 years ago with Prince  Charles, was so nervous she famously fluffed her lines and called him  Philip Charles Arthur George instead of Charles Philip Arthur George
So it is no surprise Kate, 29, is determined to get it right when she  weds William in front of 1,900 guests and TWO BILLION TV viewers  worldwide.
She’s been practising over and over again the full name of her 28-year-old husband-to-be – William Arthur Philip Louis.
Yesterday Kate was joined for the wedding rehearsal by chief bridesmaid sister Pippa, 27, and best man Prince Harry, 26.
Also there to troop behind the bride-to-be and learn their steps  were the six excited little bridesmaids and page boys who will attend on  her in two weeks’ time.
A royal source said yesterday: “Of course Kate and William want  everything to go perfectly on their big day. There will be lots of  rehearsals.
“This particular one was focussed on the bridesmaids and page boys  as Kate is very conscious that she wants them to be comfortable on the  big day.
Proudly marching along the nave of the abbey, too, were page boys  William Lowther-Pinkerton, 10, son of William’s private secretary and  Tom Pettifer, eight, son of William and Harry’s former nanny Tiggy  Legge-Bourke.

After the rehearsal they were given a short tour of the abbey by the  Very Reverend John Hall, Dean of Westminster, who will conduct the  service on the day.

Kate felt it was important for the children to get a feel of the  thousand-year-old building because she wants them to be as confident and  calm as possible when the world’s media focus on them during the  75-minute ceremony on April 29.
The Dean is one of three clergymen who will be involved in the  ceremony. Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams will marry the couple  and Bishop of London Richard Chartres – a university pal of Prince  Charles – will give the address.
Prince William’s duties as a search-and-rescue pilot at RAF  Anglesey, North Wales, meant he could not be at yesterday’s rehearsal.
But he has also been telling friends he is feeling pressure building  for the big day – even admitting publicly that his knees were “tapping  together” at a rehearsal three weeks ago.
The bride – dubbed Waity Katie during the couple’s dating years for  hanging on so long for a proposal – will turn the tables on Wills when  she arrives at the abbey for the ceremony.
Even if everything goes perfectly and the timetable runs to the  second, William will still have a nail-biting 45-minute wait at the  altar.
He will arrive there with Prince Harry at 10.15am – a full two hours  after the first of the guests take their places at the back of the  abbey.
Kate and her entourage are due to arrive on the dot of 11am – but sources say she may keep him waiting a bit longer.
While she does not want to fluff her lines like William’s mum, royal  aides have indicated that Kate would like to follow in her footsteps by  exercising the bride’s historic prerogative to delay proceedings. Diana  was a few seconds late for her wedding to Charles, which started at  11.20am on July 29, 1981.
A royal source grinned yesterday: “It’s impossible to say exactly  what will happen at the abbey. But you have to admit that every bride  has the right to keep her bridegroom waiting for just a little on her  big day.”
 
 
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