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King Charles switched Christmas speech to hospital chapel after becoming ‘enchanted’ with venue

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KING Charles will deliver his Christmas Day address from a former hospital chapel to mark his ongoing cancer treatment.

The 76-year-old recorded the speech a fortnight ago amid high security at ­Fitzrovia Chapel in central London.

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King Charles will deliver his Christmas Day address from this former hospital chapel to mark his ongoing cancer treatment[/caption]
Pictured with Camilla in Sydney in October, the King will use his speech to reflect on his cancer battle
Getty
PA
The Fitzrovia Chapel, where the King chose to record his Christmas speech in a break with tradition[/caption]

He will mention his and the Princess of Wales’s health battles in the first Christmas broadcast in 14 years to be filmed away from the royal estate.

Charles was said to be “enchanted” by the stunning chapel.

The monarch wanted to break from festive tradition at the end of a tumultuous year.

He was then told about the chapel in central London, which served patients at nearby Middlesex Hospital and is now used by the community.

Charles is said to have loved photos of the ornate 19th-century venue, and surprised passers-by when he arrived for filming amid high security a fortnight ago.

A Palace source said: “The King wanted to do things a bit differently this year and reach out into the community rather than just in the royal estates, which is a key theme of his work.”

He loved the pictures and loved the story behind it and loved the place when he got there. He was completely enchanted.

A source on Charles choosing the chapel

The Royal Household scoured several locations for the address until finding “a clear favourite” which “ticked all the boxes”.

Charles personally chose it before visiting for the first time on the day of filming on December 11, when the area close to Oxford Street was closed off.

The source added: “It seemed logical it must have some healthcare connection, it had to be a community space there to bring communities together, that it was suitably beautiful and festive, and have a royal connection, and be in easy reach of Buckingham Palace.

“He loved the pictures and loved the story behind it and loved the place when he got there. He was completely enchanted.”

 In 1987, Charles’s then-wife ­Princess Diana famously shook hands — without wearing gloves — with Aids patients when she opened Middlesex Hospital’s specialist Broderip Ward.

Diana, who divorced Charles in 1996, also returned with then-First Lady Barbara Bush in 1991.

Although the contents of tomorrow’s address are kept secret until it airs, it is understood Charles will mention his and the current Princess of Wales’s cancer struggles.

However, their health battles, which have loomed large in the royal year, will not be the “dominant theme”, it is claimed.

It will touch on “international, national and personal challenges and coming together of communities” such as the response to the horrific killings at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport.

It will also record royal achievements such as Charles and Camilla’s tour of Australia and Samoa.

Going behind the scenes

One of the main themes is a plea for “peace”, it is understood.

Buckingham Palace yesterday issued a photograph of the King filming the address inside the Byzantine-inspired chapel.

Just like last year, he stands for his address and wears one of his favourite blue ties.

In another change from Queen Elizabeth’s broadcasts, the Palace will release a teaser clip today.

There will also be a behind-the-scenes making of the King’s Speech sent out on Boxing Day on social media.

 Eyewitnesses said they were stunned to see Charles arrive at the chapel, which is next to aptly-named Middleton Place and The King and Queen pub, at around 3.30pm on December 11.

They described it as “cloak and dagger”, with the King and his security team “literally in-out”.

One said: “They just pulled up here and shut the door of the ­chapel and were there for about an hour. I was shocked when I saw him – I said ‘Oh my God it’s Charles!’”

We end the year in such a positive place it is even beyond the most optimistic hopes of doctors.

Source on the King's health

An onlooker from a nearby building added: “There were close protection officers, we knew this because they had all their medals embroidered into their suits and were very coy.

“It was very cloak and dagger. We were up at the top window facing the whole thing.

“There were three cars parked outside the chapel. There was a photographer here with the biggest camera in the world, but security wouldn’t let him go much further.

“The whole thing was very fast, ­literally in-out.”

Another passer-by said: “I came to work and the whole road was cordoned off.

“There were three cars and six police bikes and security all up that road, loads of them.

“We weren’t told what was going on, I think they kept it all hush-hush.”

The Christmas tree seen behind the King was decorated sustainably with recyclable pine cones, metal bells and glass baubles.

It was subsequently donated to Croydon BME Forum and Macmillan Cancer Support’s “Can You C Me” project, and now sits at Royal Trinity Hospice, Clapham, South West London.

Although the King’s cancer treatment continues, the Palace say it is moving in a “positive direction”.

A source told The Sun: “We end the year in such a positive place it is even beyond the most optimistic hopes of doctors.”

Meanwhile, Kate, 42, announced in September she had completed chemotherapy after initially revealing her cancer diagnosis in March.

The King’s speech will address global, national, and personal challenges, including the response to the Southport killings
PA
Getty
In 1987, Princess Diana famously shook hands without gloves with Aids patients at Middlesex Hospital’s Broderip Ward[/caption]

CHAPEL A QUIET SPOT FOR SOLACE

By Matt Wilkinson

FITZROVIA Chapel was built in the central courtyard of Middlesex Hospital to be used by patients and visitors.

Its first service was on Christmas Day 1891, with an official opening by the Bishop of London the following June.

However, its ornate interior was only completed in 1929, after the death of its designer, eminent architect John Loughborough Pearson.

 Middlesex Hospital began as an infirmary in 1745 for the “sick and lame of Soho”.

It moved nearby 12 years later before it was demolished in 1924 after it was declared structurally unsafe.

A new hospital was built on the site with a foundation stone laid by Charles’s grandfather, the future King George VI, in 1928 below.

It was closed for good in 2005 before being knocked down again in 2008 — although the Grade II-listed chapel was given a £2million restoration.

It is now used for religious services and a “space for quiet reflection for people of all faiths or none”.

The monarch’s Christmas TV address has rarely been held outside royal residences since the first in 1957.

The late Queen recorded at Royal Albert Hall in 1988, Combermere Barracks in Windsor in 2003, Southwark Cathedral in 2006 and Hampton Court in 2010.

However, tomorrow’s address from Fitzrovia Chapel is the fourth different location in as many years.

The late Queen filmed her final one in 2021 from Windsor Castle. A year later, for his first, the King pre-recorded from St George’s Chapel in Windsor, which hosted his mother’s committal service.

Then last year he filmed his speech from Buckingham Palace.

Timeline of King Charles' health battle

A look at King Charles cancer diagnosis and recovery.

January 17: Buckingham Palace announces the King has been diagnosed with an enlarged prostate

January 26: The Sun exclusively photograph the King arriving at The London Clinic for his ‘corrective procedure’

January 29: Seen waving and smiling as he left hospital after an extra night

February 5: Palace reveal while in hospital for his prostate operation doctors discovered the the King has a form of cancer

February 10: King issues ‘heartfelt thanks’ in a written statement

February 21: King tells Rishi Sunak he had been “reduced to tears” by get-well cards

March 21: The Princess of Wales and the King have lunch at Windsor Castle

March 22: Kate announces via video statement that she is being treated for cancer

March 31: King attends Easter Sunday service and takes part in ‘walkabout’ with members of the public and aides say ‘it was a significant step’ as King had ‘responded to treatment very encouragingly’

April 4: The Sun exclusively reveals King has ordered aides to ‘supercharge’ his diary for the summer and is ‘raring to go’

April 10: King and Queen embark on break at Birkhall, in Scottish Highlands

April 26: Buckingham Palace announce King will return to public-facing front-line duties

April 30: King marks his public comeback by visiting a cancer hospital with the Queen

Future:

May 8 and 21: Buckingham Palace Garden Parties

May 21 – 25: Chelsea Flower Show

June 6: 80th anniversary D-Day commemorations in France and UK

June 15: Trooping the Colour birthday parade in London

June 17: Garter Day parade at Windsor Castle

June 18 – 22: Royal Ascot

Late June: State Visit by Emperor and Empress of Japan

July 3: Holyrood Week in Scotland

October: Two or three-week tour of Australia