Serena Williams praised Meghan for choosing a gospel choir
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Serena Williams praises Meghan Markle’s ‘brave’ decision to have a gospel choir at her wedding while making a brief appearance on the Netflix show
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Tennis star Serena Williams said her friend Meghan Markle was “brave” for choosing music from her culture at her wedding.
At the wedding, the gospel group The Kingdom Choir performed Stand By Me and This Little Light Of Mine.
Speaking briefly in the Netflix documentary, Serena said: “Having her [Meghan’s] The culture represented at that wedding was incredible. I loved.
“And I thought he was very brave and broke the limits without trying.”
Serena Williams spoke in the documentary about the gospel choir at the wedding, saying it was “brave.”
Meghan’s friend Dhru Purohit, a businesswoman and podcast host, added: “We had this big moment where me, Oprah, Idris Elba, her partner, we all looked at each other for a brief moment and had a little laugh.”
“No one needed to say anything because everyone knew exactly the layers of symbolism that were going on that day.”
The wedding featured The Kingdom Choir, which was created especially for the big day and conducted by award-winner Karen Gibson.
Speaking in the documentary, prince harry he said there was “no backtracking” on that idea.
The Kingdom Choir was made up of the best gospel choir singers and directed by Karen Gibson
He said: “Everyone was like ‘a gospel choir, oh that’s cool.’ And again there was more help from my dad on that.’
Meghan added: “He said they could take the best gospel choir singers and put them together, and that’s how The Kingdom Choir came to be.”
‘They were great.’
The first three episodes of Harry & Meghan, part of the Sussexes’ multi-million dollar deal with Netflix, aired last week, with the final three hour-long episodes airing starting today.
The Sussexes’ six-part show, part of their multi-million dollar deal with Netflix, has become the streaming giant’s most watched documentary in a week of release, debuting with 81.55 million hours watched.
The opening installment covered the couple’s courtship and romance, but many were deeply unhappy with the show’s all-out assault on the late Queen’s Commonwealth legacy, with some saying it appeared the couple wanted to “overthrow the monarchy”.
Harry also dropped a number of sly hints at his family, particularly his father and brother, including the suggestion that they had married not for love but rather a woman who fit ‘the mold’.
The duke also said his family members questioned why Meghan needed more media protection than their wives had been afforded, but failed to understand the “racial element”.
Royal pundits were quick to declare the claims made in the trailer yesterday “nonsense”, while one commenter said the series was clearly a “form of revenge”.
In a clip, Meghan’s British privacy lawyer, Jenny Afia, insisted that she had seen evidence of the conspiracy against the Duchess before Lucy Fraser, whose real name is Lucy Meadmore, a former public relations manager who was a mysterious figure. until a week ago, he says, “Meg became the scapegoat.” for the Palace.
The Duchess herself also suggested that she was made a scapegoat, adding: “You’d see.” A story about someone in the family would come up for a minute and they’d say, ‘We’ve got to make that go away.
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