The king

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THINKING OF OTHERS DURING HIS 75 THBIRTHDAY CELEBRATIONS

IS JOINED BY LOVED ONES AND UNVEILS HIS GIFT OF A GROUNDBREAKING PROJECT

Piccadilly Circus in London lights up to mark His Majesty’s birthday and highlight his new Coronation Food Project to fight food poverty and food waste

The Repair Shop presenter Jay Blades and community champions (below left) and a Rock Choir group (below right) – performing Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen, one of the King’s favourite artists – are among the guests at the Highgrove tea party, held the day before his birthday

He had insisted he didn’t want a fuss, but when the King turned 75 last week, he was treated to several renditions of Happy Birthday, gun salutes, gifts and a huge cake.

Aides said His Majesty wanted to use his milestone to shine a light on other people, so he carried out a string of engagements to do exactly that.

However, he also made time to celebrate with his nearest and dearest, who helped him round off his special day with an intimate party at his London home, Clarence House.

The festivities began the day before, when the monarch dropped in on a tea party for others marking their 75th birthdays this year hosted by the King’s Foundation at Highgrove, his Gloucestershire estate. He was serenaded by around 60 partygoers and the local Rock Choir.

Slicing knife held aloft, the King prepares to cut into a Victoria sponge birthday cake at his Highgrove estate to celebrate his birthday with others also turning 75 this year
The King and Queen greet well-wishers during a tour of the South Oxfordshire Food and Education Alliance in Didcot, Oxfordshire. The group is part of FareShare, a national network of charitable food redistributors; the royal couple are shown (right) how unwanted food products are being packaged or turned into fresh, hot meals and sent out to community groups to fight food poverty (far right)

Cutting into a three-tiered Victoria sponge cake, he urged guests to eat up, saying: “Who can I donate it to? Can we get rid of it? We need to give you doggie bags.”

He had invited community champions in Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Somerset, as well as representatives of the NHS and the Windrush generation, both of which are marking 75th anniversaries this year.

TRIBUTES FROM THE STARS

Famous faces included The Repair Shop presenter Jay Blades, singer Leee John and chef Raymond Blanc, a new ambassador for the foundation, who said: “He has been campaigning for 50 years on environmental and social issues that are vital for our communities and our planet. What he has done is extraordinary.”

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