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Meghan Markle has revealed how she 'ate croissants and drank mimosas' on the morning of her wedding to Prince Harry in the latest instalment of their Netflix documentary.
The first three episodes – part of the Sussexes' multi-million-dollar deal with Netflix – were streamed last week, with the final three hour-long episodes available from today.
In the fourth show, the Duchess of Sussex, 41, spoke about how she went 'into a state of calm' on the morning of her wedding.
She said: 'All I wanted was a mimosa and a croissant and play the song "going to the chapel" and that's what I did. It was so great.'
Meghan Markle, 41, has revealed how she 'ate croissants and drank mimosas' on the morning of her wedding to Prince Harry in her new Netflix documentary
'I went into this really calm space, I don't know how I was so calm. I look back and I think, how was I so calm?'
Elsewhere in the documentary, Prince Harry and Meghan shared a number of unseen pictures from their wedding album, including snaps of the late Queen at the event, in their bombshell Netflix series.
Photographs from the big day include images of the couple cutting their cake, the Duke doing a speech while the Duchess looked on, and Doria Ragland cheering while standing alongside Camilla and Prince William at Windsor Castle.
Another image is a single-shot of the late Queen, who can be seen beaming off-camera, while a fifth shows Kate Middleton at the drinks reception speaking to another guest.
Prince Harry and Meghan can be seen cutting their lavish wedding cake in another photograph from the event in 2018
She then went on to discuss how King Charles came to walk her down the aisle.
Retired Hollywood lighting director Thomas Markle, 78, didn't attend the couple's historic nuptials at St George's Chapel in Windsor after suffering two heart attacks in California in the weeks preceding it.
She said: 'Harry's dad is very charming and I said to him like, "I've lost my dad in this", so him as my father-in-law was really important to me, so I asked him to walk me down the aisle and he said yes.'
She told herself 'take a deep breath and keep going' as she walked down the aisle, and described how her and Harry's deep connection helped.
In the latest instalment of the documentary the Duchess sings the 60s soul hit Land of a Thousand Dances, first recorded by Chris Kenner in 1962 which later became a bigger hit by Wilson Pickett and Cannibal & the Headhunters
Meghan later added: 'H [Harry] and I are really, really good at finding each other in the chaos. When we find each other, reconnect, it's like, "It's you, it's you".
'It's not that the rest of it doesn't matter, but the rest of it feels temporary.'
Wedding footage, much of it in black and white, plays over the Duchess speaking, with Harry asked what he thought when he first cast eyes on his bride.
The prince says: 'Lucky me, look what I got'.
The Sussexes' six-part show – which forms part of their multimillion-pound deal with Netflix – has become the streaming giant's most-watched documentary in a premiere week, debuting with 81.55million hours viewed.
The initial tranche covered the couple's courtship and romance, but many were left deeply unhappy about the programme's full-on assault on the late Queen's Commonwealth legacy, with some saying it seemed as if the couple want to 'bring down the monarchy'.
Harry also let rip with a string of sly digs at his family, particularly his father and brother, including the suggestion that they had married not for love but to a woman who fitted 'the mould'.
The Duke also said members of his family questioned why Meghan needed more protection from the media than their wives had been given, but that they failed to grasp the 'race element'.
The claims made in the trailer yesterday were quickly declared by royal experts as 'nonsense', while one commentator said the series was clearly a 'form of revenge'.
In one clip, Meghan's British privacy lawyer Jenny Afia insisted she had seen evidence of the conspiracy against the Duchess.
Later Lucy Fraser – real name Lucy Meadmore – a former PR manager who was a mystery figure until a week ago, says 'Meg became this scapegoat for the Palace'.
The Duchess herself also suggested she was made a scapegoat, adding: 'You would see it play out. A story about someone in the family would pop up for a minute, and they'd go: "We've got to make that go away".'
Read more:
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Prince Harry and Meghan's wedding album: Couple reveal unseen snaps from event in Netflix series - including images of Duke's speech and the late Queen at Windsor