The diamond bandeau she wore was made for Queen Mary, who was crowned with husband King George V in 1911

LONDON — The big day finally arrived: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle were married Saturday at St. George’s Chapel on the grounds of Windsor Castle. The prince takes on the title of Duke of Sussex and his American actress bride, the newest member of the British royal family, has become the Duchess of Sussex.

It all started with a blind date two years ago that went very, very well, and culminated in a global mega-event that will help reshape the British monarchy. It was watched by tens of millions of TV viewers around the world, and CBS News’ entire live coverage of the historic event can be enjoyed over and over again in the full video above.

Guests welcomed the royal newlyweds at a reception Saturday afternoon featuring seasonal British produce and a nontraditional wedding cake. It comes after a service which itself managed to combine hundreds of years of British tradition with a contemporary American twist.

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Here’s how it all unfolded:    

After a stream of A-listers including George and Amal Clooney and David and Victoria Beckham poured out of buses and into St. George’s Chapel, the guests of honor began to arrive.

Prince Harry and best man Prince William showed up, dressed in their formal military uniforms, and waved and smiled as they stepped across the grounds of the 15th-century church. Harry ended a week of speculation (and betting) on whether he would shave off his beard for the ceremony. It was neatly trimmed, but still very much upon the royal face.

William, who was married to commoner Kate Middleton at a ceremony in 2011, carried his brother’s rings.

Meghan’s mother Doria Ragland, who flew in earlier in the week from Los Angeles to attend the wedding, arrived in one of the royal family’s fleet of limousines. She was greeted by a member of the clergy and escorted into the chapel.

Queen Elizabeth II arrived at St. George’s Chapel in a flared lime-colored dress in printed silk and an edge-to-edge coat with a lime silk tweed fastening. She was joined by her husband, Prince Philip. The guests stood to attention as the pair entered the chapel.

Other members of the royal family had already taken their places inside the chapel, including Harry’s uncles Prince Andrew and Prince Edward, his aunt Princess Anne and his cousins Princess Eugenie and 부산출장안마 Princess Beatrice.

The Duchess of Sussex emerged from a vintage limousine to reveal a wedding dress by designer Clare Waight Keller — the first British senior designer taken on by storied French fashion house Givenchy.

Markle’s choice was closely watched Saturday given how big an impact royal wedding dresses have on what brides everywhere want to wear in the years that follow. Princess Diana’s 1981 wedding gown, with its romantic details and dramatic train, defined the ’80s fairytale bridal look.

More recently, when Kate Middleton married Prince William in 2011, her long-sleeved lace gown immediately sparked a trend for more covered-up, traditional lace bridal dresses.

Markle reached 125 years back into the British monarchy’s vault to choose her wedding tiara. The diamond bandeau she wore was made for Queen Mary, who was crowned with husband King George V in 1911. The tiara was specifically designed to accommodate a brooch that was given to Mary in 1893 to commemorate her engagement to the then-Prince George.

Queen Elizabeth II inherited the pieces in 1953. The grandmother of groom Prince Harry has hundreds of tiaras stored in locked vaults. Royal tradition dictated that the queen would let the Duchess of Sussex borrow one of the sparkly heirlooms.

In the months before Saturday’s wedding, there had been speculation over whether Markle would continue the tiara tradition and if so, whether she would choose one that belonged to Harry’s late mother, Princess Diana.

Markle arrived to a fanfare and walked down the aisle accompanied part of the way by Prince Charles, and by 10 young page boys and bridesmaids. The children include 4-year-old Prince George and 3-year-old Princess Charlotte, children of Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge.

Dean of Windsor David Conner welcomed the congregation at the start of the wedding. The couple stood at the altar in St. George’s Chapel, smiling at each other as a soprano sang a work by Handel.

As they stood there, Harry said to Meghan: “You look amazing.”

The leader of the Episcopal Church quoted civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the “redemptive power of love” as he blessed the marriage of Harry and Meghan.

Most Rev. Michael Bruce Curry, who was hand-picked by the couple to deliver the sermon at their wedding, told the bride and groom Saturday that there was “power in love” and that “love can help and heal when nothing else can.”

But Curry, a champion of civil rights causes and outspoken supporter of gay rights, continued “it’s not just for and about a young couple, who we rejoice with, it’s more than that.”

It was an address the likes of which no previous royal wedding had ever witnessed, steeped in the tradition of largely black churches in the United States. Invoking the days of slavery in the United States, Curry said love helped those in captivity to persevere.

He told the couple love has “the power to change the world… When love is the way, we actually treat each other — well, like we are actual family.”

It was the archbishop of Canterbury who declared Harry and Meghan husband and wife. Justin Welby, the head of the Church of England, made the proclamation after the couple promised to love and cherish one another “till death us do part,” and exchanged rings.

The British-American pair were now officially known as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, as the duchess took her place among senior members of the royal family.

The royal newlyweds emerged from St. George’s Chapel not long after and the crowd outside roared as Harry and Meghan kissed at the top of he chapel steps.

They then took a short trip through Windsor in a horse-drawn carriage, to the delight of thousands of well-wishers along the route. The Ascot Landau carriage, in the royal family since it was built for them in 1880, looped through Windsor and then back to Windsor Castle for the daytime reception. 

Kensington Palace said the 600 guests at the Windsor Castle reception wedding would eat canapés including Scottish langoustines, grilled English asparagus and croquette of confit Windsor lamb. There’s no sit-down meal at the lunchtime reception, but guests will be offered bowls of chicken fricassee with morel mushrooms, pea and mint risotto and slow-roasted pork belly.

Place of honor went to the wedding cake by California-raised London master baker Claire Ptak. The layered lemon and elderflower cake features ingredients including 200 Amalfi lemons and 10 bottles of elderflower cordial from Queen Elizabeth II’s Sandringham estate. It was decorated with Swiss meringue buttercream and 150 fresh flowers, mainly British and in season, including peonies and roses.

The reception is hosted by Prince William, his brother’s best man, and will include speeches by Harry’s father, Prince Charles, and the bride and groom.

The newlyweds weren’t to be seen again until much later on Saturday, perhaps giving a brief wave to fans again as they head to an evening reception at Frogmore House, several miles from Windsor Castle.

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The bad man, now a dedicated birdman and full-time dad, shares a suburban house with his third wife, Kiki, infant son Morocco and two-year-old Milan. He’s father of eight, but never spent much quality time with the older ones. “I’ve never been hands-on, consistently, like this,” Tyson says. “You know, I know I should be shot in the head, because I never experienced that, because that’s what I was. I was so in love with myself, that I had no competitors.” Web Exclusive video: Tyson: My belts are garbage “Where did that Mike Tyson go?” Whitaker asks. “Where did this Mike Tyson come from?” “I don’t know,” Tyson says. “He’s not as exciting as the old guy, but he’s gonna get the job done now.” Web Exclusive video: How boxing made Mike Tyson The job now? Well, he’s fighting to change his life. In some ways, he’s been doing that his whole life. Abandoned by his father as an infant, raised by his mother, he grew up poor on the meanest of Brooklyn’s streets. His first fight was over one of his birds. As a young man, his pigeons meant the world to him. “They’re like my brothers and sisters,” Tyson said once. “My friends. ‘Cause I don’t have to worry about them asking me for any money or try and get over me or do anything or try to hurt me for any reason.” Still, he seemed headed for a life of crime until legendary trainer and manager Cus D’Amato threw him a lifeline: boxing. He was good at it — tough and disciplined. “You liked it?” Whitaker asks. “I thought it was cool, because Cus and them kept saying nice things about me every time I did it and I liked hearing the nice things,” Tyson says. “I was born in hell and every, every time I do well, it’s one step out of hell. So yeah, I enjoyed that a lot.” “It took you places?” Whitaker asks. “I’ve never dreamt of before, yeah,” Tyson says. “Took you quite high,” says Whitaker. “Brought me quite low, too,” says Tyson. “But you know, in order to fail greatly, you have to attempt to succeed greatly. The two come together.” Web Exclusive video: Mike Tyson: I love my tattoo When he was at the top of his game — electrifying and terrifying — he was at the top of the world: vanquishing contenders, flouting convention, living the high life on his terms. Earning, by some estimates, as much as $400 million – more than enough to feed all his appetites. “It was fun being that guy,” says Tyson. “It was fun being in trouble, just doing what I wanted to do. People [are] addicted to chaos sometimes. Maybe that was me, I guess. I don’t know.” “Addicted to chaos?” asks Whitaker. “Yeah, no doubt. You know, I kept getting in trouble, didn’t stop.” Trouble with women: his first marriage dissolved amid charges of spouse abuse. He was convicted and served time for rape. And he perpetrated one of the most infamous acts in modern sports history: In a 1997 comeback match, he bit Evander Holyfield’s ears, tearing off a piece of one. Tyson really never came back from that. “I’m sorry that I bit him because I started really liking him again,” Tyson explains. “He’s a good guy, you know what I mean? I was just pissed off and I bit him. Undisciplined. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to do it.” “I can’t handle being that guy,” Tyson continues. “You know, that guy’s a creation. Iron Mike, the baddest man on the planet. There’s nobody like that. People like that don’t exist. I just had the audacity, the idiocy, to say it.” “What do you think of that Mike Tyson when you look back on him?” Whitaker asks. “I don’t know,” says Tyson. “It’s kind of scary. I wouldn’t want to be that guy any more. And I get it now. I didn’t get it before. That’s a very scary guy by me. This guy here was next to that guy, I would be uncomfortable.” His career on the mat, he filed for bankruptcy in 2003, and soon retired from boxing. He says it’s the best thing he ever did. “That life is gone. The entourage is gone. The riches, gone. The outrageous celebrity gone,” Whitaker points out. “Well, that’s good,” says Tyson. “I have my wife and my kids. I had all the pleasures you could ever give me and still it doesn’t match up to my ankle compared to my wife and my children. And they like me and respect me, a little bit at least. So it can’t even compare to that. It can’t. Not even a little bit.” Staying on the straight and narrow has had its ups and downs. He’s had recent brushes with the law: a cocaine conviction in 2007; and arrested for scuffling with a photographer in 2009. But he’s been to rehab and is now nearly three years sober. He knows skeptics will think this new Mike Tyson is just another act. He wonders if he’s fooling himself. From his suburban enclave he can see Las Vegas shimmering in the distance, where he once was up in lights. He says resisting the pull of the past is the hardest fight of his life. “My life is a struggle,” he says. “I thought you knew that when you came here. This is not easy. In order for me to make this work, I have to kill my ego. I can’t have an ego in order to allow this to work.” He struggled to hold on when his four-year-old daughter, from a previous relationship, died in a freak accident two years ago. “Did that change you?” asks Whitaker. “You know, I like to use that for the excuse,” Tyson says. “My daughter dying. You know, it sounds great. For television, too. My daughter died, and that changed my life. My life changed, I’m not a scumbag no more. I like to believe that was the reason why I changed. And I also like to believe that I’m just tired. And I’m a stupid, foolish old man, and I need to get my life together.” He calls himself a work-in-progress. While he hasn’t given up all vestiges of the past – he still likes the tattoo (“I love this tattoo, Bill. I love it, Bill. This tattoo looks like it’s going to kick your ass, Bill, doesn’t it?”) – he reads a lot, too. “From Pericles to Plato, Machiavelli, Mark Twain,” he tells Whitaker, of his reading list. And he’s discovered his funny side. He had audiences laughing in the hit movie “The Hangover.” He returned in “The Hangover Part II,” this summer. He says it helps pay the bills. “Did you know you could be funny?” asks Whitaker. “No, I know I’m a clown,” he says. “I know I’m a joke. You know, you could look at my career. But yeah, I’m funny. Really funny.” If his career’s a joke, it doesn’t make him laugh. “Look at this stuff,” says Whitaker, of mementos from Tyson’s past. “This is history here. You are history.” “This is garbage,” Tyson responds. “I can say I bled for garbage.” “So this is meaningless to you?” “No,” Tyson says. “At one time it meant a lot – when you’re just a young kid, this is everything to you. But then you realize your priorities change. And you just want your children to be happy and do nice things and that makes you happy. This stuff is nothing. This is just nothing, man.” Keeping his family together, keeping his life together – well, they don’t give belts for that. But succeed in this arena, and he might truly be a champion. “This is pretty interesting,” says Tyson. “I like this life right now.” “When in your life has been the best time?” Whitaker asks. “Now!” Tyson says. “Now! Right now supercedes all those championship belts, all that money, all that liquor, all that dope. Right now.”
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