Cressida Bonas has enrolled in a vocal training school on the islands of Orkney, Scotland.
The 25-year-old beauty is the former girlfriend of Britain's Prince Harry, but having decided to pursue her career as an actress around 700 miles away from Lond...
Britain's Prince Harry told Sharon Osbourne to "f*** off".
On a trip to Buckingham Palace, Sharon says she grabbed the boobs of the Duchess of Cornwall and the 30-year-old prince swore at her.
Asked how the unlikely incident came about, Sharon explained: "I asked Harry to watch my handbag - he told me to 'F*** off'."
Sharon, 62, also revealed that the only royal she bows for is Britain's Queen, suggesting the rest of the royal family are not worthy of such an act.
The London-born reality TV star told The Sun newspaper: "She's special. But for the new young generation of Royals, I don't think one should."
Sharon's claims come shortly after Prince Harry paid tribute to injured servicemen and women at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year event in Glasgow.
Harry presented competitors from this year's Invictus Games with the Helen Rollason Award at the Glasgow's SSE Hydro arena.
Harry, who has served in the military, shared: "I'm like a proud dad. These men and women will no longer be defined by their injuries. Their stories move, humble and captivate us.
"We should not underestimate the power of sport, that changes life. All of those who complete in the Invictus Games have achieved so much just to make it to the starting line-up."
Magic mushrooms have been found in the royal gardens at Buckingham Palace.
The hallucinogenic fungi was unearthed by TV presenter Alan Titchmarsh, who was in the process of making a programme called 'The Queen's Garden'.
The red and white spotted toadstool - otherwise known as Amanita muscaria, or fly agaric - was discovered while the TV host was on a tour of the private 40-acre plot alongside ecology expert Professor Mick Crawley.
During the show, which is to be aired on ITV on Christmas Day, Titchmarsh says: "Is it edible?"
The professor responds: "That depends what you mean. It's eaten in some cultures for its hallucinogenic affects. But it also makes people who eat it very sick.
"The old-fashioned thing to do was to feed it to the village idiot, then drink his urine because you get all of the high without any of the sickness."
In response, the TV host says: "I think I'll forgo that and stick to normal mushrooms.
"Not something to try at home."
Meanwhile, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson told The Sun newspaper: "For the avoidance of doubt, fungi from the garden are not used in the Palace kitchens."
Britain's Prince Harry paid tribute to injured servicemen and women at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year event in Glasgow last night (14.12.14).
The 30-year-old royal presented competitors from this year's Invictus Games - which were staged in London over the summer - with the Helen Rollason Award at the Glasgow's SSE Hydro arena.
Harry, who has served in the military, reflected: "I'm like a proud dad. These men and women will no longer be defined by their injuries. Their stories move, humble and captivate us.
"We should not underestimate the power of sport, that changes life. All of those who complete in the Invictus Games have achieved so much just to make it to the starting line-up."
Dave Henson, captain of the UK team, accepted the prestigious award on behalf of everyone who participated in the London event.
He said: "To use the phrase 'blown away' is inappropriate but we were.
"We expected Aldershot [to stage the event], but we were given the Olympic Stadium. It's absolutely overwhelming.
"To be recognised formally with the Helen Rollason Award is the icing on the cake of our Invictus Games adventure."
Britain's Prince Charles is to open a nursery at one of Wales' top independent schools.
The prince, who is on a pre-Christmas tour of the country, is to open the new facility at Llandovery College in Carmarthenshire, which ran up debts of £4 million in 2012, before a new company assumed responsibility for the institution.
In September, a brand new bilingual nursery school opened and the visit is likely to be extra special for the prince, who has a farmhouse at nearby Myddfai, which he uses during his summertime tours of Wales.
The 66-year-old prince's pre-Christmas tour has taken him to a number of interesting destinations in the country, including Newbridge in Caerphilly, where he opened a workingmen's club.
What's more, he travelled to Swansea to pay a visit to soldiers who have returned from the conflict in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, the prince and the Duchess of Cornwall have paid a special tribute to Prince Harry in their Christmas card.
The card features a picture of the couple at the Invictus Games, the event Harry helped organise over the summer.
The event in London recognised the servicemen and women who had been injured in various conflicts.
Britain's Duchess of Cambridge is avoiding some of Prince William's party-loving friends.
The 32-year-old royal, who is currently pregnant with her second child, has been a notable absentee at a number of recent social events and sources close to the ...
Britain's Prince Charles will open a working men's institute in Wales today (12.12.14).
The Prince of Wales will meet with local community groups before he officially opens the Newbridge Memorial Hall - affectionately known as The Memo - in Caerphilly, South Wales.
He will then be treated to a performance in the Main Auditorium in part of the newly renovated Grade-II listed institute, which was built 1908.
His Royal Highness will later travel to Swansea to inspect troops from 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards (QDG) - of which Charles is Colonel in Chief - who will march through the city centre as they exercise their right to the Freedom of Swansea.
Also known as The Welsh Cavalry, the QDG were the final group of British soldiers to leave Afghanistan's Helmand Province earlier this year.
Speaking ahead of Prince Charles visit, Sergeant David Chant, from Cardiff, revealed how the Afghan national army are doing "really well".
He told the website Wales Online: "We were really putting the icing on the cake over there because a lot of our predecessors have done a lot of hard work before us.
"We were really putting an end to the final chapter in Afghanistan.
"We were just polishing everything up that we could and chasing the last five per cent. The Afghan national army has come along leaps and bounds since I was over there for the first time, they've done really well."
Britain's Duke of Cambridge will honour the 1914 Christmas truce today (12.12.14).
Held at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire, Prince William will dedicate a memorial to the moment troops on the Western front held fire to play a game of ...
Britain's Duchess of Cornwall held a festive party for terminally ill children.
The 67-year-old royal hosted a gala reception yesterday (11.12.14) which saw the youngsters and staff from Helen and Douglas House - a children's hospice - have fun decorating a huge Christmas tree at the duchess' London home.
Together they had fun adding decorative mushrooms, heart shaped wreaths, miniature rocking horses and other ornaments to the branches of the lush evergreen inside Clarence House.
Later on the party sat down to a delicious lunch as they admired their beautifully decorated tree.
Camilla has been a patron of the children's charity since 2007, following her first visit to their facility which is based in Oxfordshire.
She recently described the hospice as: "The most inspiring and uplifting place to come to."
Opened in November 1982, Helen and Douglas House provides seriously ill children and young adults with a welcoming and comfortable place to stay when they require 24-hour support.
Comedian Michael McIntyre - who has two sons with his wife Kitty - has also shown his support to the charity.
Speaking in a video on the Helen and Douglas House website, he shared: "As a parent I simply cannot imagine what these families go through."