Queen Elizabeth’s funeral to be shown at over 100 cinemas, parks, cathedrals in Britain

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3:49Queen Elizabeth death: Trudeau, leaders of the Commonwealth realm meet with King Charles III

King Charles III met leaders of the Commonwealth realm at Buckingham Palace in London on Saturday ahead of the late queen’s state funeral, which is likely to be one of the biggest ceremonial events ever held in Britain. King Charles separately held talks with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness and Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis.

Queen Elizabeth‘s state funeral on Monday will be shown by around 125 cinemas across Britain, while parks, squares and cathedrals will also set up viewing screens for the huge ceremonial event, the government said on Saturday.

The funeral service at Westminster Abbey and related processions across London will also be shown live on television by the BBC, ITV and Sky, the culture department said in a statement.

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Presidents, prime ministers and royalty from around the world are expected at the funeral of Britain’s longest reigning monarch, who died on Sept. 8 aged 96.

The government has declared a public holiday for the funeral and it could command a higher audience than seen for other major events from recent British history including Princess Diana’s funeral in 1997, the 2012 London Olympics and royal weddings.

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Admission to the cinema screenings is free with many of the screenings already at capacity, the UK Cinema Association said on Thursday.

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Hundreds of thousands of people have lined up for hours this week to pay their respects at Elizabeth’s coffin, which is lying in state at Westminster Hall until early on Monday.

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