King Charles, Queen Camilla joined by celebs, supermodels at swanky Christie’s reception ending whirlwind NYC visit
King Charles III and Queen Camilla concluded a one-day visit to New York City with a high-profile reception at Christie’s in Rockefeller Center, hosted to celebrate UK cultural influence and the King’s Trust. The event drew celebrities, supermodels, and public figures, while the royal couple also paid a somber visit to the 9/11 Memorial & Museum. Earlier in the day, Camilla toured the New York Public Library with Sarah Jessica Parker, and Charles visited the Harlem Grown nonprofit.
- ▪King Charles III and Queen Camilla attended the 'Greater Together Reception' at Christie’s, supporting the King’s Trust and UK-US cultural ties.
- ▪Celebrities including Anna Wintour, Karlie Kloss, Lionel Richie, and Stella McCartney were among the attendees.
- ▪The royal couple visited the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, meeting with families of victims of the 2001 attacks.
- ▪Camilla toured the New York Public Library with Sarah Jessica Parker, and Charles visited the Harlem Grown nonprofit in Harlem.
- ▪This marked Charles’s first visit to New York City since 2007 and included remarks highlighting UK-US historical and cultural connections.
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Metro King Charles, Queen Camilla joined by celebs, supermodels at swanky Christie’s reception ending whirlwind NYC visit By Jennifer Bain and Caitlin McCormack Published April 29, 2026, 7:08 p.m. ET King Charles III and Queen Camilla regaled a flock of American and European celebrities at a swanky Christie’s reception on Wednesday evening, capping off their whirlwind one-day tour in New York City. A laundry list of famous faces — from former Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and supermodel Karlie Kloss to Grammy-winning singer Lionel Richie — attended the King’s Trust reception at the famed British auction house in Rockefeller Center. Charles founded the King’s Trust, a charity geared towards empowering young people across academics and the workforce, in 1976.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at New York Post.