Queen Camilla was a royal vision on Saturday when she stepped out alongside the King to open the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh.
The Parliament’s piper, MSP Stuart McMillan, will bring the event to a close with a performance in the members’ garden of Bonnie Dundee and a Hundred Pipers.
Following the ceremony, the King and Queen will meet local heroes nominated by MSPs for their “extraordinary contribution” to local communities.
Special performances for the King and Queen
There will be a series of special performances for the King and Queen which will include the National Youth Choir of Scotland’s Edinburgh regional choir and BSL youth choir will perform Sarah Quartel’s The Beat Of A Different Drum.
Meanwhile, the King and Queen will also watch a performance from the National Theatre of Scotland, which is marking its 20th anniversary. They will present As Others See Us, written and directed by Martin O’Connor.
This will incorporate a poem to celebrate the theatre’s 20th anniversary, and an excerpt from its production Through The Shortbread Tin performed by members of The Lyceum Youth Theatre.
There will also be poetry performances, with Scotland’s Makar Pàdraig MacAoidh delivering a poem in Gaelic called Let This Hall Be Full Of Noises.
Harpist Rachel Groves and vocalist Ellie Beaton, who are the current and previous winners of the BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year, will perform Robert Burns’s Ae Fond Kiss.
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