King is ‘getting on and doing his best’, Queen says after monarch leaves hospital

Queen Camilla opened a new Maggie's centre at Royal Free Hospital
Queen Camilla opened a new Maggie's centre at Royal Free Hospital - Paul Grover

The King is “getting on” and “doing his best” following his three-night stay in hospital, the Queen said on Wednesday.

Camilla, 76, was asked how her husband was faring as she opened a new Maggie’s cancer support centre at the Royal Free Hospital in north-west London.

On arrival, she was introduced to donors including Sir Gerald Ronson, who asked after the King’s health following his treatment for an enlarged prostate.

“He’s getting on, doing his best,” she replied.

When Dori Dana-Haeri, who led the fundraising effort for the new centre, said she was “so pleased” that the King, 75, was well, the Queen nodded as she said: “Thank goodness.”

Her Majesty met donors including Sir Gerald Ronson who asked after the King
Her Majesty met donors including Sir Gerald Ronson who asked after the King - Paul Grover

Meanwhile, supporter Sir Michael Pakenham said: “All best wishes to His Majesty for the very best recovery.”

Camilla replied: “Thank you very much, that’s very kind. I’ll pass it on.”

The King was discharged from The London Clinic on Monday, waving as he left the private hospital with his wife at his side.

The Queen has been president of Maggie’s since 2008. The engagement on Wednesday marked her 17th visit to a Maggie’s centre and her first as Queen.

“I try and get around them but every time another one pops up, so I never quite catch up,” she joked.

Maggie’s Royal Free has been operating from an interim base inside the main hospital building since 2016. Its new centre expects to receive more than 10,000 visits in its first year alone.

Among those on hand to greet the Queen was John Jencks, 45, the son of founder Maggie Keswick Jencks, who was diagnosed with breast cancer when she was 47 and wanted to use her experience to create a new type of cancer care.

She died in July 1995 and the first Maggie’s centre opened in Edinburgh the following year.

The Queen said the centres were “so special” as she thanked the staff for “everything they do”.

Asking one member of the clinical team if they had been there since the beginning, she added: “You get all the best people here.”

On arrival at Maggie’s Royal Free, Her Majesty will be introduced to Dame Laura Lee, Maggie's Chief Executive; Mr Stuart Gulliver, Chairman of Maggie’s; Daniel Libeskind, Architect of the new centre and representatives of The Royal Free London.
On arrival at the centre, the Queen was introduced to Dame Laura Lee, chief executive of Maggie's - Paul Grover for the Telegraph

When one of the donors told the Queen he had met her once before at a Maggie’s centre, she said: “Which one? I’m losing track of my Maggie’s visits.”

Upstairs, Camilla met four cancer patients being supported by the centre and sat down with them for a chat.

Billie Jean Daniels, 51, from Highgate, north London, was diagnosed with breast cancer in December 2022 and told the Queen she had discovered Maggie’s after undergoing chemotherapy.

She described the centre as her “little haven” and a “home from home”.

“It’s such an incredible place,” Camilla said. “You can literally come and chill, can’t you?”

Marilyn Bello, 51, also from north London, was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer in 2020 and told the Queen she had been coming to Maggie’s during chemotherapy and had met many new friends and “people who understand you”.

She thanked her for her work but the Queen replied: “It’s not me you should be thanking.” She added: “It’s nice that you can just drop in if you want to, you don’t have to make an appointment.”

Camilla also warmly greeted Viscountess Marcia Blakenham, a friend of Ms Keswick Jencks who has been involved with the charity since its inception.

The Viscountess said afterwards: “She’s been so wonderful for Maggie’s, she’s very very good with people and has great empathy.

The Queen photographed with Vicountess Marcia Blakenham
The Queen photographed with Vicountess Marcia Blakenham at the new centre in north-west London - Paul Grover for the Telegraph

“She really believes in what Maggie’s does and understands that it’s about helping people going through very frightening things, people who are in a very, very unpleasant situation.”

Dame Laura Lee, chief executive of Maggie’s, briefly addressed the donors, members of staff and patients who had gathered for the official opening.

She told the Queen that her “empathy for those living with cancer, and the people who love them, was evident.”

Noting that Camilla had once said every city needed a Maggie’s, she told her: “We’re trying very hard to get there!”

Dame Laura said that architect Daniel Libeskind and his team had come up with an “extraordinary and beautiful design”.

She added: “Thank you for working so closely with us every step of the way, always being there to find an answer to every problem and holding onto the vision of this building at the same time.”

Describing how it had been the last building Ms Keswick Jencks’s husband, Charles Jencks, worked on before he died, Dame Laura added: “I know how much he would have loved seeing its completion and how proud he would have been of this, our 24th centre.”

Mr Libeskind said he wanted to create a building that had “a kind of poetry and musicality to it, based on certain curvatures like the growing of a seed to flowering”.

It is a building organised around light, he added, with a domestic scale like a home, “infusing people who come here with a sense of optimism, with a sense of hope and a sense of life”.

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