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Arise Sir David: Beckham says being knighted is his proudest moment

05-11-2025 01:32 PM


Ammon News - Sir David Beckham has described being knighted by King Charles during a ceremony at Windsor Castle as "my proudest moment".

The former Manchester United and England star was accompanied by his wife - now known as Lady Beckham - and his parents, Ted and Sandra, as he was honoured for his services to sport and charity.

Sir David, 50, was dressed in a grey three-piece suit made by his fashion designer wife, which was inspired by a suit King Charles wore when he was younger.

The footballer said: "[King Charles] was quite impressed with my suit. He's the most elegantly dressed man that I know, so he inspired quite a few of my looks over the years and he definitely inspired this look."

"It was something that my wife made me," he continued.

"I looked at old pictures of [King Charles] when he was quite young in morning suits and I was like 'OK, that's what I want to wear' - so I gave it to my wife and she did it."

Speaking of his honour, Sir David said: "I couldn't be prouder. People know how patriotic I am - I love my country.

"I've always said how important the monarchy is to my family.

"I'm lucky enough to have travelled around the world and all people want to talk to me about is our monarchy. It makes me proud."

Lady Beckham received an OBE in 2017 for services to the fashion industry, while Sir David was appointed an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2003.

Sir David played 115 times for his country as well as for Manchester United, Real Madrid, LA Galaxy, Paris St-Germain and AC Milan, retiring in 2013.

He also played a key role in securing the London 2012 Olympics, and has been an ambassador for Unicef since 2005.

Sir David became an ambassador for The King's Foundation in 2024, supporting King Charles' education programme and efforts to ensure young people have a greater understanding of nature.

Anna Bogutskaya, film critic and author of Feeding the Monster: Why Horror has a Hold on Us, and host of The Final Girls podcast, agrees. "I think the film is about so much more than postpartum," she says. "It's about relationships, and creative relationships specifically, the tension that exists between the desire and need to create and the responsibilities that come with a house, a child, a partner…"

Indeed, in a scene where Grace speaks to a therapist and it's suggested that adjustment to motherhood is an issue, she snaps back with abrupt, solid certainty. "I don't have a problem attaching to my son. He's perfect," she says. It's "everything else" that's the problem, she adds.

Depictions of women on the edge
Grace's story represents, in an extreme fashion, the mental health pressures that can face women specifically. Across the West, there have been progressive moves towards reducing the domestic burden placed on women, but there remains a reluctance from men to take paternity leave, for example. Meanwhile, a 2022 US report found that the prevalence of mental illness is higher among women (26.4%) than men (19.7%), and women's hormonal disorders – PCOS, PMDD, and post-partum psychosis among them – remain understudied and underdiagnosed.

Die My Love emerges from a long legacy of artwork focusing on mental illness in women and how it is so often exacerbated by their relationships with domesticity, men, and family – from Sylvia Plath's 1963 novel The Bell Jar to John Cassavetes' 1974 film masterpiece A Woman Under the Influence. Starring Gena Rowlands as Mabel, a Los Angeles housewife who is "wacko", to use the expression of Peter Falk's helpless husband, the film reveals both a deep devotion and a total gulf in understanding between the pair. As the film suggests, the more men attempt to sculpt or "fix" their wives – who are failing to conform to what's expected of them – the worse it can be. It also depicts the male doctors treating Mabel as dismissive or glib, speaking to the long history of medical misogyny that has made women wary of seeking support.

Others honoured on Tuesday included Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sir Kazuo Ishiguro and West End star Dame Elaine Paige.

Sir Kazuo, whose books include 1989's The Remains of the Day and 2005's Never Let Me Go, for which he won the Man Booker Prize, was made a Companion of Honour.

Evita star Dame Elaine received her honour for services to music and charity.

The 77-year-old wore a blue feathered hat made by a milliner to the late Queen and carried a bag designed by Lady Beckham.

She told the BBC of her honour: "To be given it for doing something you love doing and to have the privilege of being able to do, and be passionate about it, is a stroke of luck, I think."

Speaking about her 60 years in showbusiness, she added: "It never felt like an effort, it never felt like work, being my passion and privilege to be able to do something I love, it's never felt like effort, it's just been a joy for 60 years.

"I think to myself I'm so extraordinarily lucky to have had this wonderful life in theatre and music, I really am. And none of it was ever planned of course, it just seemed to happen, so I do count myself terribly, terribly lucky."




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