With her luxuriant silver curls pinned to the top of her head,
the Londoner is instantly recognizable for anyone who watched
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding, and she is getting
used to the attention.
"I have had people screaming at me from the car window," Gibson
told Reuters during a break in rehearsals with the Kingdom
Choir.
"I do get stopped every time I go down the road - photos being
taken - sometimes they're trying to pap you (take paparazzi
photos) on the sly when they think you're not looking. It's
beautiful!"
The performance at Windsor Castle has been a massive boost for
the choir: "I physically cannot even keep up with the emails and
the messages - requests for interview and tours and weddings."
But it was also part of a cultural shift as a woman of color
married into the very top of British society - showcasing a part
of black culture in what was once a very white establishment.
"Maybe it's a big ask for one song from one choir," Gibson said.
"What you have seen from the wedding is the coming together of
two different cultures. I feel like there's been a shift, I do."
After the wedding, a mother told her that her four-year-old
daughter watching the choir had said: "Look mummy - there's
people like me."
"I didn't realize that was still a thing for children that young
in 2018," Gibson said.
For many viewers, the choir, and an impassioned sermon by
Episcopal Bishop Michael Curry, countered the stiff decorum
expected of such a formal occasion. But Gibson says she and her
singers had to rein in their usual exuberance.
"Normally with that kind of message, we would be joining in
(with the sermon). As black, Pentecostal folk there will be the
amens and hallelujahs. I could see them twitching," she said of
the choir members.
"They were wanting to move and we couldn't. We just had to hold
it all down."
(Writing by Robin Pomeroy)
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