She had smiled and posed for photographs on the red carpet and then
enjoyed an animated conversation with the Duchess of Cambridge.
And if Zindzi Mandela had any idea that her father’s long life was drawing to a close, she did not betray it for a minute.
Then,
in a single instance, everything changed. As she was about to watch the
London premiere of his incredible story, she was told that the
95-year-old had died peacefully at home after months of illness. Tearful
and flustered, she sat down and tried to compose herself. But asked if
she wanted the film – Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom – to continue, she
said yes.
According to the Daily Mail of UK, it was an
extraordinary premiere. Few in the Odeon auditorium in Leicester Square
knew what had happened and settled down to enjoy an evening celebrating
one of the most iconic figures of the 20th century. The Duke and Duchess
of Cambridge were informed of his death discreetly by an aide shortly
before the end of the movie.
It was only after the credits had
rolled that the film’s producer, Anant Singh, got on the stage to break
the news to the rest of the audience. There were screams and gasps of
shock while some burst into tears. A two-minute silence was held.
Eleanor
Simmonds, 54, from Croydon, who was at the premiere to support a
Mandela charity, said: “There was an audible sharp intake of breath. It
was shocking news to hear at the end of the film. Everyone was shocked.
It was really, really sad news because it was a wonderful evening.”
William
and Kate looked ashen-faced as they walked down the stairs into the
foyer. Speaking as he left the Odeon Cinema, the Duke said: “I just
wanted to say it’s extremely sad and tragic news. We were just reminded
what an extraordinary and inspiring man Nelson Mandela was.
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“My thoughts and prayers are with him and his family. It’s very sad.”
Shortly after the royal couple left, shocked members of the audience began emerging from the cinema, in silence at first.
The
cast, whose after-show party was promptly cancelled, were too upset to
speak. In the foyer, security men surrounded Naomie Harris, who plays
his wife, Winnie, as she walked slowly past, head down and close to
tears.
John
Battersby, 65, a South African journalist who knew Mandela personally
and wrote the afterword to his authorised biography, said: “My daughter
told me just before the announcement. Apparently he died half an hour
before the film started.
“My phone was buzzing in my pocket but I
just thought ‘who is calling me in the Mandela premiere? In the
protection of the darkness, I shed a few tears.
“He was brilliantly portrayed in the film, what came through was the dignity.”
His daughter Anna said: “I think it’s very fitting that we were all here paying tribute to him at the moment of his passing.”
It was not clear what had happened to Mandela’s daughter, Zindzi, but she did not leave with the rest of the audience.