Fatherhood has made me more emotional, William tells Ant and Dec

Updated

The Duke of Cambridge has confessed that fatherhood has made him more "emotional" and prone to welling up, during a documentary about his father's Prince's Trust.

William is the proud father of two small children - Prince George and Princess Charlotte - and has discovered that becoming a parent has made him more aware of how "precious life is".

Speaking to Ant and Dec with his brother, Prince Harry, beside him, William said of the changes fatherhood had brought: "I'm a lot more emotional than I used to be, weirdly. I never used to get too wound up or worried about things.

"But now the smallest little things, you well up a little more, you get affected by the sort of things that happen around the world or whatever a lot more, I think, as a father.

"Just because you realise how precious life is and it puts it all in perspective. The idea of not being around to see your children grow up and stuff like that."

The Duchess of Cornwall has also given what is believed to be her first televised interview for the 90-minute programme presented by Ant and Dec - Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly - who are Trust ambassadors.

Camilla praised the Prince of Wales during the documentary for setting up his Prince's Trust 40 years ago and said he was still "passionate" about helping young people.

The Trust grew out of Charles's concern that too many young people were being excluded from society through a lack of opportunity.

In 1976, when he left the Royal Navy, he used the £7,400 he received in severance pay to fund a number of community schemes. These early initiatives were the founding projects of his charity.

Around the country, 21 pilot projects were set up - from a grant given to a 19-year-old woman to run a social centre for the Haggerston Housing Estate in east London, to funds used to hire swimming baths in Cornwall to train young lifeguards.

During the past 40 years it has grown to become Britain's leading youth charity and has reached more than 825,000 young people in total, with three in four achieving a positive outcome - moving into education, employment or training.

Camilla said: "I think I'm really proud to be married to somebody who, 40 years ago, aged 27, had the vision to put it together - I mean it was an incredible idea then.

"For somebody - he was very young then - to think of it and to think of these very disadvantaged young people who had literally been to hell and back and to find a way to give them a second chance in life."

Asked how Charles still maintains his energy and enthusiasm, she replied: "I don't know, he just has that energy. You know if you're passionate about something you can do it, he cares so much about these young people."

William and Harry also praised their father's charitable achievements with Charles's eldest son saying the Prince had an "insurmountable amount of duty in him".

The Duke added: "The Prince's Trust evolved over time into what it is now, which is this incredible charity, that has really bust every possible limit it was ever set - it's really done well. And I think he's incredibly chuffed at how it's gone."

The royal brothers also joked about how their father would make them cringe when they were growing up - by laughing at inappropriate moments during school plays.

William told a story of how his father convulsed with giggles when a pyrotechnic explosion went off at the wrong moment as he was playing the role of narrator in a Christmas play.

The Duke said about his father: "He couldn't stop laughing the whole way through the production."

He added: "Several times I'd stop ... I'd cast an eye across, like you know, a big death stare, and then I'd try and get back to my lines, it was terrible."

:: When Ant And Dec Met The Prince: 40 Years Of The Prince's Trust, will be screened on ITV on Monday at 9pm.

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