Rita Ora adds glamour to Duke of Sussex’s Sentebale charity concert

Rita Ora turned on the glamour for a night celebrating the work of the Duke of Sussex’s charity supporting children living with Aids.

Wearing a trademark mini-dress, the Let You Love Me singer met Harry before she took to the stage at a rainy Hampton Court for a fundraising concert in aid of the duke’s Sentebale charity.

Sentebale Audi Concert 2019 – London
Sentebale Audi Concert 2019 – London

The duke and the singer hugged when they were introduced at King Henry VIII’s famous home where entertainers from across the Commonwealth performed in the open-air.

Ora said after their meeting: “I’m so excited, a little bit of rain never really hurts anybody, I’m just happy to be here and to be able to support and try and raise as much awareness and money for such a great cause.”

She first met Harry at BBC Radio 1’s Teen Awards in 2016 and said “It’s so nice the amount of people he probably meets to remember that.”

The amazing @bpositivechoir kicking off the show! #SentebaleAudiConcert@sentebale#HamptonCourtPalacepic.twitter.com/jG3s1sP82v

— Historic Royal Palaces (@HRP_palaces) June 11, 2019

The performer, who was joined by her psychiatrist mother Vera Sahatciu, said she told the duke she was “very grateful” to be asked to perform at the event.

Among the other acts performing were INALA, a Zulu ballet created by award-winning choreographer Mark Baldwin and featuring the Soweto Gospel Choir, and Morena Leraba – a musician and shepherd from Lesotho who fuses traditional Famo music with western influences from rock to reggae.

Sentebale Audi Concert 2019 – London
Sentebale Audi Concert 2019 – London

The choir B Positive, who were Britain’s Got Talent finalists in 2018, also entertained the audience of 3,000, and two of Sentebale’s Let Youth Lead advocates from Lesotho and Botswana, Rethabile Sereba and Sekgabo Seselamarumo also took to the stage.

The concert raised awareness and funds for Sentebale, the charity founded by the duke and Lesotho’s Prince Seeiso, to support children and young people living with HIV and Aids in Lesotho, Botswana and Malawi – countries where the virus remains a leading cause of death.

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