Monaco banking on a moment's grace                              
                                                       
                                                                                                                                                                  
                                                                                           Charlene Wittstock, a former  swimming champion from South Africa, and Prince Albert wave from the  palace balcony in Monaco. Picture: AFP                                                  
Source: AFP                                         
                                  
         
      
                               
                                  WHEN Prince Albert marries Charlene Wittstock, the former Olympic  swimmer from South Africa, in Monaco this week his subjects will pray  not only for a happy union but also for a revival of the fairytale  glamour that attended his father's 1956 wedding to movie star Grace  Kelly.                                  
             
                  The early signs are not auspicious for the tiny Riviera  principality described by Somerset Maugham as "a sunny place for shady  people" and more recently reported to be a haven for fast Russian money  and tax cheats.
The lavish celebrations, spread over Friday and  Saturday, are expected to cost $68 million and critics are asking how  much of the cost will come from the public purse. Guests are expected to  include the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, French  President Nicolas Sarkozy, King Carl Gustaf of Sweden and fashion  designer Karl Lagerfeld.
But many residents compare Ms Wittstock,  33, unfavourably - and unfairly - with the screen goddess Kelly. One  told the French magazine VSD that Wittstock was "a future Princess  Barbie, as cold as an ice-cube".
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         Ms Wittstock has hinted at her own lack of affection for the  cramped principality. "Although I have met some wonderful people since  I've been living in Monaco, I regard them all as acquaintances," she  said. "I only have two people I consider friends here."
She has  grown tired of constant comparisons with Kelly, who died in a car crash  in 1982. Asked about the blonde hair and natural elegance the two women  had in common, she burst out: "You can't compare two individuals because  they're unique!"
Albert has not escaped the sneers with his  attempt to give the wedding a "green" tinge. The prince - shown in an  advertisement last year being towed in a dog sled at the North Pole to  draw attention to climate change -- and his bride are due to cross their  realm in an open-topped Lexus hybrid after the ceremony.
But  sceptics have contrasted the drive with Albert's order for 200 specially  made BMW 7-series models to ferry guests around. Observers also point  to the sizeable carbon imprint that will be left when the newlyweds and  their entourage fly to Ms Wittstock's homeland for a party in Durban.  The couple will stay in a $6800-a-night suite.
This week's events  will include an open-air mass in Albert's palace, a gala dinner for 500  guests cooked by celebrity chef Alain Ducasse, a free concert by The  Eagles, a ball and fireworks.
The principality has been hard hit  by the recession and locals hope the celebrations will boost tourism,  which has fallen by 9 per cent in two years. Takings at the casinos are  down by 14 per cent.
Bernard Lambert, head of the Societe des  Bains de Mer, which runs four hotels and five casinos, is optimistic the  wedding will stimulate the economy. "The number of cruise ships docking  has gone up and our hotels are full," he said.
Bernard Vatrican, a  Monaco-born sociologist, was less hopeful. "The people who think they  can recapture the lost glamour are deluding themselves. Albert isn't his  father and Wittstock is a good girl, but she isn't Kelly," he said. "A  wedding isn't enough to change things."
The Sunday Times