Harry and Meghan dancing on ice! The Sussexes jig to Simple Minds and enjoy a drink as they watch ice hockey clash in Vancouver joined by their entourage – including the couple’s matchmaker, Soho House mogul Markus Anderson
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle made a surprise visit to a NHL hockey game last night where the Duke of Sussex dropped the first puck – just like the Queen did two decades ago – and then the couple danced to Simple Minds as the goals flew in.
The California-based couple watched the Vancouver Canucks beat the San Jose Sharks 3-1 from a VIP box at the Rogers Arena, at one point enjoying the action while cuddling and later jumping in the air to cheer.
When the Canucks won the match, Harry leapt up and Meghan put down her wine glass so they could both dance to celebrate the victory as Simple Minds’ hit Don’t You Forget About Me.
Also with them was Markus Anderson, a friend of Meghan’s from Toronto when they she was filming Suits who helped organise her first date with Harry in London. He is described as the second most important man in her life after her British husband.
Harry’s ceremonial puck drop came 21 years after the late Queen did the same when the same teams played each in 2002. She was on an 11-day tour in Canada in honour of her Golden Jubilee.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are in Canada for work to promote the next Invictus Games, which will be held in Vancouver and Whistler in February 2025. Their visit came a week after a whistleblower told MailOnline that the Games is in ‘turmoil’ after two of its most senior executives were ‘dismissed for no apparent reason’ with just over a year to go.
Meghan clutches her wine glass as Harry cheers a Canucks win last night
The couple clearly enjoyed being back in Canada – the country where Meghan worked as an actress and they fell in love. Vancouver is hosting the next Invictus Games in 2025
As the goals flew in for the home side, Meghan and Harry began dancing to the music in the third quarter
The Duke of Sussex was seen explaining what had happened in the game at one point when his wife appeared confused
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex get cosy in their box at the Rogers Arena last night
Meghan Markle celebrates at the NHL game in Canada – a country very important to her and Harry as it where they began courting. Her friend Markus Anderson is with her. He was the man who organised the Sussexes’ first date
The Duke and Duchess on jumbotron last night when the game was 0-0
Prince Harry, The Duke of Sussex drops the puck during a ceremonial face-off with Quinn Hughes #43 of the Vancouver Canucks and Tomas Hertl #48 of the San Jose Sharks prior to their NHL game last night
The Queen drops the puck in 2002 when the same teams played on her Golden Jubilee tour
Meghan cmiles as she takes to her seat after an exciting moment in the hockey match
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex in their seats in the first period
Others in the VIP box with Meghan and Harry were local Indigenous leaders, British Columbia Premier David Eby and the region’s Tourism, Arts, Culture and Sports Minister, Lana Popham.
Meghan has long been associated with the Soho House properties due to her long-standing friendship with Markus Anderson, the lifestyle club chain’s Chief Membership Officer.
Mr Anderson was also at the Canucks game last night, at one point standing with the Duchess of Sussex to cheer the team.
It was Anderson who arranged a private room at Soho House in London for the Montecito-based couple’s first date, while Meghan threw a low-key hen night ahead of her 2018 wedding at Soho Farmhouse in Chipping Norton, UK.
Originally, he invited her to join Soho House when she was still a TV soap actress in Toronto, and it was Markus who facilitated all of Harry and Meghan’s early dates in London and Oxfordshire.
Markus is very good friends with New York-based fashion designer Misha Nonoo, who is said to have introduced Meghan and Harry to each other.
Both Markus and Misha spent time with the royal newlyweds, staying for extended stretches with them in the UK, before Megxit.
Harry’s grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, made the ceremonial puck drop at a 2002 match, also between the Vancouver Canucks and San Jose Sharks, during her two-week Golden Jubilee tour of Canada.
It was the first NHL game the Queen had attended since 1951 when, still a princess, she and Prince Philip watched the Montreal Canadiens take on the New York Rangers.
The Sussexes’ sporting outing comes a few days after Meghan’s surprise arrival at the Variety Power Of Women event in Los Angeles to celebrate the accomplishments of women in entertainment.
The former Suits actress said she was ‘thrilled’ to have returned to the entertainment industry with Archewell Productions and is ‘really proud’ of the projects they have has created so far, including docu-series Harry & Meghan and Heart Of Invictus.
She also teased future projects, saying: ‘We have so many exciting things on the slate… I can’t wait until we can announce them, but I’m just really proud of what we’re creating. My husband is loving it too which is really fun.’
Experts told MailOnline that they believe the flurry of A-list appearances is a PR ‘tactic’ to pitch for lucrative work and create a new buzz around Meghan, and her husband.
Meghan and Harry arrive for the NHL hockey match
Harry and Meghan next to the ice in Vancouver
The Duke of Sussex bumps fists with a fan by the rink
Harry waves to the crowd as he walks on to the ice
There was cheering from the crowd at the Rogers Arena for the surprise visit
Harry was seen cracking jokes with the players
The royal then smiles as he dropped the puck, just as his grandmother did in 2002
Harry shakes hands with Quinn Hughes of the Canucks
Up in the VIP box, Meghan and Markus were cheering as Harry looked to the heavens to the left
Prince Harry, The Duke of Sussex, and Meghan Markle, The Duchess of Sussex, celebrate a Vancouver Canucks goal during the third period of the NHL game
Prince Harry speaks to an official in his seat
The Invictus Games will be held in Vancouver and Whistler in February 2025 and will feature winter sports for the first time.
MailOnline exclusively revealed last week that CEO Peter Lawless, a lawyer and arguably Canada’s most respected Olympic and Paralympic administrator, left his job abruptly.
An insider has claimed that Mr Lawless, who was awarded the Diamond Jubilee Medal by Harry’s grandmother the Queen in 2012, was fired and morale amongst staff is now ‘at an all time low’. An Invictus Games spokesman declined to comment on whether he was sacked, instead saying he had been ‘transitioned out’ and was ‘no longer an employee’ but will remain an ambassador.
Also leaving the Vancouver-Whistler team is Bill Cooper, who was in the role of Chief Commercial Officer for ten months until he left in October. He has thanked colleagues for their support after several praised his ‘grace’ and accused Invictus 2025 of making a big mistake by getting rid of him.
One Games volunteer said that staff are ‘concerned that these recent moves will again overshadow this incredible event for our veterans’. They also raised concerns that the Sussexes’ security and other costs may put a strain on Games finances if Invictus 2025 has to pick up the bill.
It came just two months after Harry and Meghan turned on the charm at a reception thrown by the Canadian delegation to promote the 2025 Invictus Games.
The Duchess of Sussex, 42, chatted with members of the committee that will be organising the games to be held in Vancouver – a city they know well having fled there in 2019 after quitting royal life.
Meghan has close friends in the city and holds great affection for Canada having lived in Toronto while she was filming the series ‘Suits’.
The couple are very familiar with Vancouver having temporarily moved there in 2019 when they split from the royal family.
They stayed on Vancouver Island at a £14m home in North Saanich, British Columbia, following their decision to step back from being working members of the royal family.
The split was termed ‘Megxit’ and the couple stayed in Canada several months before relocating to Montecito in California. Meghan chatted with many of the competitors who have taken part in the events in Dusseldorf.
And for the first-time adaptive winter sports including alpine skiing, Nordic skiing and curling will be included in the programme of weeklong events and staged in the resort of Whistler.
It is not yet clear if Invictus 2025 is looking for a new CEO and Chief Commercial Officer.