From the Palace Balcony to the Stade Louis II: Pope Leo XIV makes history in Monaco

Pope Leo XIV arrived Saturday morning in the Principality, welcomed by Prince Albert II, Princess Charlène and thousands of faithful who had filled the streets of the Rock since the early hours. 

By 8am, the Palace Square and the narrow streets of the old town were already alive with anticipation. When Prince Albert and Princess Charlène departed for the heliport to receive their guest, the crowds had swelled to fill every vantage point along the route the Pontiff would later travel.

He touched down by helicopter at 9am, and as soon as he stepped onto Monegasque soil, he was greeted by the Prince and Princess as 21 cannon shots rang out from Fort Antoine.

Prince Abert II and Princess Charlène receiving Pope Leo XIV after he touched down in Monaco, photo credit: Sarah Steck, Prince’s Palace

Then, the official welcome ceremony took place in the Cour d’Honneur of the Princely Palace, where Prince Albert II, Princess Charlène, Hereditary Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella received the Holy Father.

Military honours were rendered by two sections of carabiniers, a section of firefighters and the carabiniers’ orchestra under Colonel Tony Varo, before the Prince and the Pope reviewed the detachment together.

The two heads of state then met privately in the Family Drawing Room, covering shared priorities including environmental peace and solidarity.

During the official ceremony at the Cour d’Honneur, photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Stéphane Danna / Philippe Fitte / Ed Wright, Communication’s Department 

The balcony appearance

Following the private meeting, Prince Albert II and Pope Leo XIV appeared together on the Palace balcony with Princess Charlène, to enthusiastic cheering from the crowd below. The Prince took to the floor first.

“It is for me, for Princess Charlène, for our family and for the whole Monegasque community, an immense honour, a great joy and a profound emotion to welcome you today,” he began.

He traced Monaco’s bond with the Holy See across seven centuries, recalling that it was “by fidelity to the Pope” that the first Grimaldi lords left Genoa to settle on the Rock, a fidelity encoded in the Principality’s motto: Deo Juvante.

He spoke of faith as a living force — “In a time of profound upheaval and spiritual drought, our faith is our strength” — before turning to the question of peace, which he described as “disarmed and disarming,” built on “dialogue, seeking a genuine solution for all.” He closed with a personal pledge: “The history we celebrate today is only a stage on the longer road that we will continue to follow in your footsteps: the road of hope and salvation, in fidelity to Christ.”

The Princely Family with Pope Leo XIV at the Palace Balcony, photo credit: Frédéric Nebinger, Prince’s Palace

The Pope then addressed the crowd, speaking of Monaco’s unique position as a small Mediterranean state and calling on the Principality, at a moment of global closure, to be a place of encounter and friendship.

“In the Bible,” he said, “it is the small ones who make history.” He reminded the audience that wealth and influence are not gifts to be hoarded but to be shared, “so that everyone’s life may be better.”

He also pointed to Monaco’s status as one of the few countries where Catholicism remains the state religion — not a ceremonial privilege, he said, but a mission: to show the world the transformative power of the Church’s social teaching.

He then closed with the ancient greeting: Pax vobis – Peace be with you. 

Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella then joined their parents and the Holy Father on the balcony, a moment met with warm applause from the thousands below.

Through the streets and into the Cathedral

The Holy Father departed in his open-topped Popemobile along the rue Remparts toward Monaco Cathedral. Thousands pressed along the barriers, many passing their babies forward for the Pope’s blessing, a gesture he received with warmth, pausing repeatedly along the route.

Pope Leo XIV blessing a newborn, photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Stéphane Danna / Philippe Fitte / Ed Wright, Communication’s Department 

Inside the Cathedral, the Pope presided over the Liturgy of the Hours, the Office of Sext, the ancient prayer of the sixth hour commemorating the moment Christ was nailed to the Cross, and delivered his homily in French.

Inside Monaco’s Cathedral, photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Stéphane Danna / Philippe Fitte / Ed Wright, Communication’s Department 

As he made his way out toward the Church of Sainte-Dévote, the scenes from earlier were repeated, with crowds lining the streets and the Pope pausing once more to bless families along the way.

He paused at the Chapel of Saint-Dévote to pray before the relics of Monaco’s patron saint, before spending around 20 minutes with catechumens and young people.

He then emerged to greet the faithful gathered outside the church, a final encounter with the crowds before the day moved into its afternoon chapter.

Pope Leo XIV outside the Saint-Dévote church greeting people, photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Stéphane Danna / Philippe Fitte / Ed Wright, Communication’s Department 

The Pontifical Mass at the Stade Louis II

In the afternoon, Pope Leo XIV arrived at the Stade Louis II in his Popemobile, moving slowly around the pitch to greet the crowds who had packed Monaco’s sports stadium, which had been transformed for the occasion stadium.

The Pontifical Mass followed, celebrated in French on the Saturday of the fifth week of Lent, one day before Palm Sunday, and was presided over by the Holy Father in the presence of Prince Albert II, Princess Charlène, Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella.

During the Pontifical Mass at Stade Louis II, photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Stéphane Danna / Philippe Fitte / Ed Wright, Communication’s Department

Following the mass, the Pope met with individuals and families supported by the Principality’s charitable associations, before he was accompanied to the heliport by the Prince and Princess for his departure.

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Main photo credit: Michaël Alesi, Prince’s Palace

Interview: Director Tina Landau on artistic risk, collaboration, and the enduring power of live theatre

In partnership with the Princess Grace Foundation-USA, Monaco Life proudly presents a monthly series spotlighting the lives and artistic contributions of the Foundation’s remarkable Award winners.

For acclaimed director, writer, and theatre-maker Tina Landau, storytelling has always been more than a craft—it’s a way of understanding the world. Known for her visionary productions that merge theatre, music, movement, and immersive staging, Landau has built a career defined by bold artistic risk and deeply collaborative creative spaces.

A Princess Grace Award winner early in her career, Landau has gone on to shape some of American theatre’s most memorable productions, including The SpongeBob Musical and Floyd Collins, while also directing celebrated plays at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company and beyond. Her work continually pushes the boundaries of what live performance can be—blending spectacle with intimacy, experimentation with emotional truth.

In this conversation, Landau reflects on the confidence the Princess Grace Award gave her at a pivotal moment, the fearless instincts she developed during her years at Yale and Harvard’s American Repertory Theater, and why the ephemeral nature of theatre continues to draw her back again and again.

On the Princess Grace Foundation-USA

You received a Princess Grace Award early in your career — what did that recognition mean at the time?

Everything. It said to me quite simply, “Continue.” I remember thinking, “Someone somewhere thinks I merit this, so maybe I do? I guess I must. Huh. I might be okay.”

The Princess Grace Foundation is rooted in legacy — when you think of Princess Grace herself, what does she represent to you as an artist?

Someone who appreciated and championed the arts and understood their importance in the fabric of daily life. Her dedication to the arts and her philanthropy, both in her lifetime and obviously beyond, are unmatched, and I can’t tell you how much that’s meant to me, along with generations of other artists. So she represents, first, “support.” This is the primary ingredient the arts need in order to exist in a society. Then too I’d say, “taste.” The invitation to be discerning. A penchant for excellence. She represents the “crème” when we say the “crème de la crème” — and who doesn’t want a little, or aspire to be a little, “crème?”

On Her Career & Artistic Growth

When did storytelling first take hold of you — and when did directing become the way you knew you had to do it?

As early as I can remember. By age six, I was walking around telling people I was going to be a director. Like those little kids in the movie Annie Hall, who might hold a briefcase and look at the camera and say, “I’m an accountant.” That was me — so serious and intentional, but just a kid. I was so lucky that my parents were in the entertainment industry, and we lived just outside NYC, so I went to see Broadway shows before I could even remember. I started creating my own shows the way so many little kids do: by myself, with nothing but imagination, in ‘the basement.’

You trained at Yale and later at Harvard/A.R.T. How did those formative years shape your artistic instincts and sense of risk?

I was just recently going through containers of all my old, saved archives, going all the way back to high school when I began directing in earnest, and in looking at my folders from Yale College, I was astounded at how brave and audacious I was. Perhaps a bravura and wildness that can only be born of youth. You just don’t know any better, and you haven’t been told enough yet what you can’t do or aren’t supposed to do — so you just do it! I was thinking how I’d love to tap more into that original fire and instinct — and energy I had when I was in college. It fueled me long and far, that’s for sure.

Your work often blends theatre, music, movement, and ensemble — what pulls you toward that kind of storytelling?

I’ve always loved music — it’s my first language in a way. I played piano from when I was very young. I was lucky here, too, because I had a piano teacher who did not say, “Learn these scales — and now this classical piece of music.” She came in and asked me, “What’s your favorite song? Would you like to learn how to play it?” And that’s what we did. So I was enthused and stuck with it. Music has always provided a soundtrack to, and expression of, my life. I think of everything I direct as a piece of music — even if it only seems to be ‘a play’ to others. For me, theater is always potentially a “Gesamtkunstwerk,” the German word for “total work of art,” meaning when many forms of art come together to form a brand-new whole. Theater’s not a script or a set of characters or a plot. It’s a palette that holds sound, light, space, story, theme, color, time, action, movement, imagery, and so much more — and so when I ‘paint,’ why not use all that’s available to me on the palette?

What’s the hardest part of directing for you — starting, shaping, or letting go?

Starting can be exhilarating, but it’s also never less than terrifying. Not the preparation stage, but the actual beginning of rehearsals, when so many eyes are on you, expecting you to lead, to inspire, to know. Thank goodness, the older I’ve grown, the more tools I’ve acquired for navigating that first day anxiety. But still, the hardest part is actually, and almost always, letting go. Theater is an art of impermanence — and so something is always born, and then something always passes and is no more, ever.

What’s your creative process at the start of a new project? What’s the first question you ask?

I start by dreaming and free associating. I collect images. I listen to music. I start to assemble a world which feels somehow OF the piece. So by the time I meet designers, it’s less, “This is what it means, and this is what we’ll do,” and more, “Enter, immerse yourself in this collection of stuff I’m offering, find your own way in here.” And the first question I always ask is “Why?” Why do this now? What makes the time, energy, and money that a theater and our audiences will pour into this worth their while? Why is it necessary?

You’re known for building powerful rehearsal rooms. What makes a collaboration truly work for you?

Trust. Openness. Play. Willingness to make a mess. Firm and true belief that 20 hearts-and-heads can dream of and create something deeper and more surprising and more alive than what one person can alone.

You’ve directed and/or conceived major works, including The SpongeBob Musical, Floyd Collins, and significant plays at Steppenwolf. Which project felt like a true artistic turning point for you?

The Time of Your Life by William Saroyan, which I directed at Steppenwolf, then Seattle Rep, and A.C.T in San Francisco. I started that process during a low period: 9/11 had just happened, I had just turned 40, a project I had pinned all my hopes on had just gotten cancelled, and I didn’t know why doing theater mattered at all. So I had nothing to lose. I remember telling the cast on the first day that all I cared about was making something radically alive and mind-blowing and that if we didn’t aim for that I’d rather just go home — and that, in order to do that, I was saying “F – you” to the critics, to trying to please an audience, to rules, to propriety, to everything except my gut and instincts. And that’s how I worked. And that’s where and how I learned Saroyan’s words, “In the time of your life, live” — which I now have tattooed on my arm.

On Life Beyond the Stage

Since this interview will appear in Monaco Life, we love to highlight the principality’s allure. If you could bring one of your productions to Monaco, which would you choose—and why?

Maybe SpongeBob. Come on, Monaco and SpongeBob?! That’s what life is like: two things that don’t seem to go together yet do.

On What’s Next

What are you working on next, and what’s exciting you right now?

I’m gearing up to direct a play I wrote with Tarell McCraney at the Vineyard in NYC, called Ms. Blakk for President, and also a play at Steppenwolf next season, called The Comeuppance by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins. But most of my time now is devoted to a few big projects that will likely take 2-5 years to come to fruition. The theater world, and people’s interest in it, is shrinking. And so I’m intentionally heading into territory that is gigantic, ambitious, risky, event-driven, environmental or immersive, explosive, joy-filled — in the hopes that such things may actually keep “liveness” alive for a little longer.

After everything you’ve done, what still drives you back to the theatre?

Ancora imparo. Meaning, “I am still learning.” Michelangelo said this at age 87 while he was working on St. Peter’s Basilica. I aspire to that. Always learning. About how to make theater, which, of course, I still really have no idea how to do. And learning about others and the world I live in. I’ve always said the theater is my great ongoing graduate school. So I explore, I develop, I open up, I take in More and Different, I become more a part of a community, more a citizen of the world, I expand, I surrender to a reality larger than myself, I find solace in that — connection.

Follow Tina Landau on Instagram @TinaLandau and on Facebook @TinaLandauNYC.

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All photos provided