Saturday, July 30, 2011

Rugby and royalty mingle at wedding of Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall

NOW THAT’S FUNNY

Ready for another royal wedding? I am! I followed Will and Kate’s wedding closely, and I love that British royal tradition. Then last month, Prince Albert of Monaco got married to Charlene Wittstock, which was okay and all, but Monaco royalty and British royalty are two different things entirely.

Then Will and Kate came to America, and I saw their pictures in the magazines at the grocery store checkout, and they were glamorous, but it’s not the same as a wedding. So who cares if you’ve never heard of Zara Phillips until today – she’s in line for the throne and she’s getting married this Saturday!

Ms. Phillips is the daughter of Princess Anne, who is the daughter of Queen Elizabeth. She is thirteenth in line for the throne, which means she gets all the fun of royalty with none of the pressure. She is marrying Mike Tindall, a champion rugby player.

Mr. Tindall has a rather misshapen nose, a souvenir of his busy athletic career. It has been broken eight times. His future mother-in-law, Princess Anne, actually suggested that he get plastic surgery in time for the wedding – and the wedding photos. He declined.

The festivities were kicked off with a cocktail party for 150 guests on the Royal Yacht Britannia. Treat yourself to some yummy photos here from CBS News.
Albert II, Prince of MonacoImage via WikipediaThe wedding, to take place in Scotland, will be attended by 300 guests. The reception will be held at the Queen’s Scottish home, The Palace of Holyroodhouse.

The guests will be a spicy mix of royalty and rugby folk. It is rumored that Ms. Phillips will wear a tiara from the Queen’s collection that will compliment her designer gown. Word also has it that Ms. Phillips, a world class equestrian, has been exercising like a demon to get ready for the big day.

The couple will forgo a honeymoon for now. Mike Tindall needs to report back to training camp Sunday night to prepare for a big series of games in Wales. Perhaps it is a blessing that they are not honeymooning on the Britannia itself; four other couples who did so saw their marriages doomed: Princess Margaret and the Earl of Snowdon sailed in 1960, Zara's mum Princess Anne and father Captain Mark Phillips shared the room in 1973, Charles and Diana honeymooned in 1981, and Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson used the boat for their honeymoon in 1986.

I can’t wait to see the wedding pictures.
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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Monaco royal wedding: Moroccan princesses reign in most elegant stakes

The Moroccan ladies clearly have that ‘je ne sais quoi’.

Princess Lalla Salma of Morocco, the wife of reigning King Mohammed VI, was deemedhellomagazine.com's most elegant guest at the British royal wedding in April, having gained an impressive  55 percent of readers' votes.

And now two glamorous North African attendees at Albert and Charlene of Monaco’s weddinghave stormed their way into the top three of our best dressed vote.

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 CLICK ON THE PHOTOS TO SEE THE FULL GALLERY


In the top spot is the king's niece Princess Lalla Soukaina shortly followed in third place by her mother, Princess Lalla Meryem, who is his sister – Lalla is an honorific applied to all the ladies of the royal family.

The winner was a vision in a pale pink, traditional kaftan with crystal embellishments.

Complementing the look was a wavy updo, a matching satin clutch and platform heels.

Always immaculately turned out, Lalla Soukaina takes pride in her appearance. Often dressed in Chanel, Dior, Gaultier and Prada, the 23-year-old is very elegant, but has brains as well as beauty.

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Interested in communication, she started an internship earlier this year with French television channel TF1 in Paris.

For the wedding in Monaco, her mother had also picked out a kaftan, though hers was a pink and yellow floral number. She finished off her picture-perfect look with satin platform heels.

Runner-up for most elegant guest was Princess Mary of Denmark, who was clad in a teal satin shift dress and a nude-hued floral fascinator.

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Saturday, July 16, 2011

Tale of two iconic princesses

When England’s Prince William married Kate Middleton in appropriately regal rites months ago, over a billion viewers worldwide empathetically thrilled to their attendant rush of ravishing royal romance.
But, it now turns out that the royal rush isn’t over – far from it. Because elsewhere in Europe another royal wedding has just taken place, with the Principality of Monaco’s Prince Albert pledging his troth to another “commoner” bride, Charlene Wittstock.
The much more modest event was seen by fewer viewers, but they still gave the event due importance, because the prince’s mother, Princess Grace, like Prince William’s celebrated mother, Princess Diana, was an iconic personage in her own right.
Similarities
Now that coincidental circumstances have “superimposed” recollections of Princess Diana and Princess Grace psychically together for the first time, their lives turn out to have had more striking similarities and congruencies than previously perceived.
Diana wasn’t a big Hollywood star like Grace Kelly before she became Princess Grace, but she became equally celebrated for her beauty, which emanated from within. Both princesses were deeply involved in charitable endeavors, and were admired worldwide for their innate goodness and selflessness.
Many celebrated beauties are so wrapped up in themselves that they can’t think of others. But Grace and Diana were able to avoid that trap with an inspiring clarity of purpose and value – which is why they are loved and cherished to this day, many years after their deaths, while other famous beauties have gone the way of all flesh – and flash.
Affinity
The mention of their deaths reveals another affinity that Diana and Grace have with each other: They both died in sudden and most untimely car accidents. Thus, in both instances, their fabled lives were snuffed out in an instant – which indubitably added to the pain so many people felt – a psychic sadness that is palpable to this day.

Given such iconic resonances, it’s likely that both Prince William and Prince Albert had a hard time choosing their own brides – after all, Grace and Diana are the hardest possible acts to follow!
To his credit, William didn’t look for his mother’s junior version, but Kate’s spirit is similar to Diana’s, as verified and vivified by the zest with which she has launched into her own charitable endeavors.
Choice
But, Prince Albert’s choice is another story entirely: His bride, Charlene, is a blonde beauty very much like his mother. An achiever in her own right as a former swimmer in the Olympics, Charlene has more obviously subsumed her personality to suit Grace’s ethereal ethos.
In terms of “projection,” in fact, she looks like Albert ordered her from Central Casting – (“Get me my mother’s most perfect clone, please!”) – and Central Casting delivered.
Let’s hope that, a few years from now, Charlene doesn’t act against type, and cracks the perfect veneer and mystique that has made her embody Princess Grace so perfectly for the delectation of a new generation of viewers.
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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Monaco Museum Displays Royal Wedding Dress

Days after their I do’s, the fairytale frock which transformed Charlene Wittstock from a private citizen into a princess has gone on display as part of the “Story of the Royal Wedding (l’Histoire du Mariage Princiers”) exhibition, housed at the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco.
Through November 22, 2011, wedding watchers and fans of fashion alike can get an up close look at the bride’s Giorgio Armani Prive gown, a couture creation 2,500 hours in the making. Constructed of off-white silk duchesse and silk organza, the dress is an iconic interpretation of royal romance which features embroidered petals of floral finery, 20,000 delicate mother of pearl teardrops and 40,000 Swarovski crystals which dance in the light.
Bridal accessories a will also be on display, including the diaphanous silk tulle veil which floated behind the bride as she made her way to the altar, while the diamonds and sapphires which adorn the tiara made as a gift from the groom to his bride by Van Cleef & Arpels (see video below) dance in the light inside its own display case.
Taking its rightful place beside the Princess’s gown is the uniform worn by Prince Albert II of Monaco– a cream-colored outfit accented with gold embroidered oak and olive leaves on the sleeves and golden button emblazoned with the groom’s monarchical monogram.
Visitors will also get a glimpse of post-vow items, including the cutlery used at the reception, wedding gifts from around the world and the vehicle which bore the newlyweds to Saint Devote church, where the newly-dubbed princess placed her wedding bouquet (see video below).
For more information:

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Friday, July 8, 2011

Honeymoon healer? The lavish £4,600-a-night South African hotel where Prince Albert and Charlene are staying


As honeymoon destinations go, it's as decadent as they come. 
Prince Albert of Monaco is set to use a £4,600-a-night hotel suite in South Africa to try to 'persuade' his new bride that their marriage can work.
The 53-year-old Prince is believed to be taking the 33-year-old former Olympic swimmer on an opulent honeymoon in her home country of South Africa. Sources in Monaco say they will book into the Oyster Box Hotel in Umhlanga, which is on the Indian Ocean.
Honeymoon hideaway: The entrance of the Oyster Box hotel in Durban, where Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene of Monaco will spend their honeymoon
Honeymoon hideaway: The entrance of the Oyster Box hotel in Durban, South Africa, where Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene of Monaco will spend their honeymoon
Dark clouds: Princess Charlene and Prince Albert of Monaco arrive for a dinner at Opera terraces after their religious wedding ceremony on July 2
Dark clouds: Princess Charlene and Prince Albert arrive for a dinner at Opera terraces in Monaco after their religious wedding ceremony on July 2
The couple's wedding has been dogged by rumours of alleged attempts by Princess Charlene to escape from the principality over the past year, right up until their £55million nuptials last weekend.
 
The hotel is less than half-an-hour's drive from Durban, where Charlene used to train, and often enjoyed by newlyweds.
 
Its website reads: 'Constructed in 1869 and originally used as a navigational beacon, a beach cottage known as the "Oyster Box" was first converted into a hotel in the 1930s.'
Time for a dip: The hotel's premier suite includes a marble bath with a view of the Indian Ocean
Time for a dip: The hotel's premier suite includes a marble bath with a view of the Indian Ocean
Magical: A fairytale suite fit for a prince and his princess
Magical: A fairytale suite fit for a prince and his princess
Albert, who is a billionaire, is believed to have booked the Presidential Suite, which is set on two floors and includes an ornate-leafed bed, its own swimming pool and a freestanding marble bath overlooking the Indian Ocean.
The suite, which has its own terrace overlooking the sea and a private dining area which can seat ten, is priced at £4,600 a night.
On Thursday, the royal couple are also expected to attend an International Olympic Committee banquet in their honour at the hotel.
Hard at work: A member of staff at the Oyster Box hotel in Durban puts the finishing touches to preparations for the arrival of Prince Albert and Princess Charlene
Hard at work: A member of staff at the Oyster Box hotel in Durban puts the finishing touches to preparations for the arrival of Prince Albert and Princess Charlene
Important guests: Staff at The Oyster Box in Durban prepare to fly the Monaco flag in the foyer in preparations for the arrival of Prince Albert and Princess Charlene
Important guests: Staff at The Oyster Box in Durban prepare to fly the Monaco flag in the foyer in preparations for the arrival of Prince Albert and Princess Charlene
A senior Palace source in Monte Carlo said: 'It's a perfect place for a pair of newlyweds, and may well be all that Charlene needs to make her feel certain that marrying Albert was exactly the right thing to do.
'William took Catherine to a very expensive beach resort for their honeymoon following the British Royal Wedding, so why not Albert and Charlene?'
Tears of joy? Charlene Princess of Monaco wipes a tear as she leaves the St Devote Church after her wedding to Prince Albert II of Monaco
Tears of joy? Charlene Princess of Monaco wipes a tear as she leaves the St Devote Church after her wedding to Prince Albert II of Monaco
Solemn moment: Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene kneel at the altar during their religious wedding ceremony at the Palace in Monaco
Solemn moment: Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene kneel at the altar during their religious wedding ceremony at the Palace in Monaco
Royal lineage: Nicole Coste with her son Alexandre, the love child of Prince Albert of Monaco
Royal lineage: Nicole Coste with her son Alexandre, the love child of Prince Albert of Monaco
Results of the DNA tests are unlikely to be released during the couple's South Africa honeymoon, and this is because Charlene could refuse to return to Monaco if they point towards Albert having been unfaithful, the source admitted.
Sources said the Monaco palace had hoped the glitzy wedding - attended by a host of celebrities and European royalty - would 'overshadow' new claims about secret children fathered by Albert.
Instead, Charlene was in floods of tears at one point, while her husband looked on impassively.
If an 'arrangement' has been reached it may be that Charlene's principal aim will be to produce a legitimate heir for Albert in return for a multi-millionaire lifestyle.
Albert has a six-year-old son named Alexandre through Togolese former air hostess Nicole Coste, and a 19-year-old daughter, Jazmin, with Tamara Rotolo, an American estate agent.
Despite confirmation of the DNA tests, Charlene's father, photocopier salesman Mike Wittstock said: 'I am so disappointed that people believe this nonsense'.
Describing the joy he felt at his only daughter marrying a multi-millionaire Prince, he added: 'It feels as if we've just won the World Cup.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-2011720/Monaco-Royal-Wedding-Prince-Albert-Charlene-Wittstocks-luxury-honeymoon.html#ixzz1RWCJSr2E

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The fashion verdict on Monaco's royal wedding

Princess Beatrice might not have been in attendance, but that didn't stop Europe's other royals and their friends from putting their own spin on the fashion faux pas at Monaco's royal wedding.

From a princess in a sun hat and strappy sandals to a guest in white flowing gown, it wasn't just the paternity test raising eyebrows.

Naomi Campbell played by the rules at the ceremony in a green floral dress, but come reception time, all bets were off.

Breaking the unwritten rule that guests shouldn't wear white or black to a wedding, she changed into a white dress with a plunging neckline, side cut-outs and green beading.

So was this a fashion faux pas or fashion forward? The wedding dress designers contacted by Life & Style were split in their assessment.

Karen Willis Holmes says it's a matter of good manners to wear a different colour to the bride.

White is emerging as a trend in bridesmaid dresses, bolstered by Pippa Middleton's outfit in Britain's recent royal wedding, but that's at the bride's discretion. What a guest wears is not, and therein lies the problem.

Particularly when it's a supermodel.

"I think you could wear white but this is long and it has a train," she says.

"If it was a very un-wedding gown it is OK but this is borderline.

"I love the [concept of the bridesmaid wearing the] same colour as the bride I think it looks good visually in photos, I think it is stunning but then the bride has okayed it which is different to a guest doing it."

But Henry Roth says it's time we threw out these 'rules' and gave the thumbs up to Campbell.

"I think that it's time the world grew up and we got rid of some of the unnecessary taboos created in fashion, not to liberate women but to control their style and sense of confidence," he says.

"We don't have these rules for men."

The now Princess Charlene of Monaco wore two Giorgio Armani gowns - one at the religious ceremony and the other at the reception - and a powder blue outfit she designed in collaboration with Karl Lagerfeld to the civil ceremony.

Simple, elegant and traditional was the verdict of both Willis Holmes and Roth regarding the off-the-shoulder, boat neck gown worn at the church. Although the latter believes there's more to this dress than meets the eye - sometimes a wedding dress will reflect what is going in in the brides' heart and mind.

"She really embraced tradition, which is not a bad thing, but in the context of what's happening one can just imagine why she was grabbing at the traditions of yesteryear," he says.

"If the rumours are even 20 per cent true...it's not looking as bright as one might hope [for their future together]."

As for the reception dress with the tiered column skirt, Willis Holmes described it as "pretty" but "low key".

"They [both dresses] all look older than she does," she says.

"If she was 50 that would look pretty as well."

While there was no outrageous hat to spawn headlines, Facebook pages and a charity auction, an honourable mention goes to the groom's sister Princess Caroline for wearing a sun hat and strappy sandals to a civil wedding ceremony.

"It looked a little bit more like she was overdressed for the beach," says Willis Holmes.

"The dress is quite formal but if she had a smaller hat and high heels it would look more dressy."

Although she does get points for sun sense and comfort.

What's your verdict on the fashion at the royal wedding? Should we ditch the no-white at weddings rule for guests? Comment below.
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Sunday, July 3, 2011

Princess Charlene’s first duty? To stand by Albert over new paternity test

It may have had all the superficial trappings of a fairytale royal wedding, but as Prince Albert of Monaco tied the knot with his reluctant bride yesterday, the scandals surrounding their often tense nuptials took yet another awkward turn.
Officials in the Mediterranean enclave chose the day of his star-studded wedding to former Olympic swimmer Charlene Wittstock to announce that the Prince would have to take a paternity test for a possible third illegitimate child. A palace aide said that one of 33-year-old Princess Charlene’s first duties would therefore be to stand by her husband if there was another public scandal.

Emotional: Charlene Princess of Monaco wipes a tear as she leaves the St Devote Church after her wedding to Prince Albert II of Monaco
Albert, 53, already has an illegitimate six-year-old son called Alexandre through a Togolese former air hostess called Nicole Coste, and a 19-year-old daughter called Jazmin with Tamara Rotolo, an American estate agent. Both were kept away from Albert’s marriage to avoid ‘media exposure’, an official inside Monaco’s royal palace said.
The source added: ‘The truth of the rumour is that Albert faces paternity tests following a claim by at least one former lover.’
But none of Albert’s illegitimate brood will have a claim to the throne, with the official saying: ‘Even if a third or even a fourth child is confirmed Albert will not have an official heir until Princess Charlene bears him one.’
The tests will go ahead in the next few days, said the source.

Happy day: Prince Albert II of Monaco and Princess Charlene after their wedding mass in the Main Courtyard of the Prince's Palace in Monaco
French magazine Public has attributed two new illegitimate children to Albert. One is said to be 18 months old and the son of an Italian woman who is preparing to tell all. Other magazines have suggested Ms Coste has had a second baby with Prince Albert – an idea that gained credibility last week when the 40-year-old was pictured in Monte Carlo.
Ms Coste received a multi-millionpound settlement when a DNA test showed Albert was Alexandre’s father, while Ms Rotolo has also been supported financially by him.
Lawyers for Prince Albert have said categorically that the rumour he fathered another child is false – but they made similarly fierce denials before genetic tests proved he had fathered the other two children.
The source said he hoped yesterday’s Roman Catholic ceremony in the Palace courtyard, a day after the uneasy civil service, would ‘overshadow’ the latest revelations about secret children – although that seems like wishful thinking.

My Prince: Charlene kisses her new husband, who wore the uniform of Monaco's palace guards
There was an audible sigh of relief when bride and groom said ‘I do’, ten days after Charlene was allegedly intercepted at Nice airport as she tried to flee home to South Africa. She has looked uncomfortable, even sad, in recent appearances while Albert also looked ashen-faced during yesterday’s service, despite the apparent glamour of the event.

Who is the real prince of Ruritania: Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex and Sophie the Duchess of Wessex arrive for the wedding

The Ex: Naomi Campbell, who was romantically linked to Prince Albert in the nineties, arrives with boyfriend Russian property mogul Vladimir Doronin
Guests included the Earl of Wessex and his wife Sophie, former James
Bond star Roger Moore, French president Nicolas Sarkozy, supermodel Naomi Campbell and retail tycoon Sir Philip Green.
Also present were veteran fashion designers Karl Lagerfeld and Giorgio Armani, who designed the wedding dress embroidered with 40,000 Swarovski crystals, Manchester United footballer Patrick Evra and ex-tennis champion Ilie Nastase.
All saw Albert wink at his new bride after she had said ‘Oui’ when asked if she wanted to marry him.
Whatever the challenges of her new married life, Zimbabwe-born Charlene certainly comes from tough stock. Her great-great-great-grandfather John Webb went on an Atlantic expedition with Sir Ernest Shackleton – and ended up in South Africa where he discovered a diamond mine. He met his wife Mary, a lady-in-waiting to a princess, on a boat coming back from Egypt, and they settled in London.
The family emigrated to Rhodesia after the Second World War, but fled to South Africa when Charlene was a baby, to escape the escalating civil war there.
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Saturday, July 2, 2011

Prince Albert, bride go EV in topless Royal Wedding Lexus

After Prince Albert II of Monaco, 53, tied the knot today with former South African Olympic swimmer Charlene Wittstock, 33, he and the newly minted Princess toured their tiny realm in an interesting, one-off, topless Lexus hybrid.


In a product-placement coup, Lexus provided the Prince with a custom, bubble-top LS 600h L Landaulet hybrid for the event attended by royalty, heads of state and a glut of celebrities. (A landaulet is a convertible from the driver back.).

The official Royal Wedding cruiser was, according to Lexus, one of seven LS 600h L hybrid flagships provided the Royal Family as the exclusive green fleet for the wedding at the Grimaldi dynasty's Italian Renaissance palace in Monaco.

If the Prince gets to keep it, he could put it in his museum, one of the world's notable car museums housing a collection started by his father, the late Prince Rainier III, who was married to Hollywood star Grace Kelly.


CAPTIONBy Lexus
The Lexus LS 600h L has an EV mode that lets it operate on the electric motor alone, without the 5.0 liter V-8 kicking in. Lexus said the green Prince and his bride's official post-ceremony parade through streets of Monaco -- where its Grand Prix also runs -- will be "not less than 85%" on electric power alone.

Said Andy Pfeiffenberger, VP of Lexus Europe. "Our commitment to innovation and sustainable mobility at Lexus matches well with His Serene Highness' keen interest in promoting sustainable development and environmental protection.'

It's a good thing Monaco is small, though. The EV mode is low-speed only and has a range, according to spec, of about a half-mile, unless Lexus swapped out the standard battery pack behind the rear seat for one with more juice.

Lexus said nothing about that, but provided details of the car's meticulous conversion:

While sunshine let the couple leave the top off, the limo has a one-piece removable transparent top that covers everything from the front row back. A French supplier of canopies for helicopters and jet fights made the polycarbonate, which is a single shell a bit more than a quarter-inch thick and weighing less than 58 pounds.

The conversion was done by Belgian coachbuilders Carat Duchatelet, working with Lexus engineers based in Brussels. It took over 2000 hours to complete.
(500 hours LESS, says the Associated Press, than it took to make the bride's Giorgio Armani gown with 88 yards of silk and 40,000 Swarovski crystals. )

"We have 40 years experience in making armoured and extended vehicles for Heads of State, Royal Families and VIPs around the world'," Benoit Ceulemans, an executive of the coachbuilder said in a statement. 'However ... it is the first time we are publicly associated to such a prestigious project and memorable event.'

The fundamental objective with the conversion, says Lexus, was to retain the quality and drivability of its LS 600h L base. It says the conversion began with extensive computer-aided design. Then the car was completely dismantled, stripping out some 20,000 mechanical and electronic parts and interior features and upholstery.

To maintain chassis stiffness and torsional rigidity, the convertible was given lightweight body reinforcement using carbon fiber and Kevlar honeycomb structures. Since carbon fiber requires high-temp curing and Lexus says these pieces "were literally 'cooked' onto the bare chassis in a specially prepared oven."

The car was then painted Midnight Blue with eco-friendly water-based paint and re-assembled in two weeks by 10 people with Lexus engineers over their shoulders.
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MONACO ROYAL WEDDING MYSTERY

The wild rumors were still flying, even among the cheering crowd outside Monaco's fabled, cream-colored palace where Prince Albert married Charlene Wittstock in a civil ceremony Friday and where the couple will be wed in a religious service Saturday.

Had Wittstock really been, as headlines screamed this week, a “Runaway Bride” before being whisked back to Monaco in time for the splashy, $75 million two-day wedding?

Bing even more:
“I wonder if they've got her drugged,” said one Monegasque watching the ceremony on the jumbo screens installed outside the palace, which is perched on what locals call “The Rock,” a headland jutting out to the Mediterranean in the ancient district of Monaco. Another claimed that palace officials had found a Charlene look-alike that they dragged out Wednesday to tour the principality with Albert, while his real fiancée was in the hospital under sedation.

The stories began circulating about three weeks ago in this notoriously gossipy, postage stamp-size principality and involved reports that Prince Albert had had a third child out of wedlock—or that a woman was pregnant with his baby.

But the tales gathered real steam Tuesday when France's respected L'Express magazine reported that Wittstock had tried to flee Monaco after learning something troubling about Prince Albert—but was intercepted at the Nice airport and persuaded to return to the principality.

Photos: Charlene Wittstock and Prince Albert Wedding
The article did not cite a third illegitimate child but helpfully reminded readers that Albert, 53, already has two known illegitimate children by two different women. Jazmin Grace, 19, whose mother is American, studies at Fordham University; Alexandre Coste, 7, lives just outside Monaco with his mother, a former flight attendant from Togo in West Africa.

Fortunately for Monaco, it appeared to be the real Charlene Wittstock, a 33-year-old former Olympic swimmer from South Africa and the daughter of a photocopier salesman, who emerged with Albert onto the palace balcony Friday, dressed in a pale blue suit that she designed herself. (She will be wearing Armani later Saturday during the religious ceremony in the palace courtyard.)

She was now officially “Princess Charlene of Monaco,” although there were those in the crowd Friday who complained her name was not elegant enough and should be changed to “Charlotte.”

But the Runaway Bride rumors, still totally un-sourced and lacking any hard evidence, have shown no signs of going away, despite heated denials from the palace. Even France's venerable Le Monde has weighed in on the story. It hasn't helped matters that Albert and Charlene, who first met at a swimming event in Monaco in 2000 and began dating in 2005, exhibit alarmingly little chemistry in the few televised interviews they have done, leading some to whisper that the marriage is little more than a business deal to ensure an heir to the throne.

Depending on what you read or whom you talk to in Monaco, Charlene bolted for the airport after discovering the existence of a child fathered by Albert who was born about two years ago, two weeks ago—or whose birth is imminent.

London's Daily Mail on Friday quoted a un-named “senior Monaco detective” saying that Wittstock was indeed intercepted at the Nice airport, holding a one-way ticket back to South Africa, and that her passport was confiscated as she was “persuaded” to return to the palace.

“It's all completely, completely crazy,” Christiane Stahl, one of Albert's top advisers at the palace told me when I first called her about the rumors. “The story is totally false and it just comes from jealousy.”

Albert's lawyer, Thierry Lacoste, also angrily denounced the stories and threatened to sue L'Express, which has stood by its story and kept it up on its website.

Oddly, however, the palace has apparently not yet sought a legal injunction against L'Express, which would be typical in a country like France where libel laws are much stricter than in the U.S. Instead the palace has reportedly demanded that L'Express' editors tell them the identity of their source for the story.

Even stranger was a statement made by Albert's longtime confidant, Stephane Bern, who is France's best-known commentator on the royals. Bern first slammed the rumors. But then he added, in an interview with Le Parisien newspaper Wednesday, this jaw-dropping tidbit. “A woman could very well be pretending that she is pregnant by the prince. We can't carry out a DNA test to check this out just three days before the marriage.”

Longtime observers of the Monaco “princely” family members (they are not technically considered royals) invariably cite the so-called Curse on the House of Grimaldi whenever bad things befall them—like the car accident that killed Princess Grace in 1982 or the speedboating death that claimed the life of Stefano Casiraghi, the 30-year-old second husband of Princess Caroline in 1990.

The legend holds that back in the 13th century, Prince Rainier I kidnapped and raped a beautiful girl, who became a witch to get her revenge. The medieval sorceress then cursed the prince's family for all eternity, saying, "Never will a Grimaldi find true happiness in marriage."

But others say the curse is nonsense, even though Princess Caroline, now 54, is separated from her third husband, Prince Ernst, and Princess Stephanie, 45, has been divorced twice.

"Prince Albert frequently told me that he didn't believe in the Grimaldi curse and that his family's fate, including his mother's death, was no better or worse than yours or mine,” says author Joel Stratte-McClure, who was People magazine's correspondent on the French Riviera at the height of Monaco's heyday in the 1980s and early 1990s and interviewed Albert many times.

“He waited decades to finally choose a wife and I'm sure he laughed at the runaway bride stories. His smile throughout the wedding day certainly wasn't that of someone preoccupied by a witch's curse or a potentially AWOL bride."

Allison Coe, who reports on the Monaco royals for the local Best of Nice Blog, said she wondered if the rumors were planted by the palace itself—to drum up interest in what otherwise was viewed as a bit of a snoozefest, especially compared to Will and Kate's romantic extravaganza in April.

“I can't help but think this is a publicity stunt just to juice up what a lot of people see as this wooden marriage,” Coe said. "But I guess time will tell what the truth is."

Perhaps Albert's late father, the forceful ruler who transformed Monaco from a Riviera outpost into one of the world's most glamorous locales in large part by marrying Grace Kelly, was more prescient than he realized.

“Gossip was invented in Monaco,” Prince Rainier once said.
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