Regrouping. King Charles III and Prince William are in “constant talks” with other royals about “how to handle” Prince Harry’s memoir, a source exclusively reveals in the latest issue of Us Weekly.
08.01.2023 - 19:21 / usmagazine.com
An unpleasant surprise. Princess Kate is not happy about how she was portrayed in Prince Harry‘s memoir, Spare.
“Kate feels that Harry’s actions are atrocious,” a source exclusively tells Us Weekly. “She is appalled at him for dragging her name through the dirt and is finding it hard to forgive.”
The Duke of Sussex, 38, makes it clear that he has always been fond of Prince William‘s wife. He recalled attending a costume party with the couple shortly after being introduced to the future Princess of Wales, now 40.
“She was carefree, sweet, kind. She’d done a gap year in Florence, knew about photography, art. And clothes. She loved clothes. Her name was Kate,” Harry wrote in Spare, which will hit bookshelves on Tuesday, January 10. “I forget what native or colonial thing she was wearing to the party, but with her help Willy had chosen for himself some kind of … feline outfit.”
He recalled having “a great time” as he and Kate laughed at William. The theme of the party was to wear “ridiculous” costumes, and Harry hoped to make the future Duchess of Cambridge giggle.
“I liked seeing Kate laugh. Better yet, I liked making her laugh. And I was quite good at it. My transparently silly side connected with her heavily disguised silly side,” he explained in the memoir. “Whenever I worried that Kate was going to be the one to take Willy from me, I consoled myself with thoughts of all our future laughing fits together, and I told myself how great everything would be when I had a serious girlfriend who could laugh along with us.”
So Harry went to the costume shop and came up with either a British pilot’s uniform or a Nazi uniform. “I phoned Willy and Kate, asked what they thought. Nazi uniform, they said. I rented it, plus a silly mustache,
Regrouping. King Charles III and Prince William are in “constant talks” with other royals about “how to handle” Prince Harry’s memoir, a source exclusively reveals in the latest issue of Us Weekly.
Prince Harry really wants the truth out there, and he’s not worried about who he has to tear down in the process!
A rocky road. Prince Harry has been candid about his ups and downs with members of the royal family, including stepmother Queen Consort Camilla.
TV viewers here and stateside have been left reeling by the bombshells dropped by Prince Harry in his two interviews which hit the airwaves on Sunday.
Ready to tell all — again. Prince Harry opened up about his life within the British royal family in his debut memoir, Spare — but the revelations haven’t stopped there.
Prince Harry appeared in his first promo interviews for his upcoming memoir, Spare, and made a string of allegations about his life in the royal family - while also taking aim at his older brother, sister-in-law and stepmother.
Happy with his wife and his life! Prince Harry opened up about the perceived change in his personality that came after meeting Meghan Markle in 2016.
Ready to work things out? Prince Harry has been vocal about a possible reconciliation with his family after stepping back from his royal duties in 2020.
Nothing left to hide. Prince Harry is feeling optimistic about the future now that he’s been honest about his past.
Dancing with the devil? Prince Harry claimed that some of his family members would stop at nothing to repair their public personas — even if they had to hurt other royals.
In the first of a number of interviews promoting new memoir Spare, Prince Harry has said he’s “spent the last six years trying to get through to my family privately” before reaching the point of “fleeing my home country fearing for our lives.”
King Charles III wanted nothing more than for his sons Prince Harry and Prince William to end their bitter feud!
A common bond. In his Spare memoir, Prince Harry detailed a trip with Meghan Markle to Princess’s Diana‘s grave that helped his wife amid their difficult time in the U.K.