Monaco Royal Wedding party begins amid cold feet rumours

The Mediterranean principality of Monaco yesterday began three days of Royal Wedding festivities marked by glamour and romance but also, thanks to last minute rumours, suspense and intrigue. Californian rockers The Eagles were tuning up to mark the...

The Mediterranean principality of Monaco yesterday began three days of Royal Wedding festivities marked by glamour and romance but also, thanks to last minute rumours, suspense and intrigue.

Californian rockers The Eagles were tuning up to mark the start of the party with a late night concert on the eve of Prince Albert II’s civil wedding today to statuesque South African swimming champ Charlene Wittstock. Tomorrow, the royal union will be solemnised by a very public Catholic religious ceremony, which the palace hopes will put paid once and for all to rumours that the bride has cold feet.

It will be the biggest day in Monaco since his father Rainier III married Hollywood actress Grace Kelly in 1956, but preparations have been clouded by claims that Charlene attempted to call it off.

Press reports suggested that she had learned of some secret from Albert’s private life and decided to head home to South Africa, only to be intercepted by royal aides as she approached Nice airport and persuaded to stay on.

The royal house and family friends dismissed the claim.

“These rumours have no other goal than to severely damage the reputation of the monarch and thereby that of Miss Wittstock and severely undermine this happy event,” said the palace, which is banking on a wedding tourist boom.

“I just spoke to her assistant and whatever the story is, it’s not true. I called her and asked if everything is okay, and they said everything is fine,” said Ryk Neethling, a fellow South African Olympic swimmer.

Prince Albert, 53, has children with two other women but has yet to produce an heir, a matter of some concern to Monaco constitutionalists, who fear instability should the throne revert to his sister Caroline. For nine centuries, Monaco has been run by the Grimaldi family, the crown passing through the male line. In 2002, fearing Albert would die without an heir, Monaco changed its constitution to allow a princess to inherit.

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