Prince Harry calls Queen Camilla "dangerous" in "60 Minutes" interview.

Prince Harry calls Queen Camilla "dangerous" in "60 Minutes" interview.

So far, as the contents of Prince Harry's forthcoming memoir, Spare, have been leaked, we have heard criticism of his brother Prince William, his father Prince Charles, and his sister-in-law, Queen Catherine. However, nothing substantial has yet been said about his stepmother, Queen Camilla, until tonight's "60 Minutes" interview with Anderson Cooper.

Harry did not mince words about Camilla, calling her "dangerous" and saying that as Camilla rises from disgraced mistress to today's Queen Consort, "there will be bodies left in the streets."

According to The Sun, Harry showed an "open willingness" to exchange information with the British press as Camilla restored her image to marry then-Prince Charles in 2005.

After Cooper asked why Harry referred to Camilla as dangerous in Spare, Harry replied, "Because she needed to restore her image. She had built up connections in the British press and that made her dangerous. And both sides were willing to exchange information. With a family built on hierarchy and her on her way to becoming queen, that led to people being left on the streets and dead bodies".

Prince Charles and Camilla met in the early 1970s and were romantically involved before Camilla married Andrew Parker-Bowles and Prince Charles married Diana Spencer By the mid-1980s, Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles After the couple's marriage ended and their separation was announced in 1992, they fell into an affair that lasted until the marriage of the then Prince and Princess of Wales, which officially ended in 1996; Prince Charles and Camilla married in 2005, and over the past 17 years Camilla's image has changed radically, from a slandered mistress to a May She became a prominent member of the royal family, crowned with her husband at the coronation ceremony at Westminster Abbey.

Early in the interview, Harry repeated his claim that Camilla was "the other woman," saying, "She was the villain. She was the third person in the marriage. She needed to rehabilitate her image."

You may also like

Comments

There is no comments