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People-News
Harry and Meghan don’t beat around the bush on Oprah Winfrey
In six days the time has come: then the interview of Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan with debate legend Oprah Winfrey will be broadcast. The first few extracts of it make you sit up and take note.
Screenshot CBS
The interview of Prince Harry and his wife, Duchess Meghan is eagerly awaited. After all, this is the couple’s first major television appearance after they left the British royal family last year. It will air on March 7 on the US broadcaster CBS. Talk legend Oprah Winfrey talks to the couple about the Megxit, their new life in California, and their future plans with no royal obligations.
Two short clips from the Oprah Winfrey interview, which were posted previously, lead to an emotional, open and honest talk. Among other things, Harry says, “My biggest concern was that history would repeat itself.” He clearly refers to his mother Diana, who died in a car accident in Paris in 1997 at the age of 36 when she was followed by paparazzi.
Harry sits next to his pregnant wife Meghan in the footage from the TV show and holds her hand. She wears a long black dress, he a light gray suit. Harry said he was very “relieved and happy” to be able to talk to his wife here by his side, because he couldn’t imagine what it must have been like for his mother “going through this process alone so many years ago for me.” He adds: “It was incredibly difficult for both of us, but at least we had each other.”
In the clips, Oprah Winfrey also explains that no topic is taboo, revealing at one point, “You said some pretty shocking things here,” including the fact that your situation was “almost insurmountable.” Presumably the interview is also about the Sussexes’ fight against the British tabloids.
In an interview with James Corden for his “The Late Late Show” last week, Harry said the British tabloids had created a “difficult environment” that was devastating his mental health. He also claimed that he and his wife “have not left the royal family.” They have “resigned” but not “yielded.” He did “what any father or husband would do and thought about how to get my family out of there.”
(cerda / t-online)
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