Rumours of an approaching divorce surrounded Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, after an alleged ‘professional separation’ resulted in the Sussexes spending more time apart and focusing on their respective responsibilities.
Harry wasted no time in dispelling the erroneous rumors about his marriage.
Harry and Meghan left their royal duties in 2020, moved to Los Angeles, and have two children, Archie and Lilibet.
They administer the Archewell Foundation, which has contributed millions of dollars to charity causes.
During a recent interview with New York Times columnist Aaron Ross Sorkin, Harry denied any reports of a divorce.
He was asked the following question: “There are articles everywhere about, you know, ‘Why are you making, doing independent events?'” “Why don’t you do them together?”
“Because you invited me, you should have known!” Harry laughed.
Harry went on to say, “Apparently we’ve bought or moved houses ten, twelve times.” We’ve allegedly divorced maybe ten or twelve times. So it’s like, “What?”
According to a royal expert, the straightforward rebuttal suggests ‘inner distress’.
Hugo Vickers told the Sun: “[Harry] said that all the pundits must be very disappointed, and he felt sorry for them because none of these things actually happened.”
“What more can he say? He must be very fed up with all of the speculation that has been going on his entire life, since he was a tiny boy, so I identify with him.”
In Prince Harry’s explosive memoir, Spare, in which he detailed his estrangement from his brother and the future King, Prince William, the royal wrote: “I’d been cast in my role in the Rolling Royal Melodrama. Long before I was old enough to drink a beer (legally) it became dogma. Harry? Yeah, he’s the naughty one. Naughty became the tide I swam against, the headwind I flew against, the daily expectation I could never hope to shake.”
He went on to write: “I didn’t want to be naughty […] but every sin, every misstep, every setback triggered the same tired label, and the same public condemnations, and thereby reinforced the conventional wisdom that I was innately naughty.”