Category Archives: Monaco Princely Family

H.S.H. Princess Charlene of Monaco: A New Interview

As you know by now Monaco’s newest princess, Charlene, recently attended the Akris S/S 2012 collection in Paris on Sunday night.  During her time in the city of lights the British newspaper, Telegraph, caught up with the former Olympian turned princess whilst at the Paris prêt-à-porter shows.  Here is what she had to say:

Professionial-attention-seekers are drawn to Paris Fashion Week like insecure moths to a paparazzi-flash flame; rap stars (Kanye West launched an atrocious fashion “collection” here on Saturday), film stars (Julianne Moore kept her sunglasses on at Lanvin), and those – like Lindsay Lohan at the West event – who defy all job description, all stew together on the pret-a-porter front row. Celebrities are ten-a-penny here.

The arrival of a bona fide princess, however, is a rare event. And that the surprise royal attendee at the Swiss label Akris’s Spring 2012 show was Princess Charlene of Monaco yesterday meant it was an unmanufactured buzz that zinged down the sweltering benches in the Palais de Chaillot.

For Charlene, Princess of Monaco – who wore a pretty, light bronze Akris dress as she quietly took her place two seats down from Anna Wintour, the editor of American Vogue, then endured those camera flashes – is both Europe’s most recently minted princess and its most enigmatic.

Before her wedding to Prince Albert II in July, there were reports that she had been suffering nerves. Since her marriage, she has been glimpsed in public only rarely.

Yesterday the princess was here because of her close relationship with the label: she wore an Akris gown to the wedding of Prince William to Kate Middleton, and often consults Albert Kriemler, its owner and designer. As the models emerged to a catwalk split by racing track road markings and the tannoyed roar of Formula One engines revving and roaring, it became clear that this collection was an homage to Monaco’s most famous sporting event: its Grand Prix.

The princess smiled at models in sporty parkas and print dresses that showed a glamorous woman watching the race from Monaco’s Hotel de l’Hermitage, or were striped with an elongated photograph of a speeding vintage race car. The princess’s applause, and that of the rest of the audience too, was very well deserved.

Princess Charlene said that she had been wearing Akris since well before she and Albert were guests at the royal wedding in April. She laughed off rumours that she would like to design clothes herself, and added: “No, but I do know what I like. And if I speak to Albert (Kriemler) about certain things he adapts them for me.”

Her South African accent is as broad as her swimmer’s shoulders.

Are there things she could not wear, I and Telegraph Fashion Editor Lisa Armstrong wondered – for certain dresses in the Akris collection were extremely revealing: “There are certain protocols, and obviously I wouldn’t show too much – it [Monaco] is a Catholic country.”

Would she ever go high street shopping like the Duchess of Cambridge, only recently spotted browsing through Topshop? “I wouldn’t want to compare myself to her.”

Far from being dismissive, this was said with great caution – the new princess has become quickly wise to the press. She went on to praise Akris and this Monaco-themed collection, so we asked whether being its princess is something she anticipates will be a full-time job.

“Of course,” she replied. “I think that would be expected of me in the near future. But I have just taken a bit of a break. I think, like [anyone], I need time to adjust. I just got married.” And for the first time she laughed.

She conceded that learning French is a struggle, but that she’s working at it. “Step by step: it’s coming along but it takes time.”

And then, just as our time was coming to its end, Princess Charlene’s shoulders relaxed, and she seemed to ask us to excuse her nerves. “Honestly I don’t want to be too cut-off. But obviously the press haven’t been really good for us in the past. And that started before the wedding and the sources had come from British [newspapers]. And I was like ‘Why?’ So I’m speaking to the enemy now.”

Princess Charlene, we assured her, you most certainly are not: The Daily Telegraph does not stitch up royalty.

“I’m just learning,” she said, looking around her for the first time at the hoverers around us. We’re surprised, we responded, that she doesn’t have a much larger security detachment. A steely glint entered her eye: “I don’t like that. I’m quite independent.”

Yet how could you ever live a fairly normal life now you are a Grimaldi princess? “I will,” she said with slow and deliberate emphasis, then paused and added: “Do it my way. I think for anyone living in a new country and adapting to a new lifestyle, it’s a different role. I was an Olympic swimmer, I lived in a swimsuit, I lived on tour.”

And she still swims a lot. She loves to watch the Grand Prix too – she added that she loves all sport and can’t wait for London 2012 – and got a thrill in the pit of her stomach the first time she heard those engines revving outside her palace window.

She has been spending a lot of time in the family house, Roc Agel, on the French side of the Monaco border, she said. It was from here that Princess Grace, Charlene’s late grandmother-in-law, was driving when she perished in a road accident 29 years ago. But Princess Charlene’s introduction into the Grimaldi family long postdates that tragedy, and mentioning Roc Agel seemed to lift her spirits a notch higher. By now, in fact, she was indisputably chipper. And it was time to go.

As we got to our feet, she said one more thing. “I think, in general, that it’s all good.” source

H.S.H. Princess Charlene of Monaco in Paris, France

The S/S 2012 prêt-à-porter shows continued today in Paris, France and this afternoon the Swiss design house, Akris, presented their collection at the Palais de Chaillot.  Guests at the show included H.S.H. Princess Charlene of Monaco (wearing a dress by Akris), Hamish Bowles, and Anna Wintour to name a few.

To view photos please click here.  

To view photos from the S/S 2012 collection by Akris please click here.  Or, if you would like to watch a video please click here.

An article about the show.

H.R.H. Princess Caroline of Hanover in Berlin, Germany

On September 29, 2011, H.R.H. Princess Caroline of Hanover was in Berlin, Germany to attend the 2nd Annual German Watermill Center benefit, Voluptuous Panic.  “The Berlin Benefit will be the German celebration of Bob Wilson’s 70th birthday…”

The event was hosted by Montblanc and held at the Studio Elmgreen & Dragset.  To view photos please click here. 

Monaco Princely Family News

Recently, H.S.H. Princess Charlene of Monaco was invited to the French town of La Turbie where she, along with the local youth as well as the mayor Nicolas Bassani, celebrated Mass in honor of the village’s patron saint, Saint Michel.  Photos.

Meanwhile, H.S.H. Prince Albert II met with the director of the Laboratory of Environment of the International Agency for Atomic Energy (IAEA), Mr. Yukiya Amano, at the Musee Oceanographique. During their meeting the prince and Mr. Amano “… signed an agreement to strengthen cooperation between the IAEA agency and laboratories for the use of nuclear technologies in the areas of health and environmental protection.”   To read more about the event please click here.  To view photos please click here.

The next important meeting for H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco will be with well-known author, Professor Tim Flannery.  Mr. Flannery will be awarded the Officer of Saint Charles at a ceremony at the Palais Princier.

Courtesy of the Palais Princier de Monaco.   🙂

H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco in Baden-Baden, Germany

On September 28, 2011, H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco arrived in Baden-Baden, Germany to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Olympic Congress.

Later in the afternoon, the prince along with other senior members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), participated in the Deutscher Olympischer Sport Bund (DOSB) roundtable Q&A fest along with Hungarian President and Olympic fencing champion Pál Schmitt, IOC Athletes Commission Chairman Frank Fredericks, and many others.

To view photos please click here.  To learn more about the history of the Olympic Congress please click here.

H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco Participates in the ‘Les Ateliers: Global Conference’

On September 27, 2011, H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco was in Evian, France to participate in the 2011 Les Ateliers de la Terre: Global Conference.

During this afternoon’s event the prince gave a speech regarding the fragility of the environment as well deforestation:

Almost twenty years ago in Rio, political leaders became aware of the concept of sustainable development. Within the space of a generation, the idea has taken root in many minds, but the balance between its three pillars, economic, social and environmental, is probably still not assured, especially in times of crisis. As far as I see it, taking part in this sixth edition of the Global Conference, thanks to the dialogue established here, is highly likely to contribute towards a better understanding of what could be a more efficient governance of our planet.

For the next day and a half there will be roundtable discussions with hundreds of scholars, researchers, activists, and politicians from around the world to discuss various issues such as biodiversity, energy, the effects of global warming and so on. Finally, H.S.H. Prince Albert II will host a gala dinner this evening at the Hotel Royal in Evian.

Photo courtesy of: Palais Princier de Monaco (thank you!)

H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco Attends an Art Exhibit

On Sunday September 25, 2011, H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco attended the l’ Art-Bre exhibition in Roquebrune-Cap Martin. The prince along with the mayor of the town, Patrick Cesari, toured the outdoor exhibit along with hundreds of guests. To view photos from the event please click the links below:

Meanwhile, H.S.H. Princess Charlene of Monaco recently hosted a luncheon aboard the yacht, The World, anchored in the harbor in Monaco to remember as well as to celebrate the life of Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the founder of the Special Olympics.

Source and photos courtesy of: Nice-Matin and Palais Princier de Monaco.