Royal bad blood: Mary and Marie are sisters at war

The fight between Crown Princess Mary and her sister-in-law Princess Marie has grown more and more. You can see the rift between the couple easily.

There is no clear evidence show but as per insider claimed that two families spent Christmas apart, and while the palace blamed the absence on the COVID-19 pandemic, insiders say the decision to celebrate Christmas separately was a welcome one after months of mounting tension.

The sources continue “there’s no love lost between the princesses, although Frederik and Joachim have grown closer since the latter’s health crisis last year. Mary and Marie have not been seen together in public since October 2019, long before Denmark was forced into lockdown.

“They have never been truly close,” an insider says of the two princesses.

“Occasionally they have seemed to get closer, only to then take a distance from each other again. But we never see them together, we never see them do things together, either in private or in general. They live different lives.”

“They are very different people; one is European – and not only European, she is French – where Mary is the Princess of Denmark and this makes her number one,” says Danish royal commentator Anna Thygesen.

In her recent interview with Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten that she’d questioned whether life as a princess was worth it.

“I’d been fending for myself for years, and it felt overwhelming that suddenly everyone had an opinion about me,” she said. “I had a great life – I didn’t need to be rescued by some prince from Denmark.

“There was no doubt in my heart that I loved him, but I had my life. I was happy, and I had my pride. I simply was not ready to get married and take on the responsibility it would be to become part of the royal family.

“I was not prepared that attention could be so negative. There were some stupid articles. I did wonder whether it was worth it.”

The comments follow an earlier interview in which Marie hinted that the royal household was behind the couple’s move to France.“It is not always us who decide,” Marie revealed to Se og Hor magazine when asked about the Paris relocation. “I think that’s important to know. I loved living in Denmark.”

Marie’s comments have reportedly rankled Mary.

“Royals and their opinions should never be about politics or having too much of an opinion,” says a palace insider.

“And Marie definitely says more than Mary would ever think of saying. Mary never says anything that can possibly harm her husband’s or her own position, whereas Marie is more hot-headed.”

“But Mary is also a lot higher up the hierarchy.”

“They’re very much in Fred and Mary’s shadow, which is a source of frustration for Marie and Joachim. Ever since Mary came along, Fred has been able to do no wrong in the eyes of the public, and Joachim feels bad Marie has been so overshadowed by her sister-in-law,” a palace source revealed last year.

“Mary gets more attention and prestige,” another royal source explains. “Marie is always in the shadow of Mary – that´s for sure!”

Certainly, during the pandemic Mary has been the face of the Danish monarchy, standing in for Queen Margrethe, taking on more royal engagements, both in person and on Zoom.

“They [Mary and Fred] have had a busy year and their many tasks have had to be performed in untraditional ways,” Queen Margrethe said in her traditional New Year’s Eve speech. “It is a constant joy to see how well they do.”

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