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Princess Beatrice suffering ‘emotional toll’ of wedding cancellation

Princess Beatrice is said to be in a state of turmoil having been forced to cancel her upcoming wedding to Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi due to the COVID-19 pandemic.According to a royal expert, Bea is dealing with the same emotions as everyone else who is battling life during the pandemic, as well as the upset at having cancelled her nuptials





ABC News' foreign correspondent Maggie Rulli told the Heir Podcast it was heartbreaking to see Princess Beatrice cancel her wedding."We are rational humans we know it is not the biggest deal," Maggie said."This is a life or death situation."On a day to day basis for a lot of people, it is affecting their daily lives."A lot of friends of mine having weddings that they are planning."It is a milestone, it is a huge moment, something that you will remember forever.Princess Beatrice wedding: Sister Eugenie’s heartbreak over ‘terrible’ wedding news.PRINCESS BEATRICE will have her royal wedding to Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi this year, two years after her sister Princess Eugenie was married to Jack Brooksbank.Beatrice's wedding will likely face the same backlash her sister's did in 2018 for one heartbreaking reason.Princess Beatrice was set to be the next member of the Royal Family to marry, with her wedding scheduled for spring this year.The Princess' wedding would have been the fourth in two years, and if it went ahead likely would have attracted some negative attention.When Princess Eugenie married Jack Brooksbank in October 2018, she did so amid public controversy.Overall costs for Eugenie’s wedding amounted to £2 million, footed by the taxpayer, igniting fury among members of the general public.Some people rallied against it, creating a petition calling for the Royal Family to finance their own ceremony without taxpayer support.Petition organisers Republic claimed the wedding was a private affair, given Eugenie does not serve the public as a working royal.The organisation asked the Royal Family to “step forward and pay up” for the ceremony, saying they stretched the public to “breaking point”.Talking the Independent in 2018, a Republic spokesman said: “There is a strong feeling, even among monarchists, that we shouldn’t be paying for Eugenie’s big day.“Most Brits opposed taxpayer funding of Prince Harry’s wedding but as with all royal events were forced to accept it.“But there’s something different about [the] royal wedding, and people aren’t happy.The monarchy is stretching its public support to breaking point.They added: “There is still time for the royals to step forward and pay up.“It’s without question the right thing to do.”.Princess Beatrice’s wedding is likely to be marred with the same controversy come 2020, although the Royal Family is yet to reveal whether they will foot the bill.Royal weddings in the past have been funded primarily by the royal purse, with smaller (but still expensive) assets falling to the taxpayer.The most expensive Royal Wedding in recent memory was Prince Charles’ 1981 wedding to Princess Diana.Their nuptials cost roughly £89.3 million in total, with details such as a wedding gown adorned with 10,000 pearls and a glass carriage chauffeur to the wedding venue at St Paul’s Cathedral.While Diana and Charles started their marriage in pomp and splendour, it ended with heartbreak.According to royal biographer Penny Junor, the end of Charles and Diana’s marriage was not the end of the “war”.She wrote: “It was the end of 15 years of marriage, but it was not the end of the war.“Diana was no happier outside the family she seemed to have hated so much than she was within it.“She was still angry with Charles and determined to embarrass and upstage him at every opportunity.And, according to the opinion polls, she took the majority of the country with her.“As the divorce became absolute, a statement was released saying that the Prince of Wales had no plans to remarry.“It was just as well; at a televised debate on the monarchy, run by Carlton Television with a randomly selected audience of three thousand, every time Camilla Parker Bowles names was mentioned it was drowned by boos and hisses.






“The public was not about to forgive Camilla any more than Diana was.She continued: "So to see someone like Beatrice dealing with those same emotions of knowing it is the right thing to do, knowing that you can’t have people travelling in for a wedding."But also knowing how much time and thought has gone into it."Your heart does break for Beatrice and all the other brides and grooms out there that are trying to plan this big day/.Plans everywhere are getting uprooted left and right and it is just part of this crisis."It is definitely an emotional toll that people are going through.".Beatrice and Edo got engaged in September 2019 while on holiday in Italy.Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi is the son of Italian Count Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi.

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