Kuwait Times

Japan awaits wedding news as royal sweetheart returns

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Japanese romantics and royal-watchers held their breath for a wedding announceme­nt as Princess Mako’s boyfriend returned to Tokyo yesterday, following years of public controvers­y over their marriage. The lovebirds’ reunion has sparked a media frenzy, with reporters chasing 29-year-old Kei Komuro in recent days through the streets of New York, where he moved for law school. Major TV networks carried live footage of his plane landing, with reports saying the longdelaye­d wedding could go ahead as soon as next month-more than three years after it was dramatical­ly postponed.

Mako, also 29, is the eldest granddaugh­ter of Emperor Akihito, although Japan’s imperial succession rules mean she will lose her title after marriage to a commoner. The pair’s union was delayed after a scandal erupted around reports that Komuro’s family had run into financial difficulti­es, with his mother failing to repay a four-million-yen ($36,000) loan from a former fiance. Local media said it was his first return to Japan since he left for America in 2018 in a move seen as a bid to defuse negative attention following the tabloid reports. As he stepped off the plane at an airport near Tokyo yesterady, Komuro was met by camera flashes, video crews and a gaggle of eager reporters.

Dressed in a dark suit with his long hair tied back, he bowed deeply to the journalist­s and did not speak. He will quarantine for two weeks, as required by Japan’s border restrictio­ns. Public broadcaste­r NHK said the Imperial Household Agency was planning a wedding next month and would announce it soon. Mako is also said to be planning to move to the United States after her wedding, drawing inevitable comparison­s with another controvers­ial royal couple: Britain’s Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.

Earlier this month, Japanese media said the pair had decided to wed without some traditiona­l ceremonies, rejecting a payout that usually goes to female royals marrying out of the family. The size of the payment is unknown, though reports put it at 137 million yen or more. Mako is sister to Prince Hisahito, 15, currently the only eligible male heir to the Chrysanthe­mum Throne other than his father. The throne can pass only to male members of the family, and the children of female royals who marry commoners are not included.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? (From left) Charlie Rosen, Matt Stine, Katie Kresek, and Justin Levine, winners of the award for Best Orchestrat­ions for ‘Moulin Rouge! The Musical,’ pose in the press room during the 74th Annual Tony Awards.
— AFP photos (From left) Charlie Rosen, Matt Stine, Katie Kresek, and Justin Levine, winners of the award for Best Orchestrat­ions for ‘Moulin Rouge! The Musical,’ pose in the press room during the 74th Annual Tony Awards.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Kei Komuro (center), the boyfriend of Japan’s Princess Mako, arrives at Narita airport in Chiba Prefecture from the United States.
— AFP photos Kei Komuro (center), the boyfriend of Japan’s Princess Mako, arrives at Narita airport in Chiba Prefecture from the United States.
 ?? ?? Adrienne Warren accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical for ëTina - The Tina Turner Musicalí.
Adrienne Warren accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical for ëTina - The Tina Turner Musicalí.
 ?? ?? American actor and singer Aaron Tveit accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical for “Moulin Rougeî.
American actor and singer Aaron Tveit accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical for “Moulin Rougeî.
 ?? ?? Lois Smith accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for ‘The Inheritanc­e’.
Lois Smith accepts the award for Best Performanc­e by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play for ‘The Inheritanc­e’.
 ?? ?? Japan’s Princess Mako enters the Imperial Palace to attend the Korei-sai autumn ceremonies.
Japan’s Princess Mako enters the Imperial Palace to attend the Korei-sai autumn ceremonies.

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