Queen shock: ‘Stalker’ targets Queen and Elizabeth Hurley - palace alert
QUEEN ELIZABETH II shares a stalker with Elizabeth Hurley, the actress has claimed in a bombshell interview.
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The Queen has a stalker, Hurley claimed on Monday’s episode of Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen. The actress was asked about her craziest fan interaction, which prompted Hurley to open up on her unfortunate connection with the Queen.
She said: “In the office in London, we have a file called ‘nutters.’
“And every time, well, particular people send letters - they still send, you know, mail – they have to go into the nutter file.
“There’s one nutter who – I don’t even know if I’m allowed to say this – but he only stalks two people: I’m one of them and the other is the Queen of England.”
The 54-year-old actress added both she and Her Majesty are informed by Scotland Yard every time this person changes locations.
Hurley added: “I probably shouldn’t be saying any of this on TV.
“Take it all back!”
It is unclear how Hurley knows her stalker is also writing to the Queen.
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Hurley and the Queen surely have very little other commonalities.
Beside sharing their first name, the Queen and Hurley are both English women.
The actress has also been a monarch herself in the fictional world of The Royals, an E!’s TV show where she played Queen Helena.
In this role, the actress was a modern royal going through the everyday’s hurdles while being scrutinised by the press and royal fans.
Express.co.uk has contacted Buckingham Palace over the claim the Queen shares a stalker with Hurley.
The Queen famously discovered she had a stalker in 1982, when Michael Fagan entered her bedroom in Buckingham Palace.
Mr Fagan intruded in the Queen’s bedroom after having wandered the palace corridors for several minutes.
The break in took place at approximately 7am on July 9, after the man scaled the 14-foot-high perimeter wall of the palace and climbed up a drainpipe to reach the corridors taking him to the royal bedroom.
The monarch found the man sitting on her bed, with fragment of glass in his hand after breaking a glass ashtray.
According to one report, the Queen woke up and, after calling the palace switchboard for the police, chatted with the man to stall him.
In 2012, however, Fagan claimed the Queen ran away as soon as she saw him.
The break-in is believed to have happened as the armed police officer outside the royal bedroom came off duty before his replacement arrived.
A subsequent police report was critical of the competence of officers on duty, as well as a system of confused and divided command.
Fagan was not charged for trespassing in the Queen’s bedroom.
After the break in, he spent six months in a psychiatric hospital, and was released in January 1983.
Mr Fagan’s mother defended his intentions, saying in late July 1982: “He thinks so much of the Queen.
“I can imagine him just wanting to simply talk and say hello and discuss his problems.”