NEW YORK (AP) — The wait is finally over: Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, Hollywood's reigning royal couple, have tied the knot.
Despite two years of feverish scrutiny, the pair managed to keep one
of the world's most anticipated weddings shrouded from the media's
glare.
When? Where? Why haven't they yet? Did they already? The celebrity
press and "Brangelina" fans alike had been consumed with the matrimonial
mystery.
On Thursday, a spokeswoman for the couple confirmed to The Associated
Press that they wed Saturday in a private ceremony in Southern France.
The representative, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because she
was not authorized to be quoted by name, said Jolie and Pitt exchanged
vows in a small chapel at the Chateau Miraval in the Provence hamlet of
Correns.
Since 2008, Miraval has been the couple's Southern France home, a sprawling estate they bought three years ago.
The union was less a vow of commitment than the official affirmation
of one made long ago. Pitt and Jolie have been together nearly a decade
and have six children, all of whom participated in the wedding.
The wedding may have been cloaked in secrecy, but Pitt and Jolie are
preparing to be a big presence at the movies this fall. Pitt stars in
the upcoming World War II drama "Fury," due out Oct. 17. Jolie's second
directorial effort, the World War II odyssey "Unbroken," will be
released in December.
On Thursday, Pitt was far from any honeymoon hideaway. Instead, he
was at the Bovington Tank Museum in Dorset, U.K., promoting "Fury," a
brutal tale about a tank of American soldiers rolling through Europe in
the final days of World War II.
Both movies could be major players in Hollywood's award season, which
last year was dominated by a film produced by Pitt, the best
picture-winning historical drama "12 Years a Slave."
At Saturday's ceremony, Jolie walked the aisle with her eldest sons,
13-year-old Maddox and 10-year-old Pax. Daughters Zahara, 9, and
Vivienne, 6, threw flower petals. Eight-year-old Shiloh and Knox, 6,
served as ring bearers, the couple's spokesman said.
In advance of the nondenominational civil ceremony, Pitt and Jolie
obtained a marriage license from a local California judge. The judge
also conducted the ceremony in France.
Pitt once said that he didn't want to marry until gay marriage was
legal everywhere, but in recent years, the couple had said publicly they
intended to. They were engaged in early 2012 after some seven years
together.
"It's an exciting prospect, even though for us, we've gone further
than that," Pitt told The AP in an interview in November 2012. "But to
concretize it in that way, it actually means more to me than I thought
it would. It means a lot to our kids."
This is the second marriage for Pitt, who wed Jennifer Aniston in 2000. They divorced in 2005.
Jolie was previously married to British actor Jonny Lee Miller for
three years in the late 1990s and to Billy Bob Thornton for three years
before divorcing in 2003. Jolie has said she and Pitt fell in love
while making the 2005 film "Mr. & Mrs. Smith."
Jolie won the supporting actress Oscar for "Girl, Interrupted" in
1999 and was nominated for the best-actress Oscar for 2008's
"Changeling." Pitt shared the Academy Award for best picture for "12
Years a Slave."
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