
EXCLUSIVE Lady Gabriella Windsor's ex reignites claims of racism within the Royal Family as he again insists her mother owned black sheep named Venus and Serena and even drags in the KING - ahead of his new book that will alarm the Palace
Speaking on the podcast Tell Me About Your Father, Aatish Taseer, who was born in the UK and raised in India, recalled how he sparked a media storm in 2018 when he wrote an explosive article for Vanity Fair in which he claimed to lay bare intimate details of their relationship.
He admitted that he was 'extremely indiscreet' and said that in England there is 'really no crime you can commit greater than that' especially after remaining 'very, very cozy' with Princess Michael after splitting from her daughter.
Taseer, who is now married to a man, even described the wife of the late Queen's cousin as 'a gay icon', with the podcast host retorting: 'If she wasn't so racist, she'd be really marketable.'
He also repeated the claim that the late polo pal of King Charles, Kuldip Singh Dhillon was referred to as 'Sooty'. Mr Singh, who died in 2023, previously insisted he 'enjoyed' the nickname.
Meanwhile, Taseer doubled down on one of his most sensational claims, that Gabriella's mother, Princess Michael, once owned two black sheep at her former Gloucestershire home, which she named Venus and Serena after the tennis-playing Williams sisters.
The interview comes amid Taseer's plans to release a novel he claims was inspired by his time with the Royal Family called In Their Country, about an aspiring journalist from New Delhi named Aleramo Singh Brusetti who is dating a member of the British Royal Family named 'Rose' who was brought up at Kensington Palace by her parents 'Prince and Princess Albert'.
Although it is a work of fiction, an extract published by Air Mail weaves in real names and comments about royals such as Princess Margaret and Princess Diana and places including Kensington Palace and the restaurant Maggie Jones.
In further chapters of the as yet unpublished work, seen by the Mail, the main character refers to a sexual frisson with his girlfriend's brother and her needing a HIV test after he has sex with a man.
While the book is a work of fiction, it also weaves in quotes attributed to Princess Michael of Kent in the 2018 Vanity Fair article.
It also includes incidents that have been reported publicly such as her alleged remarks to a group of black diners in a New York restaurant to: 'Go back to the colonies'.
Despite this, Taseer said that he remained close to Princess Michael after his relationship with Lady Gabriella ended.
He told the podcast: 'After Ella and I broke up, it was one of those relationships that was purely romantic and it didn't have a kind of friendship component. But I I was very, very close to Ella's mother to Princess Michael and who I always think of as a kind of gay icon.
'I would see her from time to time after Ella and I broke up, she came to my first book launch and I would go and see her in England.
'Also, I think once I came out and was married to a man...it's one of those situations where it must have felt like a betrayal of our time together.'
Elsewhere on the podcast, he discussed his claim regarding the names of Princess Michael's sheep.
'The English, it's wild like that because the upper classes are so, they live at such a tremendous remove from the country,' he said.
'They really don't even know that like, I mean, [King] Charles has a friend called Sooty. Yeah. Like just a close friend.
'So I think the Venus and Serena was just, it was just part of that, that kind of weird air of abstraction that exists around these people and how they're not even aware of how shocking or offensive that might be.'
The daughter of Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, affectionately known as Ella, 44, lost her husband Thomas Kingston, 45, in devastating circumstances in February 2024 after he was found dead with a 'traumatic head wound' and a gun near his body in an outbuilding of his parents' Cotswolds home.
'Tom was an exceptional man who lit up the lives of all who knew him,' she said in a joint family statement at the time. 'His death has come as a great shock to the whole family.'
In the subsequent months, Gabriella was supported by her royal relatives as she mourned her husband.
She arrived for Royal Ascot side-by-side with Princess Anne and revealed how the 'kind' Princess of Wales invited her to advise on the Together at Christmas carol service at Westminster Abbey, where she was photographed with Carole and Michael Middleton.
The personal tragedy no doubt put into context the media storm created by former boyfriend Taseer, a British journalist now based in the US, when he wrote an explosive article for Vanity Fair in 2018, where he claimed to lay bare intimate details of their relationship.
'For three surreal years, Ella and I hung about Kensington Palace; we swam naked in the Queen's pool at Buckingham Palace; we did MDMA in Windsor Castle; and we had scrapes with the British press,' he wrote. No further details of the alleged incidents were given.
In the wide-reaching piece, Taseer also touched upon the issue of alleged racism within the Royal Family, drawing a link between the royals and Nazis, alleging: 'Royals and Nazis go together like blini and caviar'.
Among the most sensational claims was that Gabriella's mother once owned two black sheep, which she named Venus and Serena after the tennis-playing Williams sisters.
The timing of the article was significant: it was published weeks before the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, which was attended by the Kents and Serena Williams – a close friend of Meghan.
Senior courtiers were said to have been left reeling by the article, which was published in the US magazine but available in the UK, although there was no official comment from Buckingham Palace.
Once again, those closest to Gabriella were quick to rally. Members of her inner-circle insisted that the story was full of fabrications and nothing more than an attention-seeking ploy by an ex-boyfriend.
A source close to the Royal Family said at the time: 'What he has done is appalling and unnecessarily cruel, especially when he has only ever been shown kindness by her family.' A friend added: 'Aatish is a novelist. He has an active imagination.'
The couple were introduced by mutual friends in 2003 while Taseer was studying at Amherst College, Massachusetts, two hours from Brown University where Ella was studying comparative literature.
Highly intelligent, Ella is also a graduate of Oxford University, where she obtained an MPhil degree in Social Anthropology from Linacre College.
Their courtship was passionate and public – the couple were often spotted in clinches and made it on to Tatler's 'most invited' list two years running. At one point they were tipped to marry.
Taseer travelled with the Kents – revealing how 'to fly with the royalty was to fly with Easyjet' – and spent time at the family's five-bedroom apartment at Kensington Palace, which left him cold.
'The warren of dark-brick apartments and offices that greeted me resembled something between a military hospital and an old people's home,' he wrote.
'All the famous inhabitants - Princess Margaret, Princess Diana - were dead, and those who remained, minor royals and palace secretaries, lived in their long cold shadow.' (This was years before the Prince and Princess of Wales arrived to 'liven it up', as he put it.)
Princess Michael of Kent, known as 'Princess Pushy', was reportedly impressed by her daughter's beau, once describing him as 'one of the most handsome men I have ever met'.
But Taseer's opinion of his would-be mother-in-law was rather more conflicted. Of her denials of racism, he wrote: 'I would have liked to believe her, but I had my doubts...royals and Nazis go together like blini and caviar...everyone above a certain age in Britain is at least a tiny bit racist.'
He added that he did, however, see a 'nice side' to Princess Michael, describing her as 'funny, intelligent and generous'.
Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Michael of Kent watch the racing on Derby day at the Investec Derby Festival at Epsom Racecourse on June 7, 2014
Before the relationship fizzled out in 2006, the Kents reportedly travelled to Bombay to meet Taseer's mother. She arranged lavish dinners and fireworks for Princess Michael on her birthday.
Taseer is now a writer-at-large for T, The New York Times Style Magazine, and is married to lawyer Ryan Davis, whom he wed in August 2015.
He was stripped of his overseas citizenship of India status in 2019 after he wrote an article criticising the regime of the country's prime minister, Narendra Modi.
Meanwhile, Princess Michael once allegedly told black diners to 'go back to the colonies' and claimed not to know her father was an SS officer.
In 2004 she was branded a racist by a group in a New York restaurant after a row erupted over the noise she claimed they were making.
The royal was accused of slamming her hand down on the group's table, telling them: 'You need to quiet down.'
Restaurant boss Silvano Marchetto offered to move Princess Michael and her party to another room.
Before switching tables the royal is alleged to have said 'you need to go back to the colonies'.
The princess was reportedly challenged at the time and was said to have replied: 'I did not say "back to the colonies", I said you "should remember the colonies". Back in the days of the colonies there were rules that were very good.'
She is alleged to have continued: 'You think about it. Just think about it.'
One of the group, Wall Street banker Merv Matheson, said: 'She has a problem and that problem is racism. She needs help.'
AJ Callaway was also caught up in the alleged row and was surprised to find out she was a member of the Royal family.
'I thought she was just a crazy woman. I still think she's a crazy woman,' he said at the time.
A spokesman denied that the princess made the slur, which reportedly arose from a confrontation about the group making too much noise in the Da Silvano restaurant.
In 2014 it was revealed her father, Baron Gunther von Reibnitz, was a high-ranking SS officer, which the Princess Michael claimed was shocking news to her.
He joined the Nazi party in 1930 but would escape to Bavaria in 1945 when it was occupied by the Americans.
Princess Michael was born Marie-Christine von Reibnitz during the final months of World War Two.
Historian Philip Hall unearthed the baron's Nazi link at the Berlin Document Centre, where evidence showed he had joined the SS three years before Hitler became chancellor.
He also found references to Baron Gunther von Reibnitz being recommended for an appointment by Herman Goering and he is believed to have fought on the Polish front.
After the war's end, the baron split from his family. The children and their mother headed to Sydney, Australia, and he settled in Mozambique, where he ran a citrus farm.
The Czech princess joined the British Royal Family when she married Prince Michael of Kent in Vienna in 1978 and would later claim her union with the Silesian was an arranged marriage.
She famously accused the British of racism in the 1980s when she said in an interview: 'The English distrust foreigners. I will never become British even if I live here the rest of my life.'
She was branded Princess Pushy until 2013, when she was described as Princess Cushy for whinging about the rent she paid to Kensington Palace.
Before 2010 she was paying just £69 a week in peppercorn rent, but would go on to pay £120,000 a year to stay at the palace, which has ten main rooms.
The new rent rate was imposed when the late Queen was forced to restructure her grace-and-favour residences to bring rents into line with present-day market values.
She also courted controversy when she told Tatler magazine she knew 'the real story' about Princess Diana following her death in 1997.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni's legal battle examined in new documentary
The ongoing legal saga between Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni has dominated headlines and sparked waves of online sleuthing from fans. Now, the case is being unpacked in Lively vs Baldoni: The Hollywood Feud, a new Discovery+ documentary premiering tomorrow (17 July). Originally slated to release in June, the documentary was quietly delayed following the dismissal of Baldoni's $400m defamation countersuit, filed in January. Judge Lewis J. Liman ruled that Lively's harassment allegations were protected from defamation claims. Baldoni did not refile. Lively's original lawsuit, lodged in December 2024, remains active, with a trial scheduled for March 2026. The documentary promises a forensic breakdown of the It Ends with Us fallout, from on-set tensions and leaked texts to gag orders and countersuits. Here's what to expect from Lively vs Baldoni: The Hollywood Feud, and how to watch it in the UK. Where to watch ' Lively vs Baldoni: The Hollywood Feud ' in the UK Lively vs Baldoni: The Hollywood Feud begins streaming tomorrow on Discovery+ on Thursday 17 July. It will trace the full It Ends with Us timeline, from the harassment allegations and countersuits to the legal manoeuvrings and public perceptions about the case, taking on the format of other Discovery+ originals, like Johnny vs Amber and Vardy vs Rooney. According to Discovery+, the first half of the documentary outlines Baldoni's claims of reputational damage, alleging that Lively and those around her tried to wrest creative control of It Ends with Us, while the second half presents Lively's account of an alleged retaliatory smear campaign and online harassment after filing her lawsuit. If you have an Amazon account, you can add a Discovery+ subscription to your account for £3.99 per month or £39.99 annually. As well as access to Lively vs Baldoni, a subscription to Discovery+ also gets you access to other documentaries like Quiet on Set, as well as live channels, including TNT Sport, Animal Planet, Discovery, Discovery History, Discovery Science, DMAX, Food Network, HGTV, Quest, Quest Red, TLC, Turbo and ID.


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
British tennis player Tara Moore handed four-year doping ban despite being cleared
British tennis star Tara Moore has been handed a four-year doping ban, 18 months on from being cleared of wrongdoing by an independent tribunal. The ban has been upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) following an appeal filed by the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA). Moore, Britain's former number one-ranked doubles player, was provisionally suspended in June 2022 due to the presence of prohibited anabolic steroids nandrolone and boldenone. Moore said she had never knowingly taken a banned substance in her career and an independent tribunal determined that contaminated meat consumed by her in the days before sample collection was the source of the prohibited substance. Moore lost 19 months in the process before she was cleared of the ADRV, but CAS upheld the ITIA's appeal against the first instance "no fault or negligence" ruling with respect to nandrolone. "After reviewing the scientific and legal evidence, the majority of the CAS Panel considered that the player did not succeed in proving that the concentration of nandrolone in her sample was consistent with the ingestion of contaminated meat," CAS said in a statement. "The panel concluded that Ms Moore failed to establish that the ADRV was not intentional. The appeal by the ITIA is therefore upheld and the decision rendered by the independent tribunal is set aside." Moore had previously said how she saw her reputation, ranking and livelihood "slowly trickling away" for 19 months during her initial suspension. The 32-year-old had also filed a cross-appeal at CAS "seeking to dismiss the ITIA appeal, dismiss the nandrolone result in the ADRV or alternatively confirm that she bears no fault or negligence". However, CAS said the cross-appeal was declared inadmissible and her four-year period of ineligibility would start from July 15, with credit for any provisional suspension that has already been served. "Our bar for appealing a first instance decision is high, and the decision is not taken lightly," ITIA CEO Karen Moorhouse said in a statement. "In this case, our independent scientific advice was that the player did not adequately explain the high level of nandrolone present in their sample. Today's ruling is consistent with this position."


Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The Great British Sewing Bee fans rage 'is it even worth watching now?!' as BBC 'spoils' new series after just one episode
The Great British Sewing Bee fans have raged 'is it even worth watching now?!' as the BBC spoils the new series after just one episode. The garment-making competition, hosted by comedian Sara Pascoe, 44, returned to our screens on Tuesday night. A new cast of 12 amateur sewers will be assessed on their seamster skills by expert judges Esme Young, 76, and Patrick Grant, 53, over ten weeks. But many viewers took to social media with a litany of complaints just minutes after the first episode of the brand new series began. A montage of clips of what is to come on the programme was shown - and fans felt it gave too much away about the content of upcoming episodes. One said on X: 'Is it even worth watching #SewingBee - they've shown everything in the first few minutes. The bane of any competition programme.' Another replied: 'I agree, I try not to watch the intro and outro, talk about spoiler alert!' Someone else chimed in: 'I think it's worse when they show you "next week" and flash half the stuff almost finished.' It was not the only aspect of the preview trailer that got tongues wagging, as another section of it saw a sneak peek at a future doll-making task. But one of the toys shown was truly unsettling, with dark button eyes and a stitched-up mouth, making it look like something out of a horror film. In fact, the official Sewing Bee X account even posted about the moment: 'Apologies for this absolute jumpscare...' One viewer agreed it was one of the show's creepiest ever creations: 'That's up there with the ventriloquist doll from a couple of seasons back!' Elsewhere online, people felt the return of the show had not been advertised enough - causing them to almost miss the launch episode entirely. One commented, referring to the BBC's recent sports coverage: 'Crumbs! I've been so busy avoiding Wimbledon that I didn't even realise Sewing Bee is back! Fans were not pleased about being shown so much of the upcoming episodes in the preview trailer It was not the only aspect of the preview trailer that got tongues wagging, as another section of it saw a sneak peek at a future doll-making task (pictured) 'Get me a comfy chair, a wine and the playlist ASAP!' Another similarly said: 'Poor work from the BBC, barely seen a single sniff of the trailer for the new series of Sewing Bee. 'One of the most charming TV shows going and I almost stumbled across the fact it is back on tonight!' But many viewers, while surprised by its return, were simply glad to see the beloved programme back for another year. 'Nobody told me it's back tonight. What a lovely surprise and welcome back! #SewingBee', one said. Another commented: 'Oh I do love this, so pleased it's back #SewingBee.' This series will see the sewers tested on weekly themes as diverse as art, movies, the 1920s and Korea variously. Each episode sees the sewers take on the customary three challenges - pattern, transformation and made-to-measure. Elsewhere online, people felt the return of the show had not been advertised enough - causing them to almost miss the launch episode entirely But many viewers, while surprised by its return, were simply glad to see the beloved programme back for another year Their performance each week sees the best seamster awarded garment of the week - while one is sent home. In the launch episode, the contestants had to follow the pattern for a tie-front peplum blouse before cobbling together items from the haberdashery to make a circle skirt. They then had to design a dress with pleats that had been fitted perfectly to a model. The Sewing Bee has now been running for 12 years, after it was created in 2013 as a spin-off from the now iconic The Great British Bake Off. Its return comes after a casting shake-up in another of the programmes in the family of related Great British shows - Celebrity Bake-Off. The next series of the star-studded Channel 4 competition, set to air in 2026, will see acclaimed pastry chef Cherish Finden, 57, step in as a judge, according to The Sun. Cherish, known to viewers as the no-nonsense star of Bake Off: The Professionals, is a multi-award-winning chef with more than 20 years of international experience under her apron. A former Culinary Olympics champion, she currently serves as Executive Pastry Chef at London's five-star Langham Hotel and has been dubbed one of the UK's top afternoon tea experts. She joined Bake Off: The Professionals in 2016 and has since become a fan favourite for her razor-sharp critiques and flawless standards. Born in Singapore, Cherish began working at just 14 and quickly moved into the kitchen, enrolling in culinary school at 16. She went on to train in some of Singapore's most prestigious hotels, including the iconic six-star Raffles. As a seasoned TV personality, Cherish has appeared on MasterChef UK, Australian MasterChef, Junior Bake Off, An Extra Slice, and Heston's Great British Food on Channel 4. She even baked for royalty – designing a cake shaped like Windsor Castle for the late Queen Elizabeth II's 90th birthday. MailOnline contacted Channel 4 and Cherish's representatives for comment at the time. The new role comes after Prue Leith, 85, announced she was stepping away from all Great British Bake Off specials earlier this year. Her place was temporarily filled by food writer Caroline Waldegrave, 72, during the most recent series.