logo
Who is James Stunt, Petra Ecclestone's ex? He married ex-F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone's daughter in a lavish Italian ceremony, but they had a bitter divorce amid allegations of abuse and drug addiction

Who is James Stunt, Petra Ecclestone's ex? He married ex-F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone's daughter in a lavish Italian ceremony, but they had a bitter divorce amid allegations of abuse and drug addiction

Late last year, Petra Ecclestone – daughter of controversial ex-
Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone – spent time unwinding with her family in Dubai. The Crickle Daisy beauty brand founder was on holiday with her husband, businessman Sam Palmer and four children and posted plenty of photos on Instagram. She shares three of her kids, daughter Lavinia and twin sons James and Andrew, with ex-husband James Stunt, and her youngest girl, Minnie, with her current husband. The getaway was also in celebration of Ecclestone's turning 36, or as she's calling it, 'thirty something'.
Before the family holiday, she stepped out for date night with Palmer at Giorgio Baldi, the Italian restaurant in
Santa Monica , Los Angeles. The pair have been married for two years and together for six. They met through her sister Tamara's husband Jay Rutland and started dating a year after Ecclestone's acrimonious split from Stunt in 2017, as Page Six noted. At the time of her wedding to Palmer, Bernie said he hoped his daughter would 'be happier than she was in her last marriage'.
Advertisement
Petra Ecclestone is married to businessman Sam Palmer. Photo: @petraecclestoneofficial/Instagram
So, what happened in Petra Ecclestone's first marriage and who is James Stunt? She once said Stunt claimed he was Prince Philip's illegitimate son, while Stunt himself told Tatler he counted
Sean 'Diddy' Combs 'a personal friend'. He has just been cleared of laundering US$292 million (£226 million) in 'dirty' money that could have originated from criminal activities. What else do we know about him?
What is James Stunt's background?
Petra Ecclestone's ex-husband James Stunt reportedly has ties to the underworld. Photo: @officialjamesstunt/Instagram
James' father is Geoffrey Stunt, a bigwig in the publishing industry. In the interview with Tatler, Stunt called his father a 'self-made man', adding, 'I'm very proud of the fact my father's working class.' However, he can't say the same about himself. He received £1 million from his father at 21 but claims to have made his first £4 million through an oil trade at 16. He was educated at Bradfield College, a prestigious private school in Berkshire, England, followed by a Mander Portman Woodward independent school and later graduated from the European Business School in London's Regent's Park.
Stunt also has connections
to the underworld through his godfather Terry Adams, the notorious boss behind the Clerkenwell crime syndicate. Speaking to Tatler, Stunt gushed over his godfather, calling him an 'absolutely amazing guy' and 'the most moralled' individual.
His wedding to Petra Ecclestone was expensive
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Style Edit: The Gucci Portrait Series celebrates individual identity
Style Edit: The Gucci Portrait Series celebrates individual identity

South China Morning Post

time4 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Style Edit: The Gucci Portrait Series celebrates individual identity

It's not often that luxury brand advertising makes you stop and think about subjects beyond the beautiful clothes and accessories, which is why Gucci's newly released autumn/winter 2025 campaign is a breath of fresh air. This season, the Italian luxury house has given us more food – and fashion – for thought with The Gucci Portrait Series, a campaign that celebrates individual expression and identity through a stylish Gucci lens. Photographer Catherine Opie shot The Gucci Portrait Series. Photo: Handout Advertisement To bring this concept to life, the house turned to prominent American photographer Catherine Opie, whose work frequently explores identity – particularly LGBTQ identity – and various subcultures. Her photographs often blend documentary and conceptual approaches to create images that are not just visually striking, but also invite the viewer to delve more deeply into the subject. Each shot is intended to go beyond the beauty of the clothes to say something about the models themselves. Photo: Handout The Gucci Portrait Series features 42 individuals from diverse generations and backgrounds, with Opie looking to have each person's identity take the lead, revealing an authentic relationship between person and garment. The campaign unfolds against the backdrop of Gucci's enduring spirit of sprezzatura, the perfectly imperfect Italian style that has defined the house's aesthetic across generations. The idea is to probe the relationship between the wearer and the worn. Photo: Handout Each image captures details in how a garment is worn that reveal the subtle language of identity – from the way a jacket folds, a bag is held or a scarf hangs against the body. Clothing becomes a frame within which individuality emerges, the sitter's identity revealed through posture, ease and attitude. Gucci's autumn/winter 2025 show at Milan Fashion Week. Photo: Handout Accompanying the campaign is a series of candid videos directed by London-based filmmaker Lisa Rovner, in which cast members are invited to respond to open-ended questions. These moments of humour, reflection and memory are unguarded glimpses at their inner selves. The Gucci Portrait Series is a collective study of identity that invites us to look not just at the garments, but at the expressions they frame and the people who wear them.

Actor Terence Stamp dies aged 87
Actor Terence Stamp dies aged 87

RTHK

time4 days ago

  • RTHK

Actor Terence Stamp dies aged 87

Actor Terence Stamp dies aged 87 Terence Stamp, who made his name as an actor in 1960s London and went on to play the arch-villain General Zod in "Superman" and "Superman II", has died aged 87. File photo: Reuters Whether starring as a road-tripping transgender woman in "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert", an intergalactic supervillain in "Superman" or a mysterious beauty in "Theorem", Terence Stamp, who died on Sunday at 87, captivated audiences in experimental films and Hollywood blockbusters alike. His bold, decades-long career swung between big productions Michael Cimino's "The Sicilian" to independent films such as Stephen Frears's "The Hit" or Steven Soderbergh's "The Limey". An emblem of London's "Swinging Sixties", he showed off a magnetic screen presence from his earliest roles, immediately gaining awards and fans. He made his breakthrough in 1962 playing an angelic sailor hanged for killing one of his crewmates in Peter Ustinov's "Billy Budd", earning an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe. He would also win best male actor at Cannes in 1965 for "The Collector", a twisted love story based on a John Fowles novel. Stamp was born in London on July 22, 1938. His father stoked ship boilers and his family of seven crammed into a tenement with no bathroom in east London. In later interviews, he would recount experiencing hunger during his childhood, as well as facing problems at school because of his working-class accent. Inspired by Gary Cooper and James Dean, he dreamed of being an actor from an early age and left home at 17 – taking a scholarship to a drama school against his father's wishes. In the early 1960s, British cinema began to take an interest in the working class and Ken Loach hired Stamp for his first film, "Poor Cow" in 1967. His meeting with Italian director Federico Fellini that same year was decisive. While searching for "the most decadent English actor" for his segment of "Spirits of the Dead", Fellini cast Stamp as a drunk actor seduced by the devil in the guise of a little girl. Another Italian director, Pier Paolo Pasolini, cast him in 1969's "Theorem" as an enigmatic outsider who seduces the members of a bourgeois Milan family. But Stamp's scandalous roles fell out of fashion and he struggled to find work for a decade. He embarked on a mystical world tour and settled in India, where he was studying in an ashram in 1977 when his agent got in touch and offered him the role of General Zod in "Superman". His career took off again and he soon became a go-to face for Hollywood directors looking for British villains. The role of Bernadette in "Priscilla" came in the mid-1990s, just as he was growing weary of those Hollywood hardmen roles. A few years later though, he returned to familiar stomping ground for the "The Limey", playing a British ex-con who travels to California to find out who killed his daughter. One of his last films, Last Night in Soho (2021), was a supernatural thriller in which a teenager was haunted by characters from London's Swinging Sixties – bringing Stamp full circle on a dazzling career. (AFP)

'Skibidi', 'tradwife' added to Cambridge dictionary
'Skibidi', 'tradwife' added to Cambridge dictionary

RTHK

time4 days ago

  • RTHK

'Skibidi', 'tradwife' added to Cambridge dictionary

'Skibidi', 'tradwife' added to Cambridge dictionary The Cambridge Dictionary definition of 'skibidi' acknowledges the difficulty of pinning down a specific meaning to the term. Words popularised by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi", "delulu", and "tradwife" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary over the last year, its publisher said on Monday. Cambridge University Press said tradwife, a portmanteau of traditional wife, reflected "a growing, controversial Instagram and TikTok trend that embraces traditional gender roles". The dictionary also took on the challenge of defining skibidi, a word popularised in online memes, as a term which had "different meanings such as cool or bad, or can be used with no real meaning". The gibberish word was spread by a YouTube channel called "Skibidi Toilet" and is associated with the mindless, "brain rot" content found on social media and consumed by Gen Alpha's overwhelmingly digital lifestyle. The dictionary defined delulu, derived from the word delusional, as "believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to". As an example, it cited a 2025 speech in parliament where Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese used the phrase "delulu with no solulu". "It's not every day you get to see words like skibidi and delulu make their way into the Cambridge Dictionary," said Colin McIntosh, Lexical Programme manager at the Cambridge Dictionary. "We only add words where we think they'll have staying power. Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the Dictionary." Other new phrases include "lewk", used to describe a unique fashion look and popularised by RuPaul's Drag Race, and "inspo", short for inspiration. Work from home culture has given rise to "mouse jiggler", referring to a way to pretend to work when you are not. There is also "forever chemical", man-made chemicals that stay in the environment for years and have gained traction as concerns grow about the irreversible impact of climate change on the health of humans and the plant. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store