Latest news with #LoveandFury


Time of India
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Tyson Fury ties the knot with Paris Fury for the third time in stunning South of France celebration
Tyson Fury ties the knot with Paris Fury for the third time in stunning South of France celebration (Image via Getty) Tyson Fury and Paris Fury have tied the knot again, this time in the South of France. The retired boxing star married Paris Fury for the third time on August 13, 2025, in a beautiful ceremony in Nice. All seven of their children were there, dressed in matching shades of white and cream. Tyson Fury shared photos and videos of the big day on Instagram, calling it 'the most beautiful day' and saying the location held 'a lot of special memories' for them. Tyson Fury and Paris Fury renew wedding vows in beautiful South of France ceremony Tyson Fury and Paris Fury got hitched in Doncaster, England, on November 21, 2008. In New York City, April 2013 brought on a renewal of their vows. For their family-filled party this year, they chose the warm French Riviera. Tyson Fury chose a casual style with a cream linen shirt, white shorts, and a large cross around his neck, whereas Paris Fury wore a fitted lace dress. Their children- enezuela, Prince John James, Prince Tyson II, Valencia, Prince Adonis Amaziah, Athena, and Rico played a part in the day. On her Instagram Stories, Paris said her daughters were 'so excited' to be flower girls for the first time. She also shared a picture of ' the boys before they left for the church,' explaining they arrived before the girls as part of tradition. Tyson Fury posted a video montage set to Bruno Mars' 'Marry You' with the caption: 'Paris Fury & I got married again, third time lucky. We had the most beautiful day in the South of France.' Also Read: Dana White announces Power Slap included in the $7.7 billion UFC and Paramount deal Tyson Fury and Paris Fury's wedding journey almost called off before first marriage The couple first met in 2005 at a wedding and started dating the next year on Paris's 16th birthday. But their original wedding plans in 2008 nearly fell apart. Tyson Fury had just missed out on the Beijing Olympics, and he wanted to bring the date forward. Paris Fury refused, leading to an argument and even a temporary breakup. Paris later wrote in her memoir Love and Fury that she called off the wedding in anger, but her mother didn't cancel the plans, thinking they would make up. She was accurate. They made amends and the wedding went ahead as planned in November. Seventeen years later, Tyson Fury and Paris Fury are still together; three weddings behind them, each one signifying a new chapter in their story. Catch Rani Rampal's inspiring story on Game On, Episode 4. Watch Here!


Daily Record
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Record
Tyson Fury gets married for third time in romantic family wedding
Tyson Fury and Paris Fury have married for the third time (Image: Instagram) Tyson Fury and his wife Paris have tied the knot for a third time in a private family wedding in the South of France with their seven kids standing by their side on their special day. The Fury children, Prince John James, 13, Prince Tyson II, eight, Valencia, seven, Prince Adonis Amaziah, six, Athena, three, Prince Rico, 22-months, and their eldest Venezuela, 15, were all dressed in white as they watched their mum and dad exchange their vows to one another once more. Nexflix stars Paris and Tyson were also matching in white with the mum of seven looking stunning in a fitted lace midi dress. The boxing legend took to Instagram to share the news with fans as he wrote: "@parisfury1 & i got married again third time lucky, we had the most beautiful day in sof it holds a lot of special memories for us." Their ceremony, which appeared to only include the couple and their seven children, took place in a stunning church in France. The seven Fury children were all dressed in white (Image: Instagram) Fans rushed to the comments to gush over their special news as one wrote: "How lovely is this? A happy marriage and a big family. Can we go back to normalising this?" A second wrote: "For anyone wondering, it's choosing each other again and again. Like a declaration to each other. I assume." A third chimed in: "Lovely photos of a lovely family. Can't wait for At home with the fury's S2!" It comes as the Gypsy King also celebrated his 37th birthday yesterday with little brother Tommy Fury being among those to upload a birthday tribute to the boxer. Paris and Tyson first tied the knot in 2008 when she was aged just 19 and he was 21, during a ceremony in Doncaster. They later renewed their vows in April 2013. Tyson and Paris first met when she was 15 but they didn't become an official couple until after Paris' 16th birthday. The pair tied the knot in 2008 at St. Peter in Chains Catholic Church in Doncaster, South Yorkshire. Tyson shared the news on Instagram (Image: Instagram) However, the wedding almost didn't take place after the boxer told Paris he wanted to reschedule their big day so he could compete in the Olympics. She wrote in her book, Love and Fury: "My fiancé clearly didn't understand the amount of planning and organisation that went into a wedding. "It was one conflict after another and after an ugly slanging match with him outside Mam's house, I decided to call time on the wedding and our relationship." Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Their break-up was short lived as Tyson sent Paris an emotional text while he was holidaying in Ibiza. She said: "He told me he couldn't believe I'd abandoned our relationship so easily, and he couldn't bear the thought of me meeting somebody else." Paris said they got back together, with the help of her Scots mum Lynda. The pair, went on to have their seven children together and welcomed their youngest child, Rico, in September 2023.


Daily Record
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Record
Tyson Fury gets married for third time in romantic family wedding attended by kids
Tyson has tied the knot for a third time and announced the news on Instagram Tyson Fury and his wife Paris have tied the knot for a third time in a private family wedding in the South of France with their seven kids standing by their side on their special day. The Fury children, Prince John James, 13, Prince Tyson II, eight, Valencia, seven, Prince Adonis Amaziah, six, Athena, three, Prince Rico, 22-months, and their eldest Venezuela, 15, were all dressed in white as they watched their mum and dad exchange their vows to one another once more. Nexflix stars Paris and Tyson were also matching in white with the mum of seven looking stunning in a fitted lace midi dress. The boxing legend took to Instagram to share the news with fans as he wrote: "@parisfury1 & i got married again third time lucky, we had the most beautiful day in sof it holds a lot of special memories for us." Their ceremony, which appeared to only include the couple and their seven children, took place in a stunning church in France. Fans rushed to the comments to gush over their special news as one wrote: "How lovely is this? A happy marriage and a big family. Can we go back to normalising this?" A second wrote: "For anyone wondering, it's choosing each other again and again. Like a declaration to each other. I assume." A third chimed in: "Lovely photos of a lovely family. Can't wait for At home with the fury's S2!" It comes as the Gypsy King also celebrated his 37th birthday yesterday with little brother Tommy Fury being among those to upload a birthday tribute to the boxer. Paris and Tyson first tied the knot in 2008 when she was aged just 19 and he was 21, during a ceremony in Doncaster. They later renewed their vows in April 2013. Tyson and Paris first met when she was 15 but they didn't become an official couple until after Paris' 16th birthday. The pair tied the knot in 2008 at St. Peter in Chains Catholic Church in Doncaster, South Yorkshire. However, the wedding almost didn't take place after the boxer told Paris he wanted to reschedule their big day so he could compete in the Olympics. She wrote in her book, Love and Fury: "My fiancé clearly didn't understand the amount of planning and organisation that went into a wedding. "It was one conflict after another and after an ugly slanging match with him outside Mam's house, I decided to call time on the wedding and our relationship." Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Their break-up was short lived as Tyson sent Paris an emotional text while he was holidaying in Ibiza. She said: "He told me he couldn't believe I'd abandoned our relationship so easily, and he couldn't bear the thought of me meeting somebody else." Paris said they got back together, with the help of her Scots mum Lynda. The pair, went on to have their seven children together and welcomed their youngest child, Rico, in September 2023.


Daily Mirror
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
Inside Paris and Tyson Fury's third wedding held at a very 'special' location
Tyson Fury and his wife Paris have tied the knot – again, for the third time. The couple who first married in 2008 when Paris was just 19 and Tyson was 21, renewed their vows for the first time in April 2013. But this year, Paris and her husband have revealed they recently jetted off to a very special foreign location in order to celebrate their romance and renew their vows for the third time. This time, they were joined by their children, Venezuela, 15, Prince John James, 13, Prince Tyson II, eight, Valencia, seven, Prince Adonis Amaziah, six, Athena, three and Prince Rico, just under two. Taking to Instagram, the former heavyweight world champion told fans: "Paris & I got married again third time lucky. We had the most beautiful day in sof [sharing a French flag emoji] it holds a lot of special memories for us," as the Bruno Mars song, Marry You, played over the loved-up video montage. But their first wedding almost didn't go to plan, with Tyson asking if they could postpone it as he wanted to compete in the Olympics. Writing in her book, Love and Fury, Paris said: "My fiancé clearly didn't understand the amount of planning and organisation that went into a wedding. "It was one conflict after another and after an ugly slanging match with him outside Mam's house, I decided to call time on the wedding and our relationship." However, they later rekindled their relationship and tied the knot at St Peter in Chains Catholic Church in Doncaster, South Yorkshire in 2008. Here, we take a look at their special day and how the Fury's celebrated their third wedding.


The Guardian
08-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Love and Fury: The Extraordinary Life, Death and Legacy of Joe Meek by Darryl W Bullock
Joe Meek first tasted success as a record producer when he created the eerie backdrop for John Leyton's gothic teen melodrama, Johnny Remember Me, which reached No 1 in the British pop charts in the summer of 1961. A mere six years later, on 3 February 1967, Meek's name entered the mainstream consciousness in the most darkly dramatic way imaginable, when the news broke that he had killed his landlady, the elderly Violet Shenton, before turning the shotgun on himself. In the time between, as Darryl Bullock notes with characteristic understatement in his richly detailed biography Love and Fury, the producer's chaotic, but hugely creative, life was 'directed by his passions and obsessions'. Alongside music, they included spiritualism – he was convinced that he had once communed with his hero, the late Buddy Holly, using a Ouija board – and an abiding fascination with the extraterrestrial. His most famous single, the echoey, atmospheric Telstar by the Tornados, was inspired by the launch of the American satellite of the same name in 1962. It sold more than 5m copies, topping the charts in the UK and the US, and remains the record most associated with his often eccentric sonic signature. He also created one of the first electronic concept albums, I Hear a New World (1960), about life in outer space. Like many musical outliers, Meek was a misfit who somehow channelled his otherness into commercial success. In a TV interview conducted in 1974, his older brothers, Arthur and Eric, recalled his childhood oddness. Aged 12, he strung microphones across the walls of the family house to record the dawn chorus and assembled his own library of ambient sound effects such as glass being smashed against a wall, a skidding bicycle and his own approximations of the ghostly creaks and howls that punctuated the schlocky horror movies he loved. Meek's fondness for what Eric called 'weird sounds' carried over into his musical career, which took off in the early 1960s, when he began his ascendancy as Britain's first successful independent record producer. His studio-cum-sound laboratory was a converted room in a two-storey rented flat above a leather goods shop in north London's Holloway Road. There, musicians had to negotiate their way across a floor strewn with electric cables and littered with stacked boxes of recording tape. Out of the chaos came a rare gift: the ability to balance experimentation and mainstream acceptance. Meek's use of overdubbing, sampling, sound effects, echo and distortion was often derided as mere gimmickry by his peers, but is now lauded as visionary. It manifested itself in different ways on songs that ranged in tone from the futuristic pulse of Telstar to the upfront percussive thrust of Have I the Right? by the Honeycombs, which in 1964 became his third No 1 hit. The creation of that song and several other Meek productions, from the well known to the obscure, is described in some detail in Love and Fury, a work of deep pop cultural archaeology for which the term 'exhaustive' barely does justice. Bullock, who died in December 2024, had previously written several authoritative books on the LGBTQ+ community's influence on popular music, one of which, The Velvet Mafia: The Gay Men Who Ran the Swinging Sixties, provides a fascinating contextual backdrop to this one. In contrast to several other influential, but closeted, gay music business figures of the time, including the Beatles' manager Brian Epstein, Meek was remarkably open about his homosexuality at a stage when it was still prohibited by law. In this book, several musicians recall their surprise at his tentative advances, which tended towards the hopeful rather than the harassing. Throughout his career, Meek was dogged by depression and often dramatic mood swings, his chummy affability giving way to volcanic explosions of rage when his methods, or his cavalier attitude to royalties, were questioned. In the lengthy index to Love and Fury, there are 39 references to Meek's 'temper', one of which relates to a recording session that came to an abrupt halt when he fired a starting pistol at an astonished singer who had disobeyed his instruction not to stand so close to the microphone. In 1963, his life took a darker turn after he was arrested for 'importuning for immoral purposes' in a public toilet and he was subsequently the target of several blackmail demands. The psychological fallout, writes Bullock, 'saw him thrust back into the closet, a move that would have a disastrous effect on his already fragile psyche'. By the mid-60s, when the Beatles had dramatically redrawn the parameters of pop, Meek suddenly found himself no longer in demand. His behaviour became increasingly extreme, exacerbated by his use of amphetamines, which soon spiralled into dependence. The killing rage that led to the death of his landlady, and the taking of his own life seconds afterwards, was precipitated, it later emerged, by an argument over his missing rent book. Bullock acknowledges, but gives scant credence, to the conspiracy theories that ensued, the most enduring being a belief that their deaths were the result of a botched gangland hit ordered by the Krays, with whom he sometimes kept company. Instead, he cites the pathologist's report, which concluded that the amount of amphetamines in Meek's system could have produced 'symptoms of delusion' that caused him to perceive even those closest to him as potential threats. The following year, the contents of Meek's home studio were sold at auction, including the clavioline synthesiser that featured on Telstar. With his characteristic eye for detail, Bullock notes that 'most of the electrical items up for grabs, the amplifiers and mixers and tape decks he had created his life's work with, had their power cables cut'. The dense tangle of wires and cables that covered the upper floors of his Holloway Road flat had defeated the removal men, who had 'simply sawed though them'. It seems an oddly fitting metaphor for the brutal severance of a singular life, one touched by genius, but ultimately undone by the explosive volatility that attended it every step of the way. Read it and weep for the doomed Meek. And for Shenton. Love and Fury: The Extraordinary Life, Death and Legacy of Joe Meek by Darryl W Bullock is published by Omnibus Press (£25) To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at Delivery charges may apply