She was her hairdresser

Boris Johnson gets close to his first wife after he invites her to a curry

The first wife of Boris Johnson.

Moisten

As British Prime Minister Boris Johnson grapples with the repercussions of the Taliban's seizure of power in Afghanistan, the last thing on his mind was the appearance of some of the blunders and lies he had committed as a student at Oxford University, which were recorded by the Students' Newspaper, which he probably prefers not to remember. Start.


Among the most important of those events, which appeared in the newspaper at the time, was an apparently funny notice in February 1985, announcing his engagement to (at the time) student Allegra Mustaine Owen, who later became his first wife.


The ad describes Johnson as a "shaggy classic" and as the "personal hairstylist" of Mrs. Mustaine Owen, who at the time had already appeared on the cover of Tatler magazine, the high-society publication.


Among other excerpts from the newspaper, which Mail Oline discovered, is a satirical letter that appears to have been written by Johnson himself. She says he suffers from a "bad disease" called the "satanic tax", with symptoms including "the inability to make people laugh." He adds that the new disease may "threaten my chances of becoming president of the student union next year." The newspaper also stated that "Boris wants to keep the news of their engagement a secret at the moment, so we should not tell anyone..." The newspaper claims that "experts" considered Johnson to have a lower level of intelligence, and did not look as acceptable as his shaggy hair.


Another article in the newspaper stated that Johnson had approached an opponent in a debate at the Oxford Union with a screwdriver in his hand, after being angry at a joke he had made against him. The newspaper claimed that Johnson then said "sorry" and "that's very ridiculous", before leaving the scene. Johnson becomes close to Mustaine-Owen, daughter of the famous art historian William Mustaine-Owen, after he invites her to a curry at a London Indian house.


Johnson and Mustaine Owen ended up marrying in 1987, which lasted six years before they divorced in 1993. He had four children with his second wife, Marina Wheeler, before they separated in 2018. The prime minister now has a one-year-old son, Wilfried, with his wife The third is Carrie Johnson, who announced in July that she is expecting her second child with Mr Johnson later this year.


• "Mail Oline" says that Johnson suffers from a "bad disease" called "the Satanic tax", with symptoms including "the inability to make people laugh."

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