I wanted to work; it's not right for a princess of the royal house to be commercial, so Andrew and I decided to make the divorce official so I could go off and get a job.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I wanted my marriage to work, but it didn't.
I was looking very much for a career. My second marriage to Stan Herman had ended, and I wanted very much to be independent, not take alimony from him, be on my own, do the right thing.
I didn't want a divorce but had to because of circumstance.
I got a divorce eleven years later on the grounds of cruelty, which is still not easy in England.
A divorcee is a women who got married so she didn't have to work, but now works so she doesn't have to get married.
When I was married, I didn't work. When I had my children, I didn't work. But before that, I'd work for Diana Vreeland at 'Harper's Bazaar.'
Once when I was working for the Daily News, I was summoned back to work from vacation because Donald Trump announced he was getting a divorce.
Divorce was miserable, as it always is, and we divorce for the same reasons we marry.
I worked with John, but I had enough sense to walk just a little ways behind him. I could have made more records, but I wanted to have a marriage.
I left my marriage knowing I'd have to work. I have.