Open navigationClose navigation

Home

Shows

This Day in History

U.S. History

All the major chapters in the American story, from Indigenous beginnings to the present day.

  • Colonial America

    Colonial America

  • American Revolution

    American Revolution

  • Early U.S.

    Early U.S.

  • Slavery

    Slavery

  • Civil War

    Civil War

  • Immigration

    Immigration

  • Great Depression

    Great Depression

  • Black History

    Black History

  • Hispanic History

    Hispanic History

  • Women’s History

    Women’s History

  • LGBTQ+ History

    LGBTQ+ History

  • Native American History

    Native American History

  • Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

    Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander History

  • U.S. Presidents

    U.S. Presidents

  • First Ladies

    First Ladies

  • U.S. Constitution

    U.S. Constitution

  • U.S. Government and Politics

    U.S. Government and Politics

  • U.S. States

    U.S. States

  • Crime

    Crime

World History

History from countries and communities across the globe, including the world’s major wars.

  • African History

    African History

  • Asian History

    Asian History

  • Cold War

    Cold War

  • European History

    European History

  • Exploration

    Exploration

  • Holocaust

    Holocaust

  • Industrial Revolution

    Industrial Revolution

  • Latin American & Caribbean History

    Latin American & Caribbean History

  • Middle Eastern History

    Middle Eastern History

  • World War I

    World War I

  • World War II

    World War II

  • Vietnam War

    Vietnam War

Eras & Ages

From prehistory, though antiquity and into the 21st century, all of history’s biggest chapters.

  • Prehistory

    Prehistory

  • Ancient Greece

    Ancient Greece

  • Ancient Egypt

    Ancient Egypt

  • Ancient China

    Ancient China

  • Ancient Middle East

    Ancient Middle East

  • Ancient Americas

    Ancient Americas

  • Ancient Rome

    Ancient Rome

  • Middle Ages

    Middle Ages

  • Renaissance

    Renaissance

  • 19th Century

    19th Century

  • 20th Century

    20th Century

  • 21st Century

    21st Century

Culture & Tradition

The stories behind the faiths, food, entertainment and holidays that shape our world.

  • Arts & Entertainment

    Arts & Entertainment

  • Food

    Food

  • Holidays

    Holidays

  • Landmarks

    Landmarks

  • Mysteries & Folklore

    Mysteries & Folklore

  • Religion

    Religion

  • Sports

    Sports

Science & Innovation

The pivotal discoveries, visionary inventors and natural phenomena that impacted history.

  • Inventions & Science

    Inventions & Science

  • Natural Disasters & Environment

    Natural Disasters & Environment

  • Space Exploration

    Space Exploration

  • Archaeology

    Archaeology

HISTORY Honors 250

Stream HISTORY
Stream HISTORY

By: Erin Blakemore

European History

When Princess Margaret’s Affair Hit the Tabloids—and Torpedoed Her Marriage

Paparazzi photos of the princess with her lover scandalized Britain and pushed Margaret toward a historic divorce from Antony Armstrong-Jones.

Erin Blakemore

Erin Blakemore

Princess Margaret and Roddy Llewellyn

Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis/Getty Images

Published: February 21, 2019

Last Updated: January 31, 2025

They drank. They swam. They smiled. But they didn’t hear the click of the cameras–or acknowledge that their secret romance could constitute a national scandal. They were Princess Margaret and Roddy Llewellyn, and they were about to grace the cover of a British tabloid with images that would end a marriage and change the face of British royalty forever.

Margaret’s marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones, the First Earl of Snowdon, was already on the rocks, but it would take the photographs of her frolicking on a private island with another man to put the final nail in its coffin. In another era, the affair might have been private, too. But Margaret’s intense life was a tabloid editor’s dream, making her every move fodder for media scrutiny.

It happened on Mustique, a private island that is part of the Grenadines. In 1958, Colin Tennant, a British aristocrat who had once courted Princess Margaret, purchased and began developing it. The island had once been home to sugar plantations, all of which had been abandoned and overgrown since the 19th century. Under Tennant’s supervision, Mustique went from a scrubby, amenity-free island to a lush playground for the rich and famous. And when Margaret married Antony Armstrong-Jones, a free-spirited photographer, in 1960, Tennant gave her a plot of land as a wedding present.

READ MORE: Why Princess Margaret Sacrificed Love for the Crown

Over the years, Margaret’s wedding present turned into a retreat from the stresses of public life. At Les Jolies Eaux (The Beautiful Waters), an extravagant ten-acre villa, Margaret could relax and entertain her closest friends without worrying about public scrutiny.

But in 1976, Margaret’s private playground was punctured by a tabloid photographer. Back in England, blurry photos of Margaret and a man 17 years her junior created a gossip-fueled scandal.

The man was Roddy Llewellyn, a landscape gardener and aristocrat. The photos, which showed them in bathing suits, were taken as proof that Margaret had preyed on a much younger man.

Photos of Princess Margaret and Roddy Llewellyn while on holiday on February 1, 1976 in Mustique, West Indies.

Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Photos of Princess Margaret and Roddy Llewellyn while on holiday on February 1, 1976 in Mustique, West Indies.

Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

Margaret had met her lover through Tennant and his wife, Anne. After that first meeting, Anne Tennant told biographers later, her first thought was “Heavens, what have I done?” It was clear that Margaret—whose marriage with Armstrong-Jones had been on the rocks for years—was smitten. Soon, Llewellyn and Margaret were inseparable.

But though Margaret’s troubled love life had been news for decades, her open affair was still enough to shock and entertain tabloid readers. Straddling legitimate news and entertainment coverage, tabloid newspapers had become big business by the second half of the 20th century. And the British royal family was a beloved subject of the gossip rags. Margaret—troubled, beautiful and extravagant with her wealth—was a paparazzo’s dream, and the public was rabidly curious about her reportedly opulent life on Mustique.

That didn’t mean that they admired or protected the princess, though. When the photos surfaced, tabloid headlines skewered Margaret as a cradle robber who spent the public’s money partying. During this era, members of parliament even spoke out against her, calling her a “royal parasite” who wasted taxpayer funds and Llewellyn as her “toy boy,” a disposable lover who symbolized her rebellion against the strictures of royal life.

In reality, Margaret was deeply unhappy in her marriage, and her relationship with Llewellyn was a rare spot of solace. Lord Snowdon had conducted multiple extramarital affairs, and Margaret felt lonely within her marriage. Though her family had cheered on her relationship with a commoner, the reality of their marriage was different from what Margaret, who had grown up in a rarefied royal environment, expected. While she went through the usual round of official functions, Lord Snowdon worked full-time as a photographer for the Sunday Times, and was openly unfaithful to her. By the late 1970s, husband and wife were distant.

When the “compromising” images—tame by today’s standards—were made public in 1976, Lord Snowdon used them as an excuse to escape the strained marriage. He told Margaret’s personal secretary, Lord Napier, that he was leaving the princess. Napier, in turn, told Margaret, using coded language since he was speaking on an insecure phone line. “Oh, I see,” she reportedly replied. “Thank you, Nigel. I think that's the best news you've ever given me.”

READ MORE: The Governess Who Spilled the Queen's Secrets

Princess Margaret with her husband Earl of Snowdon in the Bahamas on March 14, 1976. That month they announced their separation and their marriage officially ended two years later.

DALMAS/AFP/Getty Images

Princess Margaret with her husband Earl of Snowdon in the Bahamas on March 14, 1976. That month they announced their separation and their marriage officially ended two years later.

DALMAS/AFP/Getty Images

Margaret’s divorce was a scandal unto itself. Until her marriage dissolved, the royal family had looked down on divorce. Margaret herself had given up her relationship with Peter Townsend, a divorced war hero, because of the family’s taboo on marriage after divorce. She was the first senior member of the royal family to get a divorce in 77 years, challenging the world’s vision of what being a royal could mean.

READ MORE: Why the Royal Family Used to Forbid Marriage After Divorce

As for Llewellyn, he realized that he was playing a role in a much bigger drama. “I am not prepared to comment on the events of last week,” he said in a statement issued after the couple announced their separation. “I much regret any embarrassment caused to her Majesty the Queen and the royal family, for whom I wish to express the greatest respect, admiration and loyalty.”

But privately, Queen Elizabeth actually approved of Llewellyn and Margaret’s relationship. After Margaret’s death, she reportedly thanked Anne Tennant for introducing Margaret to her lover. In a 2018 documentary, Anne Tennant recalls that the queen approached her, saying “I’d just like to say, Anne, it was rather difficult at moments, but I thank you so much for introducing Princess Margaret to Roddy ‘cause he made her really happy.”

After the divorce, Lord Snowdon quickly married Lucy Lindsay-Hogg, with whom he had been conducting an extramarital relationship for years. Margaret and Llewellyn continued their relationship, withstanding public scorn and criticism for their affair. The tabloid kept pursuing the couple, and Llewellyn’s brother even sold photos of them together to pay off his debts.

Eventually, the affair fizzled, and Llewellyn married another woman. Beginning in the 1980s, Margaret began to suffer severe health problems exacerbated by her smoking habit. She died in 2002. Llewellyn, who had remained friendly with her through the end, attended her memorial service. But though Margaret had died, the tabloids’ obsession with her love life didn’t. Shortly after her death, the News of the World, the same publication that had published the photos of the couple in the 1970s, published an article supposedly written by Llewellyn about his love for the princess, which later turned out to be fake.

READ MORE: Watching The Crown? Here Are the Real Facts You Need to Know

Related Articles

European History

10 Ways Shakespeare Changed the Way You Talk

The world-famous playwright invented scores of new words and phrases. Here are 10 that have become part of the popular lexicon.

How Coffee Fueled Revolutions—And Revolutionary Ideas
European History

How Coffee Fueled Revolutions—and Revolutionary Ideas

From the Ottoman Empire to the American and French Revolutions, coffeehouses have offered a place for (sober) people to discuss new waves of thought.

A woman is flanked by portraits of Soviet leaders Joseph Stalin and Vladimir Lenin. Lenin was the USSR's first ruler; Stalin served the longest.
European History

Soviet Union Leaders: A Timeline

From Stalin's reign of terror to Gorbachev and glasnost, meet the eight leaders who presided over the USSR.

European History

6 Famous Prisoners of the Tower of London

Find out about six prominent captives who did time in one of history’s most forbidding prisons.

See All Articles

About the author

Erin Blakemore
Erin Blakemore

Erin Blakemore is an award-winning journalist who lives and works in Boulder, Colorado. Learn more at erinblakemore.com

Fact Check

We strive for accuracy and fairness. But if you see something that doesn't look right, click here to contact us! HISTORY reviews and updates its content regularly to ensure it is complete and accurate.

Citation Information

Article title
When Princess Margaret’s Affair Hit the Tabloids—and Torpedoed Her Marriage
Author
Erin Blakemore
Website Name
History
URL
https://www.history.com/articles/princess-margaret-affair-roddy-llewellyn-divorce-antony-armstrong-jones-lord-snowdon
Date Accessed
May 14, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
January 31, 2025
Original Published Date
February 21, 2019

History Revealed

Sign up for "Inside History"

Get fascinating history stories twice a week that connect the past with today’s world, plus an in-depth exploration every Friday.

By submitting your information, you agree to receive emails from HISTORY and A+E Global Media. You can opt out at any time. You must be 16 years or older and a resident of the United States.

More details: Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Contact Us

King Tut's gold mask
A+E Global Media
History

HISTORY Education

HISTORY Vault™

HISTORY Apps

HISTORY2™

HISTORY en Español®

Military HISTORY®

Newsletter Sign Up

Share Your Opinions

FAQ / Contact Us

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

A&ELifetimeLMNFYIVICE TV
BiographyCrime+InvestigationLRW

Advertise with Us

A+E Factual Studios™

A+E Studios®

Employment Opportunities

Accessibility Support

TV Parental Guidelines

© 2025, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Copyright Policy

Cookie Notice

Ad Choices

We’ve updated our
Terms of Use

We encourage you to review our updated Terms of Use. By clicking Continue, you agree to our updated Terms of Use.