Kate Middleton lookalike: It wasn't me at the farm shop!
A professional Kate Middleton lookalike has insisted it "100 percent" wasn't her at Windsor Farm Shop this week, despite conspiracy theorists insisting the sighting of Catherine, Princess of Wales wasn't really her.
A professional Kate Middleton lookalike has insisted it "100 percent" wasn't her at Windsor Farm Shop this week.
Catherine, Princess of Wales, underwent abdominal surgery in January but was seen out in public for the first time in video footage with husband Prince William a few days ago, only for online conspiracy theorists to insist it wasn't really the 41-year-old royal.
And now lookalike Heidi Agan has admitted she finds the speculation "disconcerting" and she believes it was the real Catherine in the video.
Asked if she believes it was really the princess, she told 'Entertainment Tonight': "Yeah, I do, 100 precent.
"I know 100 percent it wasn't me. Personally, I think she's fine, and she will come back when she's ready and when she's healed, and we just got to give her the time...
"Just the online stuff is, wow! People go crazy online and to experience that firsthand is disconcerting."
Heidi stressed that she has never been a "serious" body double for the princess.
She said: "I'm not employed by Kensington Palace. I'm self-employed, and I just go to fun parties and corporate events and things like that. Nothing as serious as actually impersonating her for her."
But the brunette beauty feels "blessed" to have such a "fantastic job".
She said: "It's a paid job, so I guess it's kind of like an acting job. You dress up like her when you go to work. I've traveled the world with it. I've been unbelievably blessed, and it really is one of the most fantastic jobs in the world."
And Heidi does a lot of research on her doppelganger.
She said: "I want to be the best at what I do, whether it's down to the perfume she's wearing or, you know, silly things that we have to know the name of the dog.
"And we have to watch how she interacts with William, how does she interact with the children? What are her little quirks? How she holds her hands. All those kinds of things are kind of what makes the experience, I think, a little bit more realistic."