Myleene Klass is hoping for a wedding 'with a difference'
Myleene Klass is keen to have a wedding "with a difference" as she discussed the prospect of marrying her fiancé Simon Motson.
Myleene Klass wants a wedding "with a difference".
The 47-year-old star has been engaged to her partner Simon Motson since 2020 and explained that she wants the pair's wedding ceremony to be extra special as she gets the chance "to dress up all the time".
Myleene told HELLO! magazine: "I don't know what the longest engagement in the history of the world is, but this could be it. We've all been dragging our heels with it, haven't we?"
Asked if she could get married this year, the Loose Women panellist added: "Maybe; I don't know. I think it's probably because I get the opportunity to dress up all the time and have these lovely concerts and things – so maybe it would have to be a ceremony with a bit of a difference."
Klass is marking 20 years as a presenter on the radio station Classic FM, although she confessed that she only expected to be famous for a brief period after finding fame with the band Hear'Say on the ITV reality show Popstars back in 2001.
The star – who has daughters Ava, 18, and Hero, 14, with ex-husband Graham Quinn and son Apollo, six, with Simon – said: "I thought I was going to be famous for three months over Christmas in Hear'Say.
"That's what they promised me. But I move and I welcome change. I get bored very easily and like to look for new opportunities. When they present themselves, I grab them."
Myleene continued: "I look at the trailblazers out there – people like (the model) Twiggy, whom I'm proud to call a friend – and I just think, 'Keep on blazing that trail for us.'"
The star was presented with an MBE by King Charles last July for services to women's health, miscarriage awareness and charity and revealed that she told the monarch what she was campaigning for at the Windsor Castle investiture.
Klass, who has suffered four miscarriages, explained: "I said that, at the moment in the UK, you had to have had three consecutive miscarriages before there was medical intervention.
"I said: 'Surely, Your Highness, you wouldn't expect to have three consecutive heart attacks before any kind of medical intervention?' And he agreed."