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So far, Maxima has appeared to handle the intense scrutiny with ease. Even calling her future husband and the country's next king "a bit dumb" during her first press conference 10 years ago worked in her favor. "The fact that she said it in fluent Dutch with a sense of humor won a lot of people over," said Van der Linden. But like most every aspect of her life as a princess, even that seemingly throwaway line was stage managed by Royal House advisers, said Van der Linden. "Originally the crown prince was supposed to say it himself, but for the effect they decided Maxima would do it," he said. The comment deftly defused a storm of protest that erupted when Willem-Alexander made remarks defending Maxima's father, Jorge Zorreguieta, despite his position as a cabinet minister in Argentina's military dictatorship during the country's "dirty war" of the late 1970s and early
'80s, when the regime killed or kidnapped thousands of suspected dissidents. While no one accused Zorreguieta of being party to the abuses, the Dutch government, with Maxima's reluctant consent, sent an elder statesman to Argentina to inform him he would be unwelcome at the wedding. Maxima shares her down-to-earth appeal with princesses in Denmark and Sweden, where those Scandinavian royal houses mirror their egalitarian societies. Sweden's Princess Victoria married her gym instructor last year and Denmark's Crown Prince Frederik wed Australian real estate agent Mary Donaldson four years after meeting her in a Sydney bar during the 2000 Olympic Games. Norway's future queen, the former Mette-Marit Tjessem Hoiby, was a single mother when she wed Crown Prince Haakon. The father of her son was once convicted of drug offenses, and Princess Mette-Marit gave a tearful apology to the nation for her earlier freewheeling days. Royal watchers believe it is the spontaneous, unchoreographed moments in Maxima's life as a princess that have endeared her most to her adopted country of 16 million: Tears coursing down her face at her wedding, her wide-eyed horror as she watched from an open-topped bus when a crazed loner plowed his car into a crowd watching a royal parade, or jumping up and down and cheering as Dutch speedskaters compete at Winter Olympics. Her popularity has even rubbed off a bit on her husband, who has struggled to win the affection of future subjects. "Maxima has temperament. She dances, she sings, she gives the royal family a certain joie de vivre," said Van der Linden. "Willem-Alexander was regarded as dull and stiff. With Maxima next to him he gets more color."
[Associated
Press;
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