Prince Albert II attends the 2020 Hollywood For The Global Ocean Gala honoring HSH Prince Albert II Of Monaco at Palazzo di Amore on February 06, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic )
The palace of Monaco says its ruler, Prince Albert II, has tested positive for the new coronavirus but his health is not worrying.
Albert, 62, appeared to be the first head of state who has publicly said he contracted the virus.
In a statement Thursday, the palace said he is being treated by doctors from the Princess Grace Hospital, named after his U.S. actress mother. It says Albert is continuing to work from his home office in the palace and is in constant contact with members of his government.
In the statement, Albert urged residents of his tiny Mediterranean principality to respect confinement measures.
Albert is the second child of Princess Grace — formerly Grace Kelly — and Prince Rainier of Monaco. Albert became a five-time Olympic bobsledder and in recent years has been a global environmental campaigner.
Fluent in English and French, Albert graduated from Amherst College in Massachusetts with a degree in political science in 1981, and is a member of the International Olympic Committee.
He and his wife, the former Charlene Wittstock, have twin children.
Shiri Reuveni-Ullrich, the founder of Rising Above Bakery, talks to Cheddar News about providing a unique opportunity for individuals with special needs to get work experience.
Cheddar News sits down with LeAnn Darland, Co-Founder of TALEA Beer Co, at her brewery in Brooklyn to find out how TALEA is disrupting the male-dominated business of craft beer, and paving the way for women in the industry.
Emmy award-winning actor Robert Blake, whose career triumphs were later overshadowed by a trial in which he was acquitted of killing his wife, died Thursday at age 89.
A letter claiming to be from the Mexican drug cartel blamed for abducting four Americans and killing two of them condemned the violence and said the gang turned over to authorities its own members who were responsible.
Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers is doubling down on creating a positive workplace for women — even as the percentage of women in executive positions in cannabis has stagnated in recent years.