His ideal 21st century monarch was he. He demanded that the Swedish law be amended to permit his oldest daughter to succeed him.
For years, King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden’s only acknowledgement of a racier world was the stable of fast cars he enjoyed driving – while his 45-year marriage to Queen Silvia was credited as a wonderful example of partnership.
Yet in 2010 the Swedish monarchy was rocked by the release of a new biography about the King which shined a light on his ‘wild sex parties with strippers and lengthy affair with a singer’.
It was titled The Reluctant Monarch and accused King Carl, a third-cousin of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, of going to underground clubs with his friends as well as having an extramarital affair.
Now the author of the controversial book, Thomas Sjöberg, has appeared on a new podcast, Motive, to explore with the documentary series creator, Nils Bergman, the ‘royal scandal’.
Following the biography’s original release, King Carl offered a ‘vague’ statement, saying he and his family had chosen to ‘turn the page… and move forward because, as I understand, these are things that happened a long time ago.’
King Carl XVI Gustaf, of Sweden (pictured in ’90s), only acknowledgment of a racier universe was his fleet of fast cars. Queen Silvia, however was credited for his amazing example of partnership.
Yet in 2010 the Swedish monarchy was rocked by the release of a new biography about the King which shined a light on his ‘wild sex parties with strippers and lengthy affair with a singer’ Pictured, Camilla Henemark
It was called The Reluctant Monarch and accused King Carl, pictured with his wife recently, of going to underground clubs with friends and engaging in extramarital affairs.
This controversial book revealed the truth that King Charles and his friends were fond of the company of “coffee girls”, women who would entertain them. They included members of the Swedish royal family.
Also, it was claimed that the King visited underground club strip bars and that he had an extramarital affair (with a Swedish singer) in the 90s.
In the biography, the three investigative authors claimed the King had ‘wild sex parties involving strippers’, sometimes hosted by an infamous Mafia boss in a Stockholm club.
It was also alleged that, over many years, he had been protected by the Swedish secret service, Sapo, covering up embarrassing material in his wake and pressuring women to hand over compromising pictures.
Now the author of the controversial book (pictured), Thomas Sjöberg, has appeared on a new podcast, Motive, to explore with the documentary series creator, Nils Bergman, the ‘royal scandal’
Mille Markovic, the Mafia-linked owner of the club, was quoted as saying that the King liked him because it minimized the risk of police raids.
After the book was published, Markovic said that he had taken compromising photos of the King with naked women at one of his sex clubs during the 1980s.
In the descriptions of the six-part podcast, available via the Acast+ subscription service, it is said that the King and his friends, the so-called ‘royal gang’, for a few years in the early ‘90s had a standing reservation on Mondays at the underground club owned by Markovic.
‘Young women and strippers have in an almost systematic way been called into these party nights to please this elite group of powerful men,’ read the synopsis of episode two, when translated from Swedish to English.
‘The men have promised the world, modelling jobs and careers in the entertainment industry, in exchange for providing what they want.’
Many women who were interviewed claimed to have had sex at the King’s house. After one big dinner celebrating a successful elk hunt, he is said to have enjoyed sex with two women at the same time.
Following publication of the first biography, King Carl (pictured here with his wife) made an ambiguous statement. He said that his family decided to turn the page…and go forward as these were events that occurred a long while ago.
At the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, where the King of Sweden was inevitably a VIP guest, he is said to have spent $10,000 (£7,000) in the Gold Club nightclub, including two hours in a room alone with one of the strippers.
In some instances, Sapo agents have been used to search the homes of women in order to confiscate pictures taken at the King’s private parties.
‘If the rolls of film and pictures aren’t turned over, some unpleasant things will happen,’ the book startlingly claimed.
On 14 pages, he detailed the alleged long affair that he had with Camilla Hennemark, a Swedish model and singer.
Her response to the revelations following the book launch was not to deny them but merely to say her lawyer had advised her ‘not to give any comments’.
King Carl and Queen Silvia’s eldest child, Princess Victoria (pictured with her husband in 2019), is the heir to the throne, rather than her younger brother Prince Carl Philip, because of a change in the law insisted on by their father, which enables the eldest to inherit, whatever their sex
The book claimed that Queen Silvia was aware of this affair but was helpless as the King ‘had fallen in love like a teenager and, on one occasion, the King and Henemark were talking about leaving for a distant island, like Marlon Brando in Tetiaroa in French Polynesia, where they planned to live on coconuts’.
There had always been much sympathy for the King in Sweden, since it emerged that he is dyslexic and finds reading and writing difficult. He was also admired for the courage he showed to conquer the obstacles he had as a kid.
When his father died in an automobile accident, he was only seven months. This made him heir to his grandfather, King Gustaf. At the time he became King, he had been 27.
At the Olympic Games in Munich in 1972, he met Silvia Sommerlath, an interpreter with a German father and Brazilian mother. She was working as an official Games hostess.
The couple – who have three children – married in Stockholm Cathedral in 1976.
Their eldest child, Princess Victoria, is the heir to the throne, rather than her younger brother Prince Carl Philip, because of a change in the law insisted on by their father, which enables the eldest to inherit, whatever their sex.
‘It’s terrible that this has all come out,’ said a courtier at the time. ‘But the Queen is a trooper. She will show nothing.’
When first faced with questions about the book, after enjoying a gathering with friends and shooting elk, the King said he had not read it ‘yet’, but he understood what it contained.
‘I have spoken with my family and the Queen and we choose to turn the page … and move forward because, as I understand, these are things that happened a long time ago,’ he said.
Recalling the monarch’s statement, the podcast claims ‘the most important thing for the trio of authors is that the king at least does not deny any of their claims.’
However, Thomas, the author of the book, admits he was ‘punished for digging into the King’s private life’, finding it difficult to get new journalist assignments.
Branded a ‘scandal book author’, he began work as a bus driver in Stockholm.
Episode four of the podcast, meanwhile, details the release of The Reluctant Monarch, and how ‘it caused chaos within the Swedish media… drawing headlines all over the world.’
The scandalous book was published and the King’s reputation for ‘almost boring respectability’ underwent a dramatic transformation.
And in 2017, only one-fifth of the Swedish public polled said he was their favourite royal and some two-fifths said that he should abdicate, according to Newsweek.
Nearly 50% of respondents to a question about their favorite royal were able to choose his 44-year-old daughter Victoria.
Nils Bergman (creator of Motive) says, “I have been working on Motive almost two years and it is by far my largest venture to date.
‘I’ve spent countless hours on research to get to the bottom of what actually happened. Through these revelations I hope to give answers to questions not previously answered. This includes the entire story of Our Swedish King.