After almost three years apart, Princess Mary of Denmark has had an emotional reunion with her dad, John Donaldson.
WATCH BELOW: Princess Mary and her family share video message from isolation
The two were recently seen enjoying each other’s company on a walk near, Amalienborg, the Copenhagen home of the Danish royal family.
Onlookers tell New Idea Mary and John looked happy and content as they enjoyed Denmark’s warm weather. Accompanying the pair was Mary’s dog, Grace, who ran off into the lush gardens at the royal property.
Due to strict COVID-19 travel restrictions across Europe, Mary and her father haven’t been seen in public together since December 2018.
Mary and husband Prince Frederik’s four children, Prince Christian, 15, Princess Isabella, 14, and 10-year-old twins Prince Vincent and Princess Josephine, have dearly missed their grandfather and enjoyed the emotional family reunion.
In May it was reported John, 80, and his second wife, Susan, as well as Mary’s three Australian-based siblings, were unable to attend her eldest son Christian’s confirmation due to the pandemic.
At the time, insiders said Mary, 49, was devastated not to have her loved ones, all of which she remains close with, at the special day.
The downsized event saw Prince Christian, who will one day inherit the Danish throne from his grandmother, Queen Margrethe, and his dad, undertake one of his first significant events as a royal.
it’s no secret Mary and her father share a close bond. In 2004, John walked the Tasmanian-born princess down the aisle on her wedding day.
In a touching move, the Danish royal family also extended John – a university academic who now splits his time between London and France – a coat of arms ahead of Mary and Fred’s fairytale nuptials.
Over the years, Mary has also spoken candidly about how the death of her mother affected her and the importance of the family bond.
Mary’s mother, Henrietta ‘Etta’ Donaldson, John’s first wife, died from a heart condition two years before Mary met her husband.
“I was 26. It happened too early,” Mary said in 2016 of her mother’s passing.
Earlier this year at the Children, Youth and Grief’s 20th Anniversary, she further opened up about the heartache.
“It is difficult, if not impossible, to find meaning in losing someone you love,” she said
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