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Monday, 17 February, 2003, 14:22 GMT

Hello! 'sorry' for Zeta distress

Hello! magazine's owner has apologised to Catherine Zeta Jones and Michael Douglas for causing offence and distress by publishing paparazzi photographs of their wedding.

But Eduardo Sanchez Junco, whose magazine is defending legal action brought by the couple and rival OK!, said he thought the stars' reactions were over-the-top.

" I think that their attitude was a little bit exaggerated "
Eduardo Sanchez Junco
Hello!

Zeta Jones told the court last week that she felt "devastated, violated and upset" by the coverage.

Zeta Jones and Douglas are suing Hello! for £500,000 after the magazine published the unauthorised photos despite an exclusive £1m deal with OK!. OK! is suing Hello! for £1.75m.

In London's High Court on Tuesday, Mr Sanchez was challenged over Hello!'s story which said Douglas did not dance with his bride and that he gave her a yacht as a present.

"I don't think there is anything particularly unpleasant about them or offensive," he said of the statements.

He did not pay any attention to the text, he said - only the layout of the pictures, which he oversaw.

When told by Michael Tugendhat QC, representing the Hollywood stars, that Zeta Jones was very distressed by the publication, Mr Sanchez said: "I am sorry about that."

"Were you surprised to hear how distressed they were?" Mr Tugendhat asked.

"To a certain extent yes. I think that their attitude was a little bit exaggerated," Mr Sanchez replied.

He said he did not know how the couple had reacted until they gave evidence on Monday.

"I am sorry Miss Zeta Jones felt like that," he said.

Mr Tugendhat said: "Do you intend to convey an apology?"

"Obviously any way in which I have offended her, yes," Mr Sanchez said.

'No revenge'

The couple took out an injunction to stop Hello! publishing the pictures to protect their exclusive deal with OK! rather than because they were upset, Mr Sanchez told the court.

He also denied that he published the photos to get revenge on OK!, who beat Hello! in the bidding war for the official pictures.

He decided to use the paparazzi pictures to protect the economic interests of his magazine, he said.

On Friday, he told the court that Zeta Jones and Douglas were more concerned with making money out of their wedding photographs than protecting their privacy.

The celebrity couple appeared in court on Monday and described how the coverage turned the wedding into a "complete nightmare".

"It was truly gut-wrenching and very disturbing experience which left us both upset," Douglas said.

Zeta Jones - who has been nominated for an Oscar for her role in Chicago - said the pictures were "cheap and tacky" and the quality was "what any bride would hate to have out there".

The case continues.


Related to this story:
Zeta Jones 'wanted profit not privacy' (19 Feb 03 | Entertainment) Hello!'s Marquesa admits photos lie (12 Feb 03 | Entertainment) Hollywood at the High Court (10 Feb 03 | Entertainment) Celebrity court drama unfolds (10 Feb 03 | Entertainment) Zeta court case could make history (03 Feb 03 | Entertainment) High drama of cinema's golden couple (10 Feb 03 | Entertainment) A user's guide to privacy (28 Mar 02 | UK)


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