Will Mick Jagger marry again? GF Melanie Hamrick hopes he'll propose but singer has a 'Bohemian view' of marriage
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Mick Jagger's girlfriend is hopeful that the Rolling Stones member is going to take their relationship to the next level, Radar Online has reported. According to insiders, Melanie Hamrick, 36, who is in a relationship with the 79-year-old since 2014, "knew exactly what she was doing" and said that she "wouldn't say no" if the singer proposed to her. However, the chances of the duo tying the knot seem to be low, as Jagger previously stated in 2010 that he has ruled out ever marrying again.
Nevertheless, the former ballerina is making desperate attempts, even making her marital pleas public in order to change the iconic singer's mind. Hamrick and Jagger share six-year-old son Deveraux and the pair share a lot of history together.
Mick Jagger's views on marriage
The lead vocalist of Rolling Stones earlier claimed that he did not think marriage was "quite what it's cracked up to be." He said, "To be honest, I don't really think much of marriage. I'm not saying its not a wonderful thing and people shouldn't do it, but its not for me." Jagger added, "I just think it's perhaps not quite what its cracked up to be. I know its an elaborate fantasy."
Jagger, who has married twice, said at the time that he was happy to be dating his long-time girlfriend of nine years, fashion designer L'Wren Scott. The singer, who has seven other children from past relationships, said, "I don't really subscribe to a completely normal view of what relationships should be. I have a bit more of a bohemian view."
Mick Jagger's previous marriages
Mick Jagger first got married to Nicaraguan-born Bianca De Macias in 1971. They divorced after seven years after the former model accused the singer of adultery. He later began seeing Texan model Jerry Hall, with whom he had four children. After staying together for 13 years, they got married in 1990 in a Hindu beach ceremony in Indonesia. Their marriage was later annulled in August 1999.
Jagger also opened up about the derogatory comments made by his bandmate Keith Richards in his autobiography 'Life' during an interview for the New York Times magazine. Richards questioned the size of Jagger's manhood, describing it as "tiny todger." "Personally I think its really quite tedious raking over the past. Mostly, people only do it for money," the singer said of the book.
Although he expressed his desire to write an autobiography, he ultimately rejected the idea. "You don't want to end up like some old footballer in a pub, talking about how he made the cross in the cup final of 1964," he said.