Norway’s Crown Princess Mette-Marit has been pictured for the first time since undergoing a life-saving lung transplant in new photos after Norway qualified for the FIFA World Cup quarter-finals last night.
The princess, 52, was dressed casually in a grey coat, red football scarf, jeans, and thick socks, and wore no makeup in images of her watching Norway defeat Brazil 2-1 on TV with Crown Prince Haakon at their official residence in Oslo.
Another photo showed the royal couple looking out of a window, as the streets of Oslo erupted in celebration following the national team’s impressive win over Brazil.
The images shared on the Norwegian royal family‘s official Instagram account mark the first time Mette-Marit, 52, who suffers from a rare form of pulmonary fibrosis, has been seen since her surgery last month.
The Royal House of Norway confirmed the lung transplant had been successful in a statement on June 17, noting ‘everything has progressed well so far’.
While Mette-Marit and Haakon enjoyed the nail-biting FIFA World Cup qualifier from the comfort of Skaugum Estate, their eldest daughter, Princess Ingrid Alexandra, cheered the national team on from the stadium stands in New Jersey.
Accompanied by her brother Prince Sverre Magnus, Princess Ingrid Alexandra congratulated the players during a surprise visit to the dressing room, as seen in a video posted on the Norwegian royal family’s Instagram account.
Footage showed the princess hugging a topless Erling Haaland after he fired his nation into the quarter-finals of the World Cup, as fans declared ‘king and queen united’.
The princess, 52, was dressed casually in a grey coat, red football scarf, jeans, and thick socks, and wore no makeup in images of her watching Norway defeat Brazil 2-1 on TV with Crown Prince Haakon at their official residence in Oslo
Another photo showed the royal couple looking out of a window, as the streets of Oslo erupted in celebration following the national team’s impressive win over Brazil.
Princess Ingrid Alexandra, 22, is next in line for the throne and will eventually become Queen of Norway, so her presence in New Jersey was significant.
She first appeared at the tournament in the group-stage win over Senegal, when she replaced her father at short notice.
Crown Prince Haakon cancelled his visit after his wife went in for surgery, meaning that Princess Ingrid Alexandra stepped up, and she’s been a lucky charm in both games, with Norway – and particularly Haaland – shining on their first World Cup appearance in 28 years.
Meanwhile, King Harald and Queen Sonja – who was hospitalised for heart issues in May – supported the national team from their summer retreat in Mågerø on the island of Tjøme, as Norway advanced to the quarter-finals.
The World Cup represents Princess Ingrid Alexandra’s first official public appearance since Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s lung transplant last month as the palace confirmed she was being treated at the Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet.
‘We are delighted that everything has progressed well so far,’ Are Holm, a lung specialist at the hospital, said.
‘In accordance with standard practice for all recent transplant recipients, Her Royal Highness the Crown Princess will remain admitted to Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet for several weeks to come’.
Mette-Marit was diagnosed with the illness, which causes scarring of the lungs and serious breathing difficulties, in 2018.
Norway’s Crown Prince Haakon joins fans for the famous ‘Viking Row’ celebration
King Harald and Queen Sonja of Norway watched last night’s match from their summer retreat Magero
Norway’s Princess Ingrid Alexandra and her brother, Sverre Magnus, travelled to New Jersey to watch the match
Her condition had deteriorated significantly over the past six months, and her doctors announced on June 5 that she had been placed on the waiting list for a lung transplant.
Doctors said the procedure was a last resort when a patient is believed to have less than two years to live without new lungs.
Earlier this month, the future Queen suspended her official duties, and Norway’s Royal Court said ‘there will be a longer period of rehabilitation and training’ during which ‘there will initially be no updates.’
Crown Prince Haakon, who will one day succeed his father as king, will cut back his public engagements to spend time with his wife, the palace said.
Last month, Mette-Marit made a rare public appearance for the constitution parade – one of the first times the royal has been spotted wearing an oxygen mask to aid her breathing at a public event.
Together with her husband, 52, and son, Prince Sverre Magnus, 20, the family watched the children’s parade from their residence, Skaugum in Oslo, Norway.
The trio put on a brave face, waving towards cameras with wide grins, amid an incredibly challenging time for the Norwegian royal family.
The announcement of Mette-Marit’s transplant came just two days after an Oslo court sentenced her 29-year-old son from a previous relationship, Marius Borg Hoiby, to four years in prison for two counts of rape and 32 other offences.
An Oslo court also found him guilty of assaulting his former girlfriend, Nora Haukland, issuing threats and committing traffic offences, although he was acquitted of two other rape charges.
Hoiby had been charged with sexually assaulting four women who were asleep or otherwise unable to resist between 2018 and 2024.
The conviction marks a fall for Hoiby, who grew up in the public eye after his mother married Crown Prince Haakon in 2001, when he was just four years old.
Although he does not hold a royal title or carry out official duties, he has long been closely associated with the Norwegian royal family.
Judge Jon Sverdrup Efjestad handed down the sentence after hearing evidence linked to 40 charges, including four alleged rapes, assaults, breaches of restraining orders, drug offences and driving violations.
One charge relating to a restraining order violation was overturned.
The court heard how Hoiby’s drug addiction spiralled in recent years, while investigators presented more than 800 messages and a series of self-made videos of sexual encounters as evidence during the trial.
Hoiby has denied the most serious charges, and his lawyers have said they will appeal.



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