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Maria Shriver is 'open' to finding love

Maria Shriver is 'open' to finding love

Perth Now03-06-2025
Maria Shriver is "open" to finding love again.
The 69-year-old author - who was married to Hollywood star Arnold Schwarzenegger between 1986 and 2021 - isn't actively looking for love at the moment, but she's remaining open-minded about her future.
Maria said on the 'Jamie Kern Lima Show': "I'm a frustrated matchmaker myself, and I'm a big believer in relationships and love.
"I've just kind of gotten to the place now where I'm thinking, I don't know, maybe, but my life is really full. I'm not looking, but I'm open to whatever God sends my way."
Maria has "never been on a dating app" in her life. And although her kids are keen to create an online profile for her, Maria has so far resisted the idea of joining a dating app.
The author - who has Katherine, 35, Christina, 33, Patrick, 31, and Christopher, 27, with her ex-husband - shared: "My kids have kidded around going, 'We should make you a dating app [profile].' I'm like 'Absolutely not!'"
Maria's perception of love has actually changed over recent years, acknowledging that no single person can "give you everything you're looking for".
She said: "I used to think that love came only in an intimate, romantic package, and it made me miss out on all the love that was being offered to me through my friends and through other people. And I've now realised that there's so many different ways to access the love that is there for us, the love that exists for us, because we're so focused on 'dating', right? Or your marriage, partner, and that nobody can give you everything you're looking for."
Maria thinks her next relationship is likely to be healthier, because of everything she's learned and experienced in recent years.
The author - who split from her former husband after he confessed to having had an affair - said: "I'm really focused on expanding my notion of love, expanding the amount of people that are in my open field so to speak, that bring me love. And so whomever I end up with, if I do end up with someone that way, they're going to be in a village."
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The puppets take their final bow. I quietly wipe a tear. The next day by the famous lake where Maria and the children fell out of the boat, I meet Peter Husty, chief curator at the Salzburg Museum. He tells me a new museum will open near Hellbrunn Palace next year, just steps from where the famous gazebo, in which Liesl and Rolf serenaded each other, now stands. 'There have been ideas for a museum for 25 years,' he says. 'But we're official and serious – we're not a private, commercial thing. It's not going to be an excuse for a gift shop.' The museum aims to tell two stories: the Hollywood legend, and the Austrian reality. 'People come for Julie Andrews, but they often don't know there was a real Maria von Trapp,' he explains. 'The family's story is a mirror of 20th-century Austrian history – monarchy, war, loss and emigration.' Husty has spent years buying and begging from extensive private collections, including global film posters, soundtracks and rare memorabilia. 'We won't make it a cinema – we'll tell stories, show objects, backstage photos. It's a cultural history.' For Husty, the film's impact is still striking. 'Every time I see a group rush to the gazebo, singing, I say it's like a pilgrimage,' he laughs. When he curated the first local exhibition of the film in 2011, he even changed the carillon in Mozart Square to play Edelweiss. Tourists looked up, singing. Salzburgers called the museum asking, 'What the hell is that music?' And that, really, is the point. The Sound of Music has never been about historical accuracy. It's about the refusal to be cynical. It believes that music can heal, that family can triumph, and that confidence can be sung into being. Today, in a world spinning faster and more frantically than ever, The Sound of Music remains a gentle act of resistance. It reminds us that optimism isn't naive. It's necessary. 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