LONDON - After the wedding in a Scottish castle, the
mansion on a green English estate and the drinks in their own pub,
Madonna and Guy Ritchie's eight-year marriage ended Friday in a dreary
London courtroom.
The case of "Ciccone M.L. v Ritchie G.S." was
one of 17 divorce decrees granted by Judge Caroline Reid during a
hearing in a harshly lit London court that was over in a few minutes.
There
was no legal obligation for 50-year-old Madonna or Guy Ritchie, 40, to
attend the hearing at which they were granted a decree nisi, the first
of two stages of divorce. There was no sign of the couple and the room
was filled instead with journalists tracking the dying days of an
A-list celebrity romance. The divorce can become final after six weeks
and a day with the granting of a decree absolute.
Court papers
signed by Madonna in Los Angeles confirmed that the queen of pop
petitioned for divorce on the basis of Ritchie's "unreasonable
behavior," and that there is no need to apply family law in the case -
meaning that the couple have reached their own agreements over their
assets and children.
Madonna and Ritchie have two children,
Rocco, 8, and David Banda, 3, who was adopted from Malawi in 2006. The
singer has a 12-year-old daughter Lourdes, from a previous relationship
with personal trainer Carlos Leon.
The couple own homes in southwest England, London, Los Angeles and New York.
Madonna
and Ritchie appear to have avoided an expensive courtroom battle like
the one between former Beatle Paul McCartney and model Heather Mills.
Mills has said media coverage of the rancorous divorce had pushed her
to the brink of suicide; McCartney compared the process to going
through hell.
"Most couples do manage to do what Madonna and Guy
Ritchie have done, and sort out issues of assets and children among
themselves," said David Allison, a lawyer with London firm Family Law
in Partnership. "If they can't it has to go before a judge at a final
hearing and the whole process can go on for a year and be very messy."
Madonna
and Ritchie, director of "Snatch," ''Lock, Stock and Two Smoking
Barrels" and "RockNRolla," married in December 2000 in a
secrecy-shrouded ceremony at Skibo Castle in the Scottish Highlands
attended by Sting, Gwyneth Paltrow, Donatella Versace and Stella
McCartney.
Madonna - "Madge" to the British press - and her
filmmaker husband soon became rich tabloid fodder in England, where
they lived. The pop star seemed to take to English life, spending much
of her time at the couple's 1,200-acre (480 hectare) country estate in
southwest England, and to some ears, adopting a slight British accent.
Ritchie bought a share in a pub - The Punchbowl in west London's
exclusive Mayfair neighborhood - and Madonna took up a second career,
writing a series of children's books called "The English Roses."
But
in recent years, reports began to accumulate that they were on the
rocks. Over the summer, Madonna was linked - unfairly, she said - to
the breakup of New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez and his ex-wife Cynthia.
Last
month, as Madonna was in the middle of her ongoing "Sticky and Sweet"
world tour, the couple announced they were divorcing and the English
idyll drew to a close.
Requests for comment from representatives for the couple were not returned.