What Connecticut cardiac nurse with a heart of gold would want this a-hole? Of course, there can't be a romance without the leading man's change of heart, so he eventually warms to the nurse.
Initially, Tveit's prince character was churlish and unpleasant, almost to the point where you had to wonder what the writers were thinking. And the pairing made me wonder if, sometime in the past, they hadn't hooked up in some drafty drawing room. His security man, on the other hand, was darkly handsome and a bit more rugged. And the wardrobe department dressed him in ill-fitting suits. The thing with Tveit, though, is that here he was thin as a rail, almost sickly, and had a greasy mop of hair that did him no favors. Tveit adopts a properly British accent, because, hey, all royals in Hallmark movies have to sound British. The royals decamp to the woman's family's inn and hilarity ensues. So they're rescued by a well-meaning cardiac nurse whose family (natch) happens to own a charming inn in Connecticut. And hotels near the airport are all booked. near Christmas, without a way to immediately get back to the mother country. He and his mother (and handsome security man) are stranded in the U.S.
AARON CUTE GAY TWINK PICS MOVIE
Just saw Tveit slumming in a Hallmark movie in which he played the prince of some ersatz European duchy, but is initially mistaken for a commoner.