MAFS star Charlie Curtis reveals savage way ex wife Eve cut final tie with her the DAY they left show
Charlie has also lifted the lid on THAT reunion snub
MARRIED At First Sight UK’s Charlie Curtis has revealed the brutal way her ex-wife Eve Reid made sure all bridges between them were burned.
Charlie, 30, has admitted that Eve cut the last tie with her just HOURS after filming for this year’s series of MAFS UK had wrapped.
Ensuring that their marriage was dead and buried for good, Eve blocked Charlie online – and hasn’t unblocked her to this day.
Speaking exclusively to The Sun, Charlie said: “Eve blocked me on everything and I’ve never been unblocked since that day. It was so savage.”
Charlie and Eve met for the first time at the alter on this year’s MAFS UK and instantly hit it off.
However, within days their spark had turned sour and they came to blows several times during their honeymoon.
At one point, Charlie even threw her wedding ring at Eve when their conflict became too much.
Sadly, there was no way back for the couple and they quit the E4 experiment when their relationship hit rock bottom.
Fans of the show watched in anticipation as the series came to a dramatic end with a big reunion episode.
But although Charlie attended the reunion, Eve stayed firmly away.
“Before the reunion, I had written her a letter, just with everything in it. But she didn’t turn up. Shock,” Charlie told us.
“I was just a bit gutted because it’s the closure, isn’t it?
“Not that you need closure to move on? I have moved on, but it’s more of a respect thing.”
She added: “There was so much that I learned watching the series back as well that I didn’t know had been going on, which was awful.
or I didn’t know that was, was being have behind my back basically, which was awful.”
Last month, Charlie confirmed she has moved on by going public with her new girlfriend Philly Ward.
The pair were all smiles as they filmed themselves while pumpkin picking for Halloween.
Mafs couples that have stood the test of time
Loved-up Tayah Victoria and Adam Aveling of series six fame had the first Mafs baby.
The pair couldn’t keep their hands off each other on the programme and quickly found their feet in the outside world, moving into Adam’s Doncaster home.
Just 18 months after meeting, the couple welcomed their daughter Beau.
Season five couple Michelle Walder and Owen Jenkins also managed to make their marriage work away from the cameras and had their first child in December.
Teacher Michelle, 29, has no regrets about taking part in the experiment. She told us: “I just feel very lucky and thankful that it has worked out – and excited for everything to come.”
Michelle and Owen were both sick of dating apps when they applied in 2019.
Owen recalled: “I had been out for some drinks with a friend after work.
“While he was out for a cigarette I was scrolling on Instagram waiting for him to come back in.
“The MAFS advert was the last thing I saw, and I joked, ‘Wouldn’t it be funny if I signed up?’
“A few beers later when I was back at home I sent in the application, and the rest is history.”
Another couple to make Mafs UK history is Zoe Clifton and Jenna Robinson.
Despite a slight rocky start, where they clashed over Jenna’s vegan lifestyle, the show’s first same sex pairing are still going strong.
They even have a successful podcast together called Life With a Pod.
Jenna shed light on being involved in the show earlier this year when she told us: “We’re not legally married, and I never felt like we were. I definitely feel the process makes you take the relationship a lot more seriously and having the help of the experts… if you can survive that process it sets a firm foundation for a long-lasting relationship.”
Prior to this, Charlie had teased her new romance by posted a picture of herself holding hands with someone during a fried chicken date.
Speaking about her new girlfriend Philly, Charlie told us: “We’re very similar in the way that we communicate and just the way that we are.
“It’s just been so nice and refreshing to be with somebody who knows how to communicate because that was the issue before.”