ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus reveals he has sex several times a week, opening up about his private life in a recent interview.
Björn was quizzed about how frequently he tends to get intimate with his wife of 37 years, Lena Kallersjö.
Opening up, he said: “I’m 75 and I can’t manage more than four times a week.”
The Money, Money, Money hitmaker added that his wife wasn’t a fan of one of his lockdown habits, after months of self-isolating together.
Asked about his “most unappealing habit,” he added to The Guardian said: “If you ask my wife, it would probably be my habit of walking around in a bathrobe all day long during our corona self-isolation.”
(Image: PA)
However, the ABBA star hinted their relationship was a happy one, as he added that “love” feels like “a calm and secure feeling of deep loyalty”.
The music legend has been married to journalist Lena since 1981, with the sweethearts raising two daughters together – Emma Eleonora, 38, and Anna Linnea, 34.
Björn and Lena formerly lived in the UK, but have since returned to Stockholm, living together in the suburban district of Djursholm.
He was formerly wed to his fellow ABBA bandmate Agnetha Fältskog, though their marriage ended in 1980 after nine years together.
(Image: Getty Images)
The couple, who fell in love in their teens after meeting in a cafe, also have two children together, Linda and Peter.
Their breakup inspired the hit song The Winner Takes it All, with lyrics such as “Though it’s hurting me, now it’s history”.
Björn and Agnetha weren’t the only couple in the group – their bandmates Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad were also dating when the band started out.
(Image: Getty Images)
After tying the knot in 1978, however, Benny and Anni-Frid divorced three years later, with both eventually remarrying.
Decades later, the supergroup promised to release new music in the future, with Björn teasing the release of several new tracks back in 2018.
Speaking to PA, he said: “One of them is a pop tune, very danceable. The other is more timeless, more reflective, that is all I will say. It is Nordic sad, but happy at the same time.
“I think that exuberant quality of the two ladies [Fältskog and Lyngstad] together singing, that makes the saddest song a bit uplifting. I think that is what happens and that [it] is very organic: [it] isn’t calculated, [it] just happened that way.”
Source: Celebrities - dailystar.co.uk