Noble Blood - A Smoking Gun in the Spanish Royal Family
Episode Date: July 29, 2025King Juan Carlos I had an astonishingly eventful life and ruled as King of Spain for nearly four decades. But a tragic event when he was a teenager maybe have been the defining incident of his life.&n...bsp; Support Noble Blood: — Bonus episodes, stickers, and scripts on Patreon— Order Dana's book, 'Anatomy: A Love Story' and its sequel 'Immortality: A Love Story'See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
What's up, everyone?
I'm Ago Vodam.
My next guest, it's Will Ferrell.
Woo, woo, woo, woo.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
He goes, just give it a shot.
But if you ever reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't
feel fun anymore, it's okay to quit.
If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration.
It would not be on a calendar of, you know,
The cat just hang in there. Yeah, it would not be. Right, it wouldn't be that. There's a lot of luck.
Listen to Thanks, Dad, on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A quick note before our episode begins, this one includes the death of a child. And so please feel free to sit this one out if that's a subject you're particularly sensitive to.
Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of IHeart Radio and Grimm and Mild from Aaron Manky.
Listener discretion advised.
The date was March 26, 1956.
It was Holy Thursday, the day before Good Friday.
A pair of teenage brothers, 114, 118, attended evening mass with their family.
Once they were back home, the brothers went off.
on their own. Not long after, a shot was heard throughout the family home. Their father ran to investigate
and discovered the younger brother bleeding from a gunshot wound to the head. He died in his father's arms.
This tragedy was compounded by the fact that the family at the time was living in exile
since their father was the rightful heir to the Spanish throne. The brother who lived,
would eventually go on to be known as Juan Carlos I.
He was the future king of Spain.
So what happened between those teenage brothers that night in 1956?
And what effect did it have on the almost 40-year reign of one of the most powerful men in the Western world?
I'm Dana Schwartz, and this is Noble Blood.
At one point, Juan Carlos I, who began his reign as king in 1975, was one of Spain's most popular monarchs,
especially beloved for safeguarding his country's often perilous relationship to democracy.
As recently as 2008, he was considered the best-regarded leader in the Spanish-speaking world.
but less than a decade later, he would abdicate in a cloud of controversy.
What went wrong?
And did what happened decades earlier on that holy day back in 1956 play a part?
Juan Carlos I was born into the Spanish Bourbon dynasty that descended from the French Bourbonne line
and had ruled Spain since the 18th century.
His birth in January of 1938 came during a tumultuous time in Spain's history.
Juan Carlos's grandfather, King Alfonso I, had been forced into exile in 1931 with the Second Spanish Republic.
This was Spain's attempt at a democratic government, with a majority of citizens voting to reject the monarchy
and embrace more progressive policies.
The country then descended into political chaos,
with a rotating group of factions vying for control.
By the time Juan Carlos was born,
the Spanish Civil War was in full swing.
Francisco Franco's military coup had been raging for two years,
pitting monarchists, fascists, and the Catholic Church,
against loyalists who supported a democratically elected republic.
A year later, the country turned into a full-out fascist dictatorship in 1939.
Franco, backed by Hitler and Mussolini, won control of the country to the tune of half a million lives.
This was not a great time to be a member of the nobility in Spain,
As direct descendants of the Spanish royal family, Juan Carlos and his siblings spent much of their childhoods in exile, first in Italy and later in Portugal.
Their father was Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona, Infante being the title given at birth to the descendants of current and past Spanish monarchs, taking the place of the Anglophone prince or princess.
But though Infante Juan was next in line for the monarchy, the son of Spain's last king would never rise above the rank of count, thanks to the political turmoil in his home country.
The Infante's wife was Maria, his third cousin and a princess in her own right.
Juan Carlos was the oldest of four children, with two younger sisters and finally a youngest boy, his brother.
Alfonso. The family bounced around, first to Italy, then Switzerland, and eventually settling in
Portugal. By 1956, the family's home base was their Via Heraldo, their sprawling estate on the Portuguese
Riviera. It was there that tragedy would strike and forever alter the course of the future
king's life. Juan Carlos's younger brother, Alfonso, was born.
in Rome in 1941 as Europe was being torn apart by World War II. By all accounts, he was a spirited,
popular boy, who brought lightness to what could have been a dreary existence in exile. The two
brothers were each other's lifelines. For Juan Carlos, who was naturally more introspective,
Alfonso brought energy and joy to their displaced existence. The future king often struggled with
loneliness, and Alfonso's presence was one of the few constants that made their nomadic childhood
bearable. When they were old enough, both brothers were sent to study in Spain, with the express
permission of General Franco. The boys attended a few different private schools, with Juan Carlos
ending up at the prestigious Zaragoza Military Academy. He was, by all accounts, a good student with a keen
sense of justice, who refused special treatment and was happy to leverage his royal cachet to
help his buddies meet girls. While at home, Alfonso was the clear favorite. At school, Juan
Carlos found his own ways to shine. In 1956, 14-year-old Alfonso and 18-year-old Juan Carlos
were both home at Villa Heralda, visiting family for the Easter holidays. Holy Thursday had
started well for Alfonso. The whole family attended morning Mass and took communion.
Then he participated in the semifinals of a local junior golf tournament. Alfonso won and was
excited to compete in the finals that Saturday. The evening concluded with evening mass. Then the family
retired home for the evening where the brothers headed for the house's playroom. That's when
tragedy struck. The details of what happened next have been debated for decades.
Let's start with the official statement issued the next day by the Spanish embassy in Portugal
by the order of General Franco. Quote, while His Highness the Infante Alfonso was cleaning a revolver
last evening with his brother, a shot was fired, hitting his forehead and killing him in a few
minutes. The accident took place at 20, 30 hours after the Infante's return from the Monday
Thursday religious service, during which he had received Holy Communion. This version quickly
came under scrutiny. The brothers had both received enough military training to know how to
properly clean a gun. It seemed odd that either young man would be foolish enough to clean a weapon
without first checking to make sure it wasn't loaded.
Was that really what occurred?
Alternate accounts began to emerge almost immediately.
The Italian press reported that Juan Carlos, not Alfonso,
had been holding the weapon when it fired.
It should be noted that at no point as anyone in the royal family
disputed that version of the story,
the one in which Juan Carlos was holding,
the gun. Hosefina Corolla, the family's dressmaker, claimed that the countess later told her
the true version of what happened that night. Although the boy's mother never made an official
statement on the tragic events, she allegedly confided in her dressmaker that Juan Carlos was
joking around and pointed the gun at his little brother, thinking the gun was empty, he pulled the
trigger. Bernardo Arnoso, a Portuguese friend of Juan Carlos, reportedly heard a similar confession
from Juan Carlos himself, although in this version the bullet ricocheted off a wall before striking
Alfonso. An entirely different account came from the boy's sister Pilar, who told Greek author
Helena Mathiopolis a version that paints the shooting as even more accidental.
According to Pilar, Alfonso had left the playroom briefly to get them both some snacks.
When he returned with his hands full, he pushed the door open with his shoulder.
The door struck Juan Carlos' arm just as he was handling the gun,
causing an involuntary trigger pull at the moment Alfonso's head appeared in the doorway.
More recently, another witness has come forward.
with his own account. Prince Victor Emmanuel of Savoy, the son of Italy's last king and a childhood
friend of Juan Carlos, shared his version of events in a 2023 documentary about his own scandal
involving the death of a German teen in 1978. In the documentary, Victor reveals that he was
there with the brothers in the playroom when Alfonso died. He insisted the shooting or
was accidental, but suggested it happened through a closet door rather than in an open room.
Given the fact that Victor wasn't mentioned in any other account and his own life was riddled with
controversies and illegal activities, we'll take his addition to the topic with a grain of salt.
What all these accounts share is their agreement on one crucial point. This was a tragic
accident, not an intentional act. They also agree on what happened immediately afterward. The boy's
father rushed in to find Alfonso bleeding out on the playroom floor. Despite the Count's best
efforts to revive his son, the boy died in his arms within minutes. In his grief and rage,
the Count reportedly grabbed Juan Carlos and shouted at him, swear to me that he,
that you didn't do it on purpose.
The aftermath was swift and decisive.
There would be no investigation by Portuguese authorities,
no autopsy and no formal inquiry into these circumstances.
Despite, or perhaps because of, the royal status of those involved,
this was very much a closed-door family tragedy.
Alfonso was buried quietly in a nearby cemetery,
and shortly after the funeral,
the Count picked up the weapon that had killed his son
and hurled it into the ocean.
Juan Carlos was ordered to return to Spain at once.
Less than 48 hours after his little brother's death,
he was already on his way back to military school.
We can't know exactly what he was thinking
as he made his way back to Zaragoza,
but it's clear that the silence that surrounded this tragedy
shaped the man he would become. Back at school, he was withdrawn and tormented, but he wouldn't be able to
stay that way forever. Eventually, General Franco came calling for him. The reign of Juan Carlos I
Carlos I was full of highs and lows. For many years, he was a beloved king, responsible for
bringing Spain back from the dark ages of fascism. But by the time he asked, he had,
abdicated, he was awash in controversy, with many calling for his removal.
In 1947, legislation was passed that both cemented Spain's status as a monarchy and allowed
General Franco to choose his own successor. In a surprising move, the dictator passed over Juan
Carlos' father in favor of the younger prince. The count was seen as too liberal, and perhaps
Perhaps Franco assumed a younger monarch would be easier to control.
But Juan Carlos surprised them all.
Rather than becoming a puppet ruler, he emerged as a champion of Spain's democracy.
After Franco's death in 1975, the young king began reforms to move the country away from authoritarianism
and back towards a constitutional monarchy.
For three decades, he was privileged.
praised as a transformational figure who brought Spain back into the European mainstream.
But as time went on, another side of Juan Carlos began to emerge, and controversy followed.
There were whispers about extramarital affairs, as well as an indulgent lifestyle that seemed
increasingly disconnected from the struggles of ordinary Spaniards.
These might have remained palace gossip, except for an incident that just happened to take place during a spectacular lapse in judgment.
In April 2012, as Spain struggled with disastrously high unemployment rates, nearly 50% for young workers,
photos emerged of Juan Carlos on a luxury safari in Botswana.
In them, he stood holding a rifle in front of a dead elephant.
His companion on the trip, a woman who was most certainly not Queen Sophia, his wife.
The trip might have remained secret, except that the king fell and broke his hip, requiring a special aircraft to bring him home for medical treatment.
The optics were devastating.
The hunting expedition was outrageously expensive, making it incredibly tone-deaf of the king.
The photos were striking imagery, highlighting the irresponsibility of royal privilege in the face of such nationwide hardship.
His approval ratings, once impressively high, began their terminal decline.
The scandal opened the floodgates that had been held back by decades.
of respectful media coverage.
Suddenly, Spanish journalists were investigating other aspects of the king's private life.
They uncovered an embezzlement scandal involving his daughter and son-in-law.
More damaging still were revelations about his relationship with a German businesswoman,
as well as allegations that he'd received massive kickbacks from Saudi Arabia's high-speed rail contracts,
during the late 2000s. By 2014, Juan Carlos could read the writing on the wall,
and chose to abdicate in favor of his son Felipe. His life post-monarchy has remained
plagued with controversies, but one early event was never far from his mind. According to his
former mistress Corinna Larson, Alfonso's death continued to haunt Juan Carlos well into his old
old age. Larson explained on a podcast that, despite his immense power and wealth, the former
king never got over that Holy Thursday in 1956. She said, I think deep down in his soul and in his
head, he feels a lot of guilt. He has nightmares about it. He told me that his younger brother
was the really bright one, the handsome one, the best golfer, the parents' favorite.
son. He felt that his younger brother was really the light that shone in the family.
It didn't matter that Juan Carlos had commanded a nation for almost four decades, amassing wealth
and respect that most people could never even dream of. Part of him apparently always felt like
and also ran, the older brother who should have been his family's golden child, but instead
found himself forever chasing the glory of a dead 14-year-old.
Right after the accident, when their father made Juan Carlos swear he didn't do it on purpose,
what kind of effect might a question like that have had on a young man during the worst
moment of his life?
Perhaps tellingly, it took Juan Carlos 36 years to bring his brother's remains back to
to Spain. Alfonso was hastily buried at the time back in Portugal, less than two days after his
death, but he wouldn't be brought back to his home country until 1992, when he was re-interred
in the royal mausoleum at the monastery El Escorial outside Madrid. Many speculated that the
delay reflected the king's ongoing sensitivity about the circumstances of his brother's death.
The irony is inescapable.
A man who spent decades successfully avoiding legal consequences
could never escape the psychological consequences of a teenage tragedy.
Critics have called him, quote,
the luckiest man alive for his ability to dodge accountability,
comparing his knack for escapism to none other than Donald Trump's.
But if Juan Carlos' story has taught us,
anything. It's that luck will only get you so far. And eventually, tragedy catches up with you
one way or another. That's the story of the tragedy of Juan Carlos and his brother Alfonso.
But keep listening after a brief sponsor break to hear a little bit more about the metaphorical
resonance of that event.
What's up, everyone? I'm Ego Wode. My next guest, you know from Stepbrothers Anchorman,
Saturday Night Live and the Big Money Players Network.
It's Will Ferrell.
Woo, woo, woo, woo, woo.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with them one day,
and I was like, and Dad, I think I want to really give this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place they come,
look for up and coming talent.
He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you,
which is really sweet.
Yeah.
He goes, but there's so much luck involved.
and he's like just give it a shot
he goes but if you ever reach a point
where you're banging your head against the wall
and it doesn't feel fun anymore
it's okay to quit
if you saw it written down it would not be an inspiration
it would not be on a calendar
of you know
the cat just hang in there
yeah it would not be
right it wouldn't be that
there's a lot of luck
listen to thanks dad on the iHeart radio app
Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcast
What's up, everyone? I'm Ego Wodom.
My next guest, you know from Step Brothers Anchorman, Saturday Night Live, and the Big Money Players Network.
It's Will Ferrell.
Woo, woo, woo, woo.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with them one day, and I was like, and dad, I think I want to really give this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place they come.
Look for up and coming talent.
He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you, which is really sweet.
Yeah.
He goes, but there's so much luck involved.
And he's like, just give it a shot.
He goes, but if you ever reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore, it's okay to quit.
If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration.
It would not be on a calendar of, you know, the cat, just hang in there.
Yeah, it would not be.
Right, it wouldn't be that.
There's a lot of luck.
Listen to Thanks, Dad, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
When you think about it, the story of one Carlos I first can be seen as a meditation on the different ways types of weapons can destroy a life.
There was the hunting rifle in the safari photographs that marked the beginning of the end of his popular support.
There was the metaphorical smoking gun, evidence of financial corruption that drove him into exile,
and of course there's the weapon that cast the longest shadow over his life,
the one that killed Alfonso on that chilly March day in 1956.
That gun may have disappeared beneath the ocean waves, but its impact rippled through the decades,
shaping the character of a king for better or for worse.
Noble Blood is a production of IHeart Radio and Grimm and Mild from Aaron Manky.
Noble Blood is hosted by me, Dana Schwartz,
with additional writing and research by Hannah Johnston, Hannah Zwick, Courtney Sender, Amy Height, and Julia Milani.
The show is edited and produced by Jesse Funk,
with supervising producer Rima Il Kali, and examines.
Executive producers, Aaron Manky, Trevor Young, and Matt Frederick.
For more podcasts from IHeartRadio, visit the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
What's up, everyone? I'm Ago Vodom. My next guest, it's Will Ferrell.
Woo, woo, woo, woo, woo, woo. My dad gave me the best advice ever. He goes, just give it a shot.
But if you ever reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore, it's okay to.
quit. If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration. It would not be on a calendar
of, you know, the cat. Just hang in there. Yeah, it would not be. Right, it wouldn't be that.
There's a lot of luck.
Listen to Thanks Dad on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.
