Hollywood
royalty mixed with the real deal on Friday when Brad Pitt and Angelina
Jolie had tea with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and
Kate Middleton.
According to Us Weekly, the two couples met for a private meeting in Kensington Palace.
It is the first time they have come together.
Angelina was in London having flown in earlier in the week to attend a lunch at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office.
It was part of her work on UK foreign policy and involvement in an ongoing campaign to end sexual violence in war zones.
According to a source the meeting took place at around 3:45 pm on Friday.
Angelina, 40, was joined by husband Brad, 51, and they went to Kensington Palace for their chat.
The Royal couple were said to be 'really excited' about the afternoon tea,
The
Duke and Duchess, according to the source, were joined by their son
Prince George - who will be two years old in July, but the Jolie-Pitts
children were not present.
The Hollywood pair brought a special gift for their daughter Princess Charlotte, who was born in May.
'Everyone got on splendidly' said the source.
'Brad and Angelina spent much longer with the Duke and Duchess than planned. They ended up staying for almost a few hours.'
The insider added: 'They discussed their shared interest in combatting the illegal wildlife trade.'
It was the first time meeting for the foursome. In 2014 they all attended the BAFTA awards but didn't cross paths.
Last week
Angelina - who serves as a Special Envoy of the United Nations High
Commissioner for refugees - visited Turkey to mark World Refugee Day.
While there she took daughter Shiloh, nine, to visit a camp for Syrian refugees in Mardin Midyat, southeastern Turkey.
Angelina and U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres met Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in the city.
She also attended a Ramadan fast-breaking dinner at a nearby camp and visited refugees.
It
was Jolie's third visit to Turkey since 2011, when the conflict in
Syria began. The war has displaced more than 3million refugees, or
almost a fifth of the pre-war population.
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