Laura Boyer wanted to be buried next to her father but it couldn’t be: the role of Isabel Preysler and her daughter Ana

Laura Boyer, former minister’s daughter Miguel Boyerwho died last Thursday, was buried in the Irún cemetery, where the remains of some of her paternal relatives rest, such as Agustín Boyer, known for his talent as a painter, who was godfather to his niece.

Laura died at the Ramón y Cajal Hospital in Madrid, two and a half years after she was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. After a very tough treatment with radiation and chemotherapy, Laura decided to stop taking the medication and face the end of it with serenity, but she had time to say goodbye to her four children, who were very attentive to her all the time, and to decide that she wanted to be buried in the San Isidro cemetery, along with her father, who died in 2014.

But his last wish was not possible. After some unsuccessful calls from the Boyer-Arnedo family to Isabella Preysler, the second wife of the former Minister of Economy of Felipe Gonzalez He finally spoke with Laura’s relatives, who perceived “certain difficulties” on the part of the Filipina to carry out the wishes of Laura’s eldest daughter. Elena Arnedo y Miguel Boyer, according to comments from the environment of the family of the deceased.

Finally, Preysler agreed. But at that point the Boyers already preferred to take Laura’s remains to the Irún cemetery, where other relatives rest. At the Madrid funeral home, where family and friends gathered to say her last goodbye, she did not go Ana Boyer, Laura’s younger sister on the father’s side, although “she was not expected either”, the sources consulted confirm.

The relations between them had always been distant and after Miguel Boyer’s death, non-existent, due to issues related to inheritance. Miguel Boyer died without fortune due to the large expenses incurred by the treatment after the stroke suffered in 2012. But the two children of the former minister and Elena Arnedo considered that they should have received at least some personal memory of his father and reproached Isabella Preysler having denied them an aspiration that they considered legitimate.

Flower crown without the names of Ana Boyer or Isabel Preysler, only Tamara

The flower crown that arrived at the funeral home, with the names of Isabel, Ana and Tamara Falco, was received with skepticism by the Boyer family and considered an “insincere” gesture by Ana and her mother, as they explain to us from the tone of the deceased, who refer to the other part of the family as people who “never They had not appreciated Laura, nor had they been interested in her during her long illness”. She has been Tamara Falco the only one that has ruled on the death of Ana’s sister, describing it as “very sad”. They did not want the names that the crown of Isabel and Ana wore to be seen, and they only allowed Tamara’s to be seen.