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Connie Britton engaged to producer David Windsor

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Published in Entertainment News

Connie Britton is engaged to producer David Windsor.

The 58-year-old actress is set to marry her longtime lover after being together for six years. Connie sported a ring on her left-hand ring finger as the pair kissed at LAX International Airport in Los Angeles, California on October 24, People reports.

The Nashville star recently gushed over David, saying he was "the one".

In March, she told Parade: "What I was really looking for was a partnership where there's constant growth, on both sides, and a sort of deepening of each other.

"It's not just like, 'Oh, I found true love.' It's that I found somebody who I can walk on a journey with that is going to be constantly ever-changing."

Connie and David first locked eyes with each other at a pal's 50th birthday in late 2019.

Speaking of her "amazing man", she said on SiriusXM's Radio Andy in 2023: "I walked into his party and I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I don't know a single soul at this party.'

"But I was like, 'It's OK, I just wanna celebrate him. It's his 50th birthday.'

"And so I'm talking to my friend, and he looks past me and he sees David across the room, and he is like, 'There's someone here you have to meet.'

"And it was like, I'll never forget that moment because I turned around and I looked at who he was pointing at and I was like, 'Oh yeah, I wanna meet him.'"

The White Lotus actress and David did not meet each other that night as they were seated at separate tables.

 

Connie asked her friend for David to email her, which he did the next day.

The Life List star was previously married to investment banker John Britton from 1991 until 1995.

Connie adopted her son, Eyob 'Yoby' Britton, from Ethiopia in 2011, when he was nine months old.

And she also told Parade how tough single motherhood was.

Connie said in the March interview: "I didn't know a soul.

"[I] started working 16-hour days, 18-hour days, and had this little baby at home and was like, 'Ahhhh.'

It was kind of 'crisis mode' a little bit because I didn't know what I was doing, and I really didn't have people to rely on."

She added: "I went into [that chapter of my life] a little bit blindly, not really fully anticipating what it is to be a single mom and how difficult that is, and what you're taking on in doing that.

"I had a stay-at-home nanny. So I realised, 'Oh my gosh, at least I have help.'"


 

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