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Angelina Jolie on marriage to Brad and the vows their kids made for them

Angelina Jolie has opened up about what it’s like being Mrs Brad Pitt and how the kids keep her and Brad in check!

“It does feel different,” Angelina says of being married. “It feels nice to be husband and wife.”

Speaking in a new interview in Vanity Fair magazine, Ange revealed that she and Brad were settling quite comfortably into their newly married life, but that their kids are making sure to keep them in check!

Maddox, Pax, Zahara, Vivienne, Shiloh and Knox made Brad and Ange make vows especially for them.

“They did not expect us never to fight, but they made us promise to always say, ‘Sorry,’ if we do. So they said, ‘Do you?,’ and we said, ‘We do!’”” Ange said.

It’s no surprise that Brange’s six kids have a big say in the way their parents conduct their marriage, not only do they outnumber Brad and Ange – they also played a big part in their parents wedding day.

Maddox, 13, and Pax, 10, walked their mum down the aisle while Zahara, 9, and Vivienne, 6, tossed flower petals gathered from the garden in their roles as flower girls. Shiloh, 8 and Knox, 6 played ring bearers, and all of them assisted with the design of Angelina’s wedding dress – which was covered with their illustrations.

As well as speaking about her domestic life though, Ange also opened up about her highly visible political life and when she was directly asked if she could see herself “pursuing a life in politics, diplomacy, or public service,” Angelina responded: “I am open.”

Known for her humanitarian work as a special envoy for the United Nations Refugee Agency, Angelina was even recently made an Honorary Dame by Queen Elizabeth.

“When you work as a humanitarian, you are conscious that politics have to be considered,”Angelina told Vanity Fair. “Because if you really want to make an extreme change, then you have a responsibility.”

Ange was careful though not to make any big promises about vying for the White House anytime soon though: “But I honestly don’t know in what role I would be more useful—I am conscious of what I do for a living, and that [could] make it less possible.”

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