Milo Yiannopoulos has married his partner John - but has bizarrely cropped out his new husband's face from all their photos on their big day.

The right-wing troll jetted out to Hawaii to marry his long-term boyfriend, named only as John, whose identity Milo has gone to some lengths to hide.

Milo shared a photo of him and his partner - who is facing away from the camera - appearing to say their vows underneath a tree. On the back of his new husband's white tuxedo, were the words 'blind for love.'

Milo Yiannopoulos has married his partner John - but has bizarrely cropped out his new husband's face from all their photos on their big day

In another where the grooms are both pouring champagne into a tower of glasses. John's face is barely visible in the second photo where he's been all but cropped out.

The last photo Milo shared on his Instagram account was of his wedding cake which featured tiny models of the alt-right journalist and his African American husband holding hands on top.

'It's official,' he wrote as the caption.

The wedding took place at the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai on the big island of Hawaii, on Saturday.

Yiannopoulos, 32, became an alt-right poster boy, after his frequent misogynistic, racist, and even homophobic rants.

Yet the extremist agenda he pushes, which has won - and lost - him book deals, speaking events and his job as a writer at Brietbart, seem contradictory with his own life.

He once told Bloomberg he generally didn't employ gay people because he 'didn't trust them'.

In one picture the grooms are both pouring champagne into a tower of glasses. John's face is barely visible in the second photo where he's been all but cropped out

The last photo Milo shared on his Instagram account was of his wedding cake which featured tiny models of the alt-right journalist and his African American husband holding hands on top

'They don't show up on time. They don't do the work. They get all queeny with drama,' he said. 'I like straight white men. They do the work. I like black guys for my love life, straight white males as employees, and girls as drinking buddies.' He doesn't drink anymore.'

He added that he also disapproved of all Muslims - except his boyfriend of 10 years.

Milo, who has compared feminism to cancer in a bid to be as outrageous as possible, once spoke about his hypocrisy on Real Time saying he struggled to fit in as a 'gay Jew who never shuts up about his black boyfriend'.

The right-wing firebrand thrives on controversy, and was stoking the fires again last week when he arrived at UC Berkeley for a free speech forum and was greeted by dozens of counter-protesters.

The official event was cancelled but wrote onInstagram: 'I did what I said I would do. I showed up. Sorry to the hundreds of people the police refused to let in.'

According to the Los Angeles Times, security was only letting 100 people or so in at a time and they had to go through metal detectors to enter the plaza.

Yiannopoulos established a reputation as the poster boy of the American 'alt-right' movement and scourge of political correctnes

In February, violent protesters blocked the former Breitbart editor from making a speech at the university.

He lost his $250,000 book deal later that month after video was leaked that showed the alt-right poster boy appearing to defend pedophilia. The publisher, Simon & Schuster, had received backlash since the announcement in January, with many on social media threatening to boycott them.

Milo is currently engaged in a bitter $10 million lawsuit against Simon & Schuster over their move.

The snafu came after video surfaced in which Yiannopoulos appeared to condone pedophilia, which he has since condemned.

His autobiography, Dangerous, had been due for publication next month

Yiannopoulos's lewd comments saying relationships in which 'older men help those young boys to discover who they are' seemed to have pushed the company to back out.

He resigned from his post as tech editor at Breitbart after the controversy.

Yiannopoulos was born Milo Hanrahan in 1984. He appears to have been an only child.

Born to a Greek father and British mother, he grew up in a small village in Kent in the south of England - and was said to be a nerdy child obsessed with the fantasy game Warhammer.

His parents divorced when he was six and he was raised by his mother and a stepfather who he said was tough on him as a child.

In a previous interview, he told The Times: 'My mother never really stopped that stuff happening with my stepdad. She just let it go on. I don't want to go too much into it … it's ancient history. But I did not have a happy time.'

He stayed with his father, Nicolas Hanrahan, who worked as a doorman in Kent - where they had a live-in housekeeper and cook.

His father has since moved to St Ives, in Cornwall, with his new Jamaican wife.

In an interview with Bloomberg Yiannopoulos appeared to hint that his father was a gangster, joking: 'My dad is like Tony Soprano but Greek. He does unspeakable things during the day and comes home and listens to Wagner and drinks fine wine.

Milo took a photo showing the protesters who were being held back by police in riot gear

Counter-protesters hold up sign while waiting for Milo's arrival on Berkeley's campus. Last time he was on the campus things turned violent as protesters and counter-protesters clashed

'I would think, If my dad is just a doorman, why do we have such a nice house? Then I saw it on The Sopranos.'

He was particularly close with his grandmother, Petronella, who regularly took him for high tea at Claridge's, one of London's top hotels.

Recalling their relationship, he said: 'She was by far the first person to twig that I was gay. My mother was awful about it, my father was surprisingly understanding, but Nana showed just the right amount of acceptance and concern.'

He later adopted his Greek grandmother's surname but preferred the mystique of simply being known as 'Milo.'

He identifies as a Catholic, although he also claims Jewish heritage via his maternal grandmother.

Discussing his religious views, he said: 'I'm basically mostly Catholic, though a terrible one.'

He attended Simon Langton Grammar School, a publicly funded but academically selective institution in southern England, where he showed early signs of his attention-seeking future.

Yiannopoulos had never apologized for his offensive comments and had instead cast himself as a champion of free speech

Speaking to MailOnline, a school friend said: 'He was always a bit of an outsider and an extrovert - but he really came to prominence at school when he effectively came out around the age of 14 by singing Big Gay Al's Super song from South Park as part of a full-school music assembly.

'This was quite a courageous thing to do at an all-boys school in the 90s and he probably suffered some abuse because of it.

'He claims he was expelled but no-one who I know remembers that.'

After leaving school, he began a literature degree at Manchester University, dropped out, went to Wolfson College in Cambridge and completed two years, before dropping out again.

He later returned to his alma mater for a talk at the Cambridge Union debating society and said: 'It was a pretty cool 'f*** you' [after they] threw me out after repeated warnings for the ridiculously trivial reason that I didn't show up to supervisions, didn't submit any essays, and spent most of my time s**gging and drinking instead of reading.'

After college, he secured a job at the Catholic Herald before covering technology for the Daily Telegraph.

The right-wing writer calls himself the 'most fabulous supervillain on the internet'

It was at the Telegraph that he began to forge a reputation as a provocateur and an enemy of the Left.

At the paper, he quickly gained a reputation as a web prodigy - but constantly provoked trouble by 'picking fights with absolutely everyone', according to colleagues.

He adopted the names of despotic Roman emperors Nero and Caligula for his two Twitter accounts, and revelled in his ability to whip up storms of support and outrage before he was banned from the site last year for bullying.

Having left the Telegraph in 2011, he co-founded online tech magazine The Kernel and sold it in 2014, racking up huge debts and waging legal battles with writers who sued for unpaid earnings.

But it was his next move that gave him the platform he craved to attack his political opponents.

In 2015 he was appointed a senior editor at right-wing website Breitbart News by Steve Bannon, who has since become President as Trump's senior adviser.

Yiannopoulos described Bannon as the 'man who made me a star'.

On the controversial website, the 32-year-old has written inflammatory pieces with headlines such as 'Would you rather your child had feminism or cancer?', 'There's no hiring bias against women in tech, they just suck at interviews' and 'Birth control makes women unattractive and crazy.'

In an attack on Muslims, he said: 'Their outfits are hilarious. Ridiculous. Is there anything more comically sinister than the sight of a herd of women swathed in black bedsheets?'

He attracted a huge following on social media, becoming the mouthpiece of predominately young, white, angry men.

As his popularity grew and he moved to the US, he boasted how he was 'the most interesting thing happening in American conservatism.'