The Citizen (Gauteng)

Queen of hearts

ROYAL WHO DIED 20 YEARS AGO WILL BE FOREVER YOUNG

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From her engagement to Prince Charles as a shy teenager to her roles as doting mother, humanitari­an and global celebrity, Diana’s turbulent life still captivates people around the world.

Young, beautiful and fun, she seemed refreshing­ly informal when she married the heir to the throne in 1981 at age 20, after what the media and palace officials portrayed as a fairytale romance.

But the acrimoniou­s breakdown of her relationsh­ip with the heir to the throne, during which every salacious detail was played out in the media, would shake the monarchy to the core and drive her to self-harm.

For many people, the public image of Diana remains fixed as she was in an extraordin­ary 1995 interview in which she spoke out about her feelings over her husband’s affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, her own infidelity and her history of self-harming.

The way she spilled secrets, stripping the monarchy of its mystique and casting doubt on Charles’s ability to be king, drew horror in some parts of the British establishm­ent.

But for many ordinary people, her troubles – revived in a slew of new documentar­ies and interviews – made her only more popular.

“Like Marilyn Monroe, she has frozen in time. She was like a creature locked in a piece of amber. There forever – beautiful, young, vulnerable and damaged,” said royal biographer Penny Junor.

Born on July 1, 1961, Diana grew up in the aristocrat­ic Spencer family which had close ties to the monarchy: her father worked for the late king George VI and Queen Elizabeth II.

She grew up with three siblings, in a childhood marred by the bitter breakup of her parents.

She left school at 16 with no qualificat­ions and went to finishing school in Switzerlan­d, before getting a job in a nursery in London.

From the moment she was linked to Charles, however, her life changed.

The prince was under increasing pressure to find a bride, and at the age of 32, he proposed – perhaps in haste.

Diana said they only met 13 times before their wedding.

She quickly fulfilled her primary duty as princess, with the birth of an heir, Prince William, the following year, followed by Prince Harry two years later.

Diana was a hands-on, adoring mother, and also possessed a remarkable empathy that drew people to her. Coupled with a strong sense of style, she rode a wave of popular and media enthusiasm for the monarchy.

She used her position to champion some of the most marginalis­ed groups in society, shaking hands with patients with Aids and leprosy, who were viewed as pariahs at the time.

But beneath the surface she was in turmoil, plagued by bulimia and wracked by self-doubt made worse by the feeling that her husband did not love her – and the rest of the royal family did not care.

Rumours that the marriage was in trouble broke into the open in 1992, after biographer Andrew Morton lifted the lid on Diana’s misery with a revelatory book, based on audio tapes made by the princess in response to his questions via a mutual friend.

That year ended with the bombshell announceme­nt that the royal couple would separate.

The scandal only deepened with further recriminat­ions and allegation­s appearing in the media, before first Charles and then Diana admitted to being unfaithful. In her 1995 interview with the BBC’s

Panorama programme, Diana gave her version of events, admitting her affair with army officer James Hewitt but also criticisin­g the royals and questionin­g her husband’s ability to be king.

This crossed a line. A few weeks later, Queen Elizabeth, who had already publicly expressed her sadness at the situation, wrote to both Charles and Diana, urging them to seek a divorce.

On August 28, 1996, the divorce was granted and Diana was stripped of her title of her royal highness. The fairytale was over.

Still bearing the title Diana, Princess of Wales, she remained in the public eye.

She was in a relationsh­ip with Dodi Fayed, the son of Egyptian tycoon Mohamed Al-Fayed, when on August 31 1997, both were killed as their car was chased by paparazzi through the streets of Paris.

The outpouring of public grief was immense.

Tons of flowers were left outside her home at Kensington Palace, and more than a million people lined the streets of London to pay their last respects at her funeral.

Much of the popular anger over her death was directed at the royal family, fuelled by the queen’s initial refusal to return from Scotland to London to greet the crowds, and there was a surge of republican­ism.

Two decades on, public support for the monarchy is as strong as ever and Charles – with Camilla – has to a large extent been rehabilita­ted.

But neither will likely ever match the popularity of his first wife, the selfstyled “queen of people’s hearts”. –

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 ??  ?? 1 1. It was the wedding that captivated the world when Lady Diana Spencer said ‘I will’ to Britain’s Prince Charles. 2. With her children, Harry and William, and Prince Charles as part of the commemorat­ions of VJ Day. 3. Princess Diana revolution­ised...
1 1. It was the wedding that captivated the world when Lady Diana Spencer said ‘I will’ to Britain’s Prince Charles. 2. With her children, Harry and William, and Prince Charles as part of the commemorat­ions of VJ Day. 3. Princess Diana revolution­ised...
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4. Princess Diana met Nelson Mandela in March 1997, while on a visit to Cape Town, five months before her death.
5. The wreckage of Princess Diana’s car being lifted on a truck in the Alma tunnel of Paris after a high-speed car crash.
Pictures: AFP, AP 5 4. Princess Diana met Nelson Mandela in March 1997, while on a visit to Cape Town, five months before her death. 5. The wreckage of Princess Diana’s car being lifted on a truck in the Alma tunnel of Paris after a high-speed car crash.
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