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William, Harry recall last chat with mother

‘Rushed’ conversati­on weighs heavily on their minds even 20 years after Diana’s death

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Britain’s Prince William and Prince Harry have revealed they talked to their mother Princess Diana on the day she died and that the “short” conversati­on now weighs “heavily” on their mind.

“It was her speaking from Paris, I can’t really necessaril­y remember what I said but all I do remember is probably regretting for the rest of my life how short the phone call was,” Prince Harry told ITV for a documentar­y to commemorat­e their mother.

Prince William was just 15 and his brother Harry 12 when their mother and her friend Dodi Al Fayed were killed in August 1997 after the car they were in crashed in a tunnel in central Paris as it was being pursued at high speed by press photograph­ers. Their French chauffeur Henri Paul also died.

“Harry and I were in a desperate rush to say goodbye, you know ‘see you later’. If I’d known now obviously what was going to happen I wouldn’t have been so blase about it and everything else,” William told ITV.

“But that phone call sticks in my mind, quite heavily.”

Diana died in a car crash in Paris on August 31, 1997. On the day she was killed, William describes how the brothers were having a “very good time” at Balmoral, the Queen’s private Scottish estate, with their cousins.

The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry have revealed deep remorse that their last conversati­on with their mother was a brief phone call that they cut short because they were too busy playing with their cousins.

In a documentar­y about Diana, Princess of Wales, her sons speak candidly about their grief, their loss, and coping with the shock of her premature death, aged 36, 20 years ago.

‘The best mother ever’

They also remember “the best mother ever”, a mother, says Harry who was just 12 when she died, “who brought a breath of fresh air to everything she did”. William, who was 15 when Diana died, describes news of her death as if an “earthquake had run through the house”. His brother reveals he has only cried twice since, the first at her funeral on the island at Althorp, her ancestral home where she is buried, “and probably only since then maybe once. So there’s a lot of grief that still needs to be let out.”

Diana died in a car crash in Paris on August 31, 1997. On the day she was killed, William describes how the brothers were having a “very good time” at Balmoral, the Queen’s private Scottish estate, with their cousins.

“Harry and I were in a desperate rush to say ‘goodbye’, ‘see you later’ and ‘we’re going to go off’ ... if I’d known what would happen I wouldn’t have been so blasé about it. But that phone call sticks in my mind quite heavily”, he says.

Harry reveals he grew up thinking that “not having a mother was normal”. He says he was puzzled by the public grief, and remembers thinking: “How is it that so many people who have never met this woman, my mother, can be crying and showing more emotion than I was feeling?.”

In lighter moments, the documentar­y, to be screened today, captures their memories of what a fun mother she was. William reveals how she once invited home three models as a surprise treat for him. “She organised when I came home from school to have Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlingon and Naomi Campbell waiting at the top of the stairs, I was probably a 12- or 13-year-old boy who had posters of them on his wall. I went bright red and didn’t know quite what to say and sort of fumbled and I think pretty much fell down the stairs on the way up. I was completely and utterly awestruck,” he recalls. “That was a very funny memory that’s lived with me forever.”

She also bought him the “rudest” cards, which he was embarrasse­d to open in front of his schoolmate­s. Harry describes her as “a total kid through and through”, whose motto was “you can be as naughty as you want, just don’t get caught”.

Their mother lives with them every day. “She set us up really well. She gave us the right tools and has prepared us well for life in the best way she could, not, obviously, knowing what was going to happen,” says William. He is keeping alive the memory of “Granny Diana” for his own children, George and Charlotte, as he regularly talks to them about her. Harry admits his difficulti­es in dealing with his grief. “People deal with grief in different ways, and my way of dealing with it was just by basically shutting it out, locking it out. The 10 years that I was in the army, I just dug my head in the sand and it was just ... it was just white noise. And I went through a whole period of having to try and sort myself out.”

Speaking openly about her for the documentar­y had been “daunting” at first, but a “healing” process, William said.

A tribute

Her sons hope it will remind the public, especially the generation too young to remember her, of their mother’s warmth and humour and also her achievemen­ts. The programme chronicles Diana’s personal journey, and her campaigns.

William said: “We won’t be doing this again — we won’t speak as openly or publicly about her again, because we feel hopefully this film will provide the other side from close family friends you might not have heard before, from those who knew her best and from those who want to protect her memory, and want to remind people of the person that she was.” He added: “Twenty years on, Harry and I felt that it was an appropriat­e time to open up a bit more about our mother.”

The documentar­y, Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy will be screened on ITV today at 9pm.

 ??  ?? Diana with Harry
Diana with Harry
 ?? Courtesy ITV ?? This photograph released by Kensington Palace, from the personal photo album of the late Diana, Princess of Wales, shows the princess and Prince Harry on holiday and features in the new ITV documentar­y.
Courtesy ITV This photograph released by Kensington Palace, from the personal photo album of the late Diana, Princess of Wales, shows the princess and Prince Harry on holiday and features in the new ITV documentar­y.
 ?? Courtesy ITV ?? The late Diana, Princess of Wales, holding Prince William while pregnant with Prince Harry.
Courtesy ITV The late Diana, Princess of Wales, holding Prince William while pregnant with Prince Harry.
 ?? Courtesy ITV ?? Prince William and Prince ■ Harry sitting on a picnic bench together.
Courtesy ITV Prince William and Prince ■ Harry sitting on a picnic bench together.

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