Scottish Daily Mail

REVEALED: WHAT'S IN THE OTHER DIANA TAPES

She poured her heart out to her voice coach on video tapes soon to be aired on TV She said Charles only wanted sex every 3 weeks She fell ‘deeply in love’ with her police bodyguard . . . but he died in a car crash – and she was sure he had been ‘bumped o

- by Richard Kay and Geoffrey Levy

FOr a young woman whose troubled life had become the focus of the world, the lure must have been irresistib­le. ‘I want to bring a camera,’ actor Peter Settelen told Princess Diana as he gave her voice-coaching sessions. ‘I want you to see you and we will do your story. You can tell me your story, then you can watch.’

The video exercise would, he explained, ‘show you who you are’.

No doubt the charming Settelen, who trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, meant what he said. And in shooting a total of 16 videos of his pupil at Kensington Palace, the former Coronation Street actor undoubtedl­y achieved what Diana was after — more confidence and authority in her public speaking on issues such as Aids and eating disorders.

These were private £50 lessons at her London home, and the tapes are understood to have been kept under lock and key by Diana. But after her death, the tapes, containing five hours of footage, were discovered in the possession of her former butler, Paul Burrell.

Understand­ably, Settelen was concerned. He embarked on a legal battle over the material and won ownership of the tapes in September 2003.

Yet a few months later, most unchivalro­usly, he did a deal for an undisclose­d sum of money for them to be shown on the American TV network, NBC.

Although NBC was universall­y condemned for the purchase, it broadcast the tapes in 2004. Critics described the programme as a ‘ghoulish striptease’ and said those involved were no better than ‘grave robbers’.

Now, 13 years on, Settelen has done another deal, this time with Channel 4, for the tapes to be seen for the first time in Britain. The programme, Diana: In Her Own Words, will be broadcast on Sunday, August 6, at 8pm.

WATCHINg the Princess, many viewers are bound to wonder what the subject material had to do with voice coaching.

They will see a vulnerable Diana in January 1993, just a month after her separation from the Prince of Wales, talking openly about some of the most intimate aspects of her life: her relationsh­ip with Prince Charles (in particular the scarcity of lovemaking with him), his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, and her police bodyguard Sergeant Barry Mannakee, with whom she admits she fell ‘deeply in love’.

She tells Settelen that after the birth of Prince Harry her sex life with Charles had deteriorat­ed: ‘There was never a requiremen­t for it from him — once every three weeks, about — and I kept thinking it followed a pattern. He used to see his lady [Camilla] once every three weeks before we got married.’

Describing her thoughts as the marriage moved to crisis point, Diana told her voice coach: ‘If I could write my own script I would have my husband go away with his woman and never come back.’

Of course, it must be stressed that these tapes were never intended to be made public. But her mention of Sgt Mannakee is most telling.

The policeman is one of the most intriguing figures in Diana’s life. A burly, 6ft tall East End ‘Jack the lad’ whose father was a Ford car worker at Dagenham, Mannakee was 37 when he was posted to work as a personal protection officer at Kensington Palace in 1985, a year after the birth of Prince Harry, when the royal marriage was already in difficulty.

Diana doesn’t name Mannakee on the tape but refers to him as ‘somebody who worked in this environmen­t’, telling Settelen: ‘He was the greatest fellow I have ever had. I was always waiting around trying to see him. Um, I just, you know, wore my heart on my sleeve. I was only happy when he was around.’

Asked by Settelen if he provided ‘the intimacy you weren’t getting’, she replies: ‘Yeah.’

The Princess adds: ‘I was quite happy to give it all up (her royal life), just to go off and live with him. Can you believe it?’

Laughing at the memory, she goes on: ‘And he kept saying he thought it was a good idea, too.’

But Diana also says she saw Mannakee as a ‘father figure’. She explains: ‘I was like a little girl in front of him the whole time. Desperate for praise. Desperate.’

As for Mannakee, who was married with two children, he had an easy familiarit­y with the Princess that irritated other police bodyguards. Soon this evolved into a closeness that made his colleagues feel ‘quite uncomforta­ble’.

‘We could see she liked him,’ says a former colleague. ‘It was ‘Barry this’ and ‘Barry that’. But we never dreamt there was anything between them because Barry was a blabbermou­th about such things. We assumed he’d have boasted about it. But he didn’t.’

At a time of mounting turmoil for the Princess, Mannakee was a good listener who became an unexpected confidant, especially on their 90-minute drives taking William and Harry to Highgrove in gloucester­shire for the weekend.

The pair referred to them as their ‘M4 chats’.

He would also often accompany her when she took William from Kensington Palace to his nursery school in Notting Hill.

Mannakee’s relationsh­ip with the Princess also infuriated palace domestic staff. ‘Diana was forever asking his opinion of just about everything and they saw this as Mannakee encroachin­g on their territory,’ says one close figure.

Brazenly confident, Mannakee flirted with Diana in front of servants. Once, when she had dressed for a dinner engagement in a tight mini-skirt, she playfully wiggled her bottom at him. ‘Do I look all right?’ she asked him.

Apparently, Mannakee replied: ‘Sensationa­l, as you know you do.’ Then he added: ‘I could quite fancy you myself.’ Diana giggled and retorted: ‘But you already do, don’t you?’

Yet could Diana have been merely indulging in a fantasy about an affair with the entertaini­ng police officer?

On the tape, as Channel 4 viewers will see, she denies having a full affair with him. Asked by Settelen if there was a sexual relationsh­ip between them, her reply is ‘No’.

In later years, when emboldened to discuss her relationsh­ips with men more freely, although she spoke about James Hewitt, her Household Cavalry officer lover, Mannakee’s name as a lover never passed her lips.

In 1986, after Mannakee had worked for the Princess for a year, he was called before his superiors and challenged about being ‘over-familiar’ with her. They decided he should be put back in uniform and transferre­d from royal

‘I was quite happy to give up royal life and go and live with him’

to diplomatic protection. A year later he was killed in a road crash, as a pillion passenger on a Suzuki motorcycle t hat c ollided w ith a c ar driven by a girl of 17.

It was Prince Charles who broke the news of his death to Diana, as they were travelling to the 1987 Cannes Film Festival on an official engagement.

The P rincess i s s aid t o h ave w ept uncontroll­ably and torn at her clothes in the car en route to RAF Northolt for their flight to the SouthofFra­nce.Shesuggest­edthe Prince was cruel in breaking the news to her at that time.

‘Charles ‘just jumped it on me like that,’ she said, ‘and I wasn’t able to do anything’. Within m inutes she had to put on her public face. ‘I just sat there all day going through this huge high-profile visit to Cannes,’ she later recalled. ‘ Thousands o f P ress. J ust devastated. Just devastated.’

Reflecting on the matter to S ettelen s ix y ears l ater, s he s aid: ‘ I should n ever h ave p layed w ith f ire, but I did, and I got burned.’

He tape-recorded her saying, shockingly: ‘ I t hink h e w as b umped off.’ Of course, there have been c onspiracy theories that the car crash in Paris which led to Diana’s own death was staged deliberate­ly because she was with the ‘unsuitable’ Dodi Fayed.

But the allegation that M annakee’s death was anything other than an accident has never been taken seriously. After these remarkswer­efirstbroa­dcastin200­4, Scotland Yard considered re-opening the investigat­ion into the policeman’s death.

Claims had surfaced over the years that Mannakee had been deliberate­ly killed by intelligen­ce officers, presumably because of fears of a scandal. But they were never substantia­ted and the Yard inquiry went nowhere.

For her part, Diana continued to be haunted by the relationsh­ip. ‘I used to have really disturbing dreams a bout h im,’ s he s aid i n t he tapes used by NBC.

‘He w as r eally u nhappy, w herever he’s g one t o. A nd I w ent a nd f ound out w here h e w as b uried. I w ent t o put some flowers on his grave.’

According to Diana, that was when she realised he had been cremated.‘Hewasjustc­huckedover the ground,’ she recalled.

‘That absolutely appalledme, but there we were. I wasn’t in any position to do anything about it. The day I did that (left flowers), the dreams stopped. It’s strange, isn’t it?’

In an attempt to quash the conspiracy­theories,JoyChopp,the mother of the 17-year-old novicedriv­erwhosecar­collidedwi­th Mannakee, has said ‘it was just an accident’.

Princess Diana also relates on tape the story of her first meeting with Charles.

He ‘followed me around like a puppy’, she says, and made a fumbling attempt to kiss her, which she repelled.

‘He was all over me like a rash. He’d r ing m e u p e very d ay for a week, and then he wouldn’t speak to me for three weeks. Very odd. And the thrill when he used to ring up was so immense and intense.’

Diana also recalls how she c onfronted Charles over Camilla.

‘I remember saying to my husband:“Why,whyisthisl­adyaround?” and he said: “Well, I refuse to be the only Prince of Wales who never had a mistress.” ’

DIANA h ad b een i ntroduced to Peter Settelen by her fitness instructor Carolan Brown, who had worked withhimone­xercisevid­eos.Hehad p layed t he D uke o f W indsor i n an ITV comedy series, a prince in an e pisode o f J ackanory P layhouse and ac ommando i n t he W orld W ar II epic A Bridge Too Far.

When h e e ncountered D iana, s he was a princess suffering from low self-esteem, full of ideas about her public responsibi­lities but with little idea how to marshal them.

On one occasion, when Settelen accompanie­d h er t o m ake a s peech, he u sed a b izarre t echnique, t elling her to see herself as a prostitute whose l ife h ad h it r ock b ottom b ut who had turned things around. Afterwards, Settelen has recalled, as her car arrived she ‘opened the door, kicked her leg out and said: “Not bad for a hooker, eh?” ’

Having clients talk freely about themselves was part of Settelen’s technique. He explained that it was a key to injecting passion into the spoken word.

He taught Diana how to breathe properly and appear more c onversatio­nal in her delivery. His unorthodox a pproach a lso i ncluded placing marbles in clients’ mouths as he massaged their shoulders, though h e d idn’t d o t his t o D iana.

All the same, he is credited with giving her a new assertiven­ess. Certainly, some weeks after these sessions b egan, D iana s urprised a n audience she was addressing on issues such as Aids with dramatic language and flourishes as she talked o f t he ‘ aching l oneliness a nd rejection’ of sufferers.

BuT from the very beginning of his coaching, there was unease about him filming P rincess D iana a nd encouragin­g h er t o o pen u p a bout her life.

For hour after hour, over the weeks, s he s at o n h er p ink d rawing room sofa facing Settelen and his camera mounted on a tripod.

One s enior p alace f igure b ecame very c oncerned a bout D iana b eing videoed and recalls asking her where the tapes were.

‘Shetoldme:“Oh,Peter’sgotthem,” h e s ays. ‘ And I s aid: “ What! You must get them back. They could be his pension.” ’

But s uch c onfessiona­ls w ere n ot new to Diana. She had secretly talked to writer Andrew Morton, whofirstre­vealedthep­roblemsin her marriage. Later there was her raw, confession­al BBCP anorama interview.

Today, living in a modest semi in T wickenham, S outh-West L ondon, Settelen, 6 5, i s a d irector o f C hakra P roductions Ltd, which provides ‘support activities to performing arts’. His wife Sarah resigned as a director in 2014.

Mrs Settelen is director of a c harity c alled T he P romise, h elping children with special needs in R ussia, w hich w as s et u p f ollowing the death of their ‘profoundly d isabled’ daughter Ellie in 2000.

Over the years, Settelen has c ontinued to offer ‘motivation­al mentoring’, public speaking t raining and ‘crisis communicat­ions’ advice.

He has one recent acting credit, in a short 2015 European crime film called Schwarzwal­d.

His website lists previous c orporate clients including the Metropolit­an Police, the Labour Party as well as journalist­s from the BBC, ITV and Channel 4.

Describing what he does, it says: ‘Peter’s w ork o riginally c ame

to public attention through the help he gave to Diana, Princess of Wales.

‘During the most difficult period in her all-too-short life, he helped her to move from “Shy Di” to become a confident and passionate public speaker, able to express what she really wanted and needed to say.

‘As her adviser, speech coach and speechwrit­er, he worked with her on subjects ranging from Aids to eating disorders through to women’s mental health.’

Undaunted by the controvers­y about the planned broadcast on Channel 4, Settelen’s lawyer, Marcus Rutherford, said last night: ‘His view has always been that the tapes were as much private to him as they were to Diana. Had she still been with us, I have no doubt they would have remained private as long as both Peter and Diana wanted it.

‘It took a lot of persuading for Peter to accept that the time had come to let people in the UK look at the material itself and form their own views.’

For its part, Channel 4 says: ‘This unique portrait of Diana gives her a voice and places it front and centre at a time when the nation will be reflecting on her life and death.’ True, it was hardly becoming of the Princess to talk so liberally about her sex life. But even so, how many people will excuse Peter Settelen — and Channel4 — for airing these private thoughts so publicly?

LOOKING FOR LOVE AFTER CHARLES Richard Kay and Geoffrey Levy reveal the tantalisin­g untold story in Weekend

 ??  ?? Close: Barry Mannakee with Diana in 1985
Close: Barry Mannakee with Diana in 1985
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