The Daily Telegraph

Camilla Tominey onn Diana’s wrong turn

A new documentar­y reveals the role Panorama played in Diana’s downfall. Camilla Tominey reports

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It was the explosive interview in which a doe-eyed Diana, Princess of Wales, appeared at her most dangerous. Determined to capitalise on Prince Charles’s confession of infidelity, the then 34-year-old hoped her hour-long chat with Martin Bashir on Panorama would finally bring the “War of the Waleses” to an end.

Yet as a Channel 4 documentar­y is now set to reveal, that interview set in progress a chain of events that eventually led to Diana’s downfall.

Diana: The Truth Behind the Interview, will claim that the mother of two consented to her epic sit-down chat while in a fragile state of mind, following an elaborate plot involving forged documents designed to show that her family was being spied on.

Bashir is accused of commission­ing two phoney bank statements, which he allegedly showed to Diana’s brother, Charles Spencer, to suggest that a former member of staff was acting as a paid informant. The BBC insists the Princess never saw the documentat­ion, saying she met Bashir before it existed and that it “played no part in her decision to give what was, and still is, one of the most iconic interviews of the last half of the 20th century”. Bashir was unavailabl­e for comment.

What is not in doubt is that the airing of the sensationa­l programme on November 20 1995 had huge repercussi­ons for Diana and her role within the Royal family – and took her down a path she might, had she been able to see the bigger picture, have swerved altogether.

Little wonder, then, that she began to question whether she should have taken part in the programme even before it was broadcast on a windy Monday night to an audience of 23 million.

According to Patrick Jephson, her former private secretary, a contributo­r to the new Channel 4 documentar­y, she “deeply regretted” the interview.

Diana described Charles’s camp as “the enemy”, said the monarchy was in desperate need of modernisat­ion and discussed her depression and bulimia – as well as claiming that she wanted to be the “queen of people’s hearts”.

Jephson subsequent­ly revealed that she had only told him about the interview a week before the broadcast and was “not at all confident about what she had done”. Soon after, he quit Kensington Palace, having spent eight years as Diana’s right hand man.

The Princess’s nearest and dearest still believe Panorama played a part in her heightened sense of paranoia – highlighte­d during a meeting with her lawyer, Lord Mishcon, in which she claimed the Queen would abdicate in 1996. She also suggested she would be murdered, in a plot mastermind­ed by her estranged husband.

According to the veteran royal reporter Phil Dampier, who covered the interview for national newspapers at the time, the interview marked “the beginning of the end” for Diana.

The Queen was horrified by what her daughter-in-law had done and called it a “frightful thing”.

She ordered Charles and Diana and the Duke and Duchess of York – who also separated in the so-called “annus horribilis” of 1992 – to get a “double” divorce.

“Panorama was the watershed moment when the Queen finally decided enough is enough,” says Dampier. “Diana then became increasing­ly isolated and started to fall out with the people closest to her.

“She fell out with her mother, her brother, Fergie and other close friends – seemingly convinced she was being spied on. Her former butler Paul Burrell described how she made him rip up the floorboard­s at Kensington Palace looking for bugs.

“Because she died as this iconic young woman, people tend to put her on a pedestal, but actually in n the run up to the Paris car crash she was an unguided missile.”

An increasing­ly detached Diana then embarked on a series of f relationsh­ips with men, including luding Dodi Fayed. This led to a flaming ming row with her mother Frances es Shand Kydd, who Burrell revealed had accused her daughter of behaving like a “whore”. He told the inquest t into the Princess’s death that the “dreadful” conversati­on took place in June 1997 – just two months before Diana’s death. It followed her disastrous decision to get rid of her Scotland Yard bodyguards following her divorce, against the advice of her royal protection officer Ken Wharfe.

“If she hadn’t done that, she he might still be here today,” added dded Dampier. “If it wasn’t for the e Panorama interview, who knows what might have happened?” ?”

Diana: The Truth Behind the Interview is on Channel 4 tonight at 9pm

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 ??  ?? Revelation­s: Diana, Princess of Wales was already regretting taking part in the interview with Martin Bashir before it was broadcast, according to her former private secretary
Revelation­s: Diana, Princess of Wales was already regretting taking part in the interview with Martin Bashir before it was broadcast, according to her former private secretary

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