New York Post

SEX TOY TO DI FOR

Princess’s ‘lucky mascot’ revealed

- By YARON STEINBUCH

Princess Diana’s “lucky mascot” created quite a buzz. Royal protection officer Ken Wharfe’s new tell-all reveals how Princess Di was given a vibrator that she dubbed “Le Gadget.” “The small vibrator, bought as a practical joke after a staff night out in Paris during Diana’s official visit there . . . had become her lucky mascot,” Wharfe writes in “Guarding Diana: Protecting The Princess Around The World,” the UK Independen­t reported. Di became so attached to her dildo that she insisted on taking it on official foreign trips. When she left Le Gadget behind during a trip to Nepal in 1993, she promptly had it delivered to the British Embassy in Katmandu. An aide brought the handy device — in a sealed bag — on a silver platter to the ambassador’s residence moments before a press reception. But the special deliveryma­n “foolishly opened the packet and removed the offending item in front of everyone in the room (but, mercifully, not the press, who were starting to gather outside),” Wharfe writes.

“There was a stunned pause (and a few bemused glances from Embassy dignitarie­s), until the silence was broken by Diana, who said, ‘Oh, that must be for me,’ and began to laugh.”

Di’s naughty side was also evident during a 1991 tour of Pakistan, when a member of her entourage inflated a condom over his head, according to Wharfe:

“The staff member decided to reveal that he had a party trick where he could blow up the condom and put it on his head, fully inflated.”

“Really?” Diana inquired. “Go on then, show me.”

That’s when the bizarre challenge began.

“Within seconds, everyone was falling about the place in fits of giggles as the staff member accomplish­ed this extraordin­ary feat in a matter of seconds,” Wharfe writes.

The latest Diana anecdotes emerged days after the UK Sun reported that she once caught hubby Prince Charles sitting on the toilet having phone sex with his mistress, Camilla ParkerBowl­es.

Wharfe writes in his memoir that when Diana later read the transcript­s from the infamous “Camillagat­e” conversati­on, she triumphant­ly declared, “Game, set and match.”

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