New York Post

Palace malice

New doc spotlights the often-frosty relationsh­ip between Princess Diana and her stepmother, ‘Acid Raine’ Spencer

- By JANE RIDLEY

IT was September 1989, and Princess Diana was staying at her ancestral home of Althorp in Northampto­nshire, England, when her fury for her stepmother boiled over.

The royal, then 28, berated Countess Raine Spencer, who had married her father, Johnnie, 13 years earlier. Then Di pushed the 60-year-old so hard, she fell down the stairs.

“[Raine] was badly bruised and was dreadfully upset,” Raine’s former personal assistant, Sue Howe, says in a revealing new documentar­y. “It was a cruel and heartless thing to do.”

The fraught relationsh­ip between troubled Diana and larger-than-life socialite Raine is the focus of the film “Princess Diana’s ‘Wicked’ Stepmother,” premiering on the Smithsonia­n Channel Monday.

Both women are dead — Diana was killed in a car accident in 1997, while Raine succumbed to cancer in 2016 — but their rivalry and surprising eventual friendship is fascinatin­g.

“They were strong to the core — survivors,” Diana’s former butler, Paul Burrell, tells The Post. “They suffered adversity and tragedy, which brought them together in the end.”

Raine, the daughter of flamboyant British romance novelist Barbara Cartland, first entered Diana’s universe when dating her father, Earl John Spencer, following his 1969 divorce from Diana’s mother, Frances Shand Kydd.

Together with her younger brother, Charles, and older sisters, Jane and Sarah, the teenage Diana gave this interloper the caustic nickname “Acid Raine.”

“They were used to having their father to themselves, and when Raine came along it was a disaster,” says royal biographer Penny Junor. “And Raine was not sensitive about the way she handled matters, [such as] changing Althorp because she had no sentimenta­l attachment to it.”

Raine sold precious antiques to fund renovation­s of the dilapidate­d stately home and imposed her flashy taste on the decor. As Burrell says: “Diana said she made it look like Disneyland.”

Two years after they wed, in 1978, the outrageous­ly bouffant-haired

Raine refused to allow Diana and her siblings to visit their father after he suffered a near-fatal stroke, causing further friction.

“She thought it would be better if he had peace, rest and no agitation,” says Junor.

John recovered to proudly walk Diana down the aisle for her wedding to Prince Charles in 1981. Raine, meanwhile, was banished to a seat at the back of St. Paul’s Cathedral.

As Diana’s marriage to Charles went into free fall, the princess used her stepmother as an outlet for her anger and frustratio­n. “It was pretty full-on war,” says Junor.

When John died in 1992 — the same year Diana separated from Charles — Raine was unceremoni­ously kicked out of Althorp by her stepchildr­en. She went to live in the London townhouse her husband had left her in his will.

According to Burrell, things took a surprising turn during the last three years of Diana’s life, as the two women reconciled. Raine, newly married to French Count Jean-Francois de Chambrun, started writing to her former stepdaught­er.

“The princess did a complete U-turn and invited Raine and her husband for lunch,” says Burrell.

In the documentar­y, Peter Constandin­os, Raine’s hairdresse­r and friend, recalls what the then-60somethin­g socialite told him about that lunch.

“Diana said to Raine: ‘I have to thank you. I know you loved my father deeply, and I have to be grateful for all the years of happiness you gave him,’ ” he says. The two hugged, and their reconcilia­tion began.

“Diana mellowed as she got older, and they were quite similar characters,” Junor says.

Soon, the women were regularly spotted around London having lunch. Raine showered Diana with flowers, chocolate and gifts such as Hermès scarves.

But Diana may have been using Raine as a pawn.

Burrell told The Post that the princess would arrange for newspaper photograph­ers to snap pictures of her embracing Raine in public — a move orchestrat­ed to spite Shand Kydd, from whom Diana was then estranged.

Tragically, the women’s newfound friendship came to a premature end with Diana’s death in Paris on Aug. 31, 1997, at 36.

Raine visited Burrell at Kensington Palace the night he returned from France with Diana’s body. “She cried and held my hand and said, ‘What are we going to do now?’ ” says the butler. “She was devastated.”

Raine died Oct. 21, 2016, at 87, after throwing a “farewell” dinner for her closest pals.

“Was she a force for good? Was she the evil stepmother? Or was she the femme fatale?,” Raine’s friend Geordie Greig, now editor of the Daily Mail, says in the doc. “She was all of those things. What she wasn’t was dull.”

 ??  ?? Princess Di’s relationsh­ip with her stepmother, Countess Raine Spencer, was testy at best.
Princess Di’s relationsh­ip with her stepmother, Countess Raine Spencer, was testy at best.

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