A new documentary about Diana, Princess of Wales, proves just how insatiable the appetite is among the British public is for ever more stories on her
A new documentary about Diana, Princess of Wales, proves just how insatiable the appetite is among the British public is for ever more stories on her

Twenty years on, Diana's hold over the British public remains unbroken



Diana, Princess of Wales, once famously noted that there were three people in her marriage to Prince Charles,  the third being the prince’s mistress - and now wife - Camilla Parker Bowles.

But she was wrong; there were actually hundreds of millions of people in their union, since the whole world seemed captivated by the fairytale-gone-wrong that lasted from a royal wedding in 1981 to their 1996 divorce. And as the 20th anniversary of her death on August 31 approaches, the British public's insatiable appetite shows no signs of abating.

On Sunday, Channel 4 will show Diana in Her Own Words, a programme featuring video clips made in 1992-3 of the princess talking about her life and marriage.

Although some extracts have been aired before, with NBC broadcasting short clips from them in 2004, British audiences have never legitimately seen them. The tapes were recorded at Kensington Palace by speech coach Peter Settelen, who was hired to help Diana present her case after the royal couple separated in 1991.

In a series of remarkably candid revelations, Diana talks in excruciating detail about how she was courted by Charles, the couple’s sex life, her love for a royal bodyguard who she wanted to run away with, and how the presence of Camilla Parker Bowles was always there  in the background.

The tapes were discovered by police in 2001 while they were searching the home of Diana’s former butler Paul Burrell, who was accused of stealing personal items from the princess after she died in 1997 but subsequently acquitted following an intervention from Queen Elizabeth II.

Charles and Diana’s relationship was long played out under the media spotlight,  from the early days of their courtship, when Diana was subjected to the intense press attention that has plagued the royals ever since, through to their engagement and a wedding in 1981 that was watched by an estimated global audience of 750 million. Her  death in a car accident in Paris was a seismic news event and two billion people watched her funeral, making it one of the most watched events  in history.

During her unhappy marriage, Diana became adept at manipulating the pack of reporters and photographers who congregated around her, feeding titbits to certain favoured journalists and allowing herself to be photographed in ways that would endear her to the public at Charles’s expense; most notably in when she posed alone in front of the Taj Mahal in 1992.

This came to a head in 1995 when she notoriously gave an interview to Martin Bashir for the BBC’s Panorama programme and opened up about her unhappy marriage, confessed to an affair with her sons' riding instructor James Hewitt, and spoke of wanting to be the “queen of people's hearts”.

Despite this undoubted predilection for co-opting the media, Diana's friends and family have rallied round to attack the Channel 4 programme.

“This doesn’t belong in the public domain,” Rosa Monckton, a confidante of Diana’s, told the Guardian. “It is a betrayal of her privacy and of the family’s privacy. I certainly don’t think they should be broadcast. The [tapes] should be dispatched to the young princes.”

Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, is  said to have implored the network in writing not to show the documentary. But Channel 4 have robustly defended the broadcast, saying: “The excerpts from the tapes recorded with Peter Settelen have never been shown before on British television and are an important historical source. 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.”

Fight card

1. Bantamweight: Victor Nunes (BRA) v Siyovush Gulmamadov (TJK)

2. Featherweight: Hussein Salim (IRQ) v Shakhriyor Juraev (UZB)

3. Catchweight 80kg: Rashed Dawood (UAE) v Khamza Yamadaev (RUS)

4. Lightweight: Ho Taek-oh (KOR) v Ronald Girones (CUB)

5. Lightweight: Arthur Zaynukov (RUS) v Damien Lapilus (FRA)

6. Bantamweight: Vinicius de Oliveira (BRA) v Furkatbek Yokubov (RUS)

7. Featherweight: Movlid Khaybulaev (RUS) v Zaka Fatullazade (AZE)

8. Flyweight: Shannon Ross (TUR) v Donovon Freelow (USA)

9. Lightweight: Mohammad Yahya (UAE) v Dan Collins (GBR)

10. Catchweight 73kg: Islam Mamedov (RUS) v Martun Mezhulmyan (ARM)

11. Bantamweight World title: Jaures Dea (CAM) v Xavier Alaoui (MAR)

12. Flyweight World title: Manon Fiorot (FRA) v Gabriela Campo (ARG)

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million 
HOW TO WATCH

Facebook: TheNationalNews  

Twitter: @thenationalnews  

Instagram: @thenationalnews.com  

TikTok: @thenationalnews 

Other promotions
  • Deliveroo will team up with Pineapple Express to offer customers near JLT a special treat: free banana caramel dessert with all orders on January 26
  • Jones the Grocer will have their limited edition Australia Day menu available until the end of the month (January 31)
  • Australian Vet in Abu Dhabi (with locations in Khalifa City A and Reem Island) will have a 15 per cent off all store items (excluding medications) 
The specs

Engine: 3-litre twin-turbo V6

Power: 400hp

Torque: 475Nm

Transmission: 9-speed automatic

Price: From Dh215,900

On sale: Now

Iraq negotiating over Iran sanctions impact
  • US sanctions on Iran’s energy industry and exports took effect on Monday, November 5.
  • Washington issued formal waivers to eight buyers of Iranian oil, allowing them to continue limited imports. Iraq did not receive a waiver.
  • Iraq’s government is cooperating with the US to contain Iranian influence in the country, and increased Iraqi oil production is helping to make up for Iranian crude that sanctions are blocking from markets, US officials say.
  • Iraq, the second-biggest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, pumped last month at a record 4.78 million barrels a day, former Oil Minister Jabbar Al-Luaibi said on Oct. 20. Iraq exported 3.83 million barrels a day last month, according to tanker tracking and data from port agents.
  • Iraq has been working to restore production at its northern Kirkuk oil field. Kirkuk could add 200,000 barrels a day of oil to Iraq’s total output, Hook said.
  • The country stopped trucking Kirkuk oil to Iran about three weeks ago, in line with U.S. sanctions, according to four people with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified because they aren’t allowed to speak to media.
  • Oil exports from Iran, OPEC’s third-largest supplier, have slumped since President Donald Trump announced in May that he’d reimpose sanctions. Iran shipped about 1.76 million barrels a day in October out of 3.42 million in total production, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
  • Benchmark Brent crude fell 47 cents to $72.70 a barrel in London trading at 7:26 a.m. local time. U.S. West Texas Intermediate was 25 cents lower at $62.85 a barrel in New York. WTI held near the lowest level in seven months as concerns of a tightening market eased after the U.S. granted its waivers to buyers of Iranian crude.
The specs

Engine: Four electric motors, one at each wheel

Power: 579hp

Torque: 859Nm

Transmission: Single-speed automatic

Price: From Dh825,900

On sale: Now