Nostradamus predicted something bad would happen in 2024, and it has already come true at the beginning of the year.
Known as the ‘prophet of doom’, a French astrologer from the 16th century predicted things like the Great Fire of London, the rise of Adolf Hitler, and even Bitcoin.
He wrote his ideas about the future in a book called ‘Les Propheties’ in 1555. Some people think he predicted the big earthquake in Japan, even though his writing is not very clear.
The prophet said that the Earth will become very dry and then there will be big floods.
He also said that in 2024 there will be a big shortage of food because of an earthquake.
It is one of the worst disasters ever in the country and some people think it was predicted by Nostradamus.
Another famous psychic, Baba Vanga from Bulgaria, also seems to have foretold the disaster in Japan, where at least 84 people died.
She predicted that the weather would get worse and there would be many disasters during the year. But she wasn’t sure about it.
Vanga became well-known in Europe for predicting the Chernobyl disaster, Princess Diana‘s death, 9/11 in New York, and even her own death on August 11, 1996, at the age of 85, according to her followers.
Many people are searching for survivors of the New Year’s Day earthquake. They want to save as many people as they can before Thursday afternoon.
“We need to keep working hard to save people, even after 72 hours after the disaster,” said Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida at a press conference.
Tag: Princess Diana
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Prophecy made by Nostradamus for 2024 “came true within hours of the new year”
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Princess Diana’s expensive jewellery to be sold for £10,000,000 to get money for Ukraine
Jewels that used to belong to Princess Diana will be sold to raise funds for the Ukrainian war.
A necklace and earring set made of diamonds and pearls, supposedly given to Princess Diana by Dodi Al-Fayed, will be sold at an auction next month and might sell for £10 million.
Diana wore the necklace at her last important event before she died in 1997. It was at a fancy evening for Swan Lake at the Royal Albert Hall.The set has been owned by a Ukrainian family since 2008, The Telegraph reports.
This is believed to be the first time Diana’s privately owned jewellery will be sold publicly. Most of the jewellery she wore was loaned to her by the Crown when she was a member of the royal family.
They will be displayed in London before being auctioned off in New York next month.
Experts at Guernsey’s Auctioneers of New York reckon the set will sell for anything between £4 and £11 million.
Arlan Ettinger, president of the auctioneers, said: ‘While many accomplished figures fade from view, Princess Diana is as vibrant today as when she was indeed the most admired woman on the planet.
‘The Swan Lake Suite was especially made for her. She was part of the design process.
‘It is thought to be her only jewellery to have ever been sold, making it extraordinarily important.
‘There are many people who have described it as priceless but we have given it a very broad estimate.’
After Diana’s death her family gave permission for the necklace and matching earrings to be sold, with some of the proceeds going to Unicef.
The earrings were made to match the necklace but weren’t finished before her untimely death.
The listing includes a letter of authenticity from Diana’s former butler Paul Burrell, dated April 1998.
He explains how he approached her older sister, Lady Sarah McCorquodale, who consented for the set to be sold.
It was bought in 1999 by American businessman Jim McIngvale for just under $1 million, but he sold it to a Ukrainian family who are big fans of the royal family during the economic downturn in 2008.
Mr Ettinger added: ‘The war in Ukraine has been a motivating factor in them deciding to sell the Swan Lake Suite now.
‘They have had them for 14 years but given what is going on, their thoughts are now very much on rebuilding their country.’
The necklace was made from 178 diamonds totalling 51 carats and paired with five matching 12mm South Sea pearls.
The sale will take place on June 27.
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Princess Diana’s handwritten letters to friends set for auctioning
“An astonishing, confidential collection of 32 highly personal letters and cards written by the Princess of Wales to two of her closest friends,” is how Lay’s Auctioneers describes the correspondence.
Letters from Princess Diana to her friends during her divorce from the then-Prince Charles are being sold by her friends.
The sale of 32 letters that the late Princess of Wales wrote to Susie and Tarek Kassem over the course of her final two years has been announced by Lay’s Auctioneers.
The “highly personal letters and cards” were “astonishing” and “confidential,” according to the English auction house. On February 16, the notes are scheduled to be sold off in discrete lots at auction.
“Susie & Tarek Kassem have treasured these letters for more than 25 years as Diana, Princess of Wales’, close friends. They exhibit the unique
The auction house released a photo of one of the letters, dated February 17, 1996, on Kensington Palace stationery with Diana’s royal cypher.
“Darling Susie,” Diana began in the note. “Thank you for all the lovely things you said to me on the telephone tonight… You have no idea the joy and trust you and Tarek have introduced into my life and I count myself extremely fortunate both Tarek and you for believing in me…”
“Love, Diana,” she wrote, adding an “X” for a kiss.
Lay’s said that the Kassems decided to auction some of the correspondence “to give other people the opportunity of acquiring ‘a memento’ of the Princess, and in doing so, support causes that were important to her.” The charities that the sale of the letters will benefit were not named in the statement.
LAY’S AUCTIONEERS “The Kassems have kept some of their more personal and confidential letters, but largely this collection of over 30 letters and notecards illustrate Diana’s immensely warm and loving disposition in a charming and delightful manner,” the release continued. “Some letters do touch on the enormous stress she was experiencing during periods of very public heartbreak, yet her strength of character and her generous and witty disposition shine through.”
“It is an extraordinarily poignant collection of correspondence, written by one of the most important and influential women of the 20th century, and documents one of her most valued and significant friendships during the last 2 years of her life,” it concluded.
TIM GRAHAM PHOTO LIBRARY The letters fall within the time that Diana’s divorce from Charles was finalized. After 11 years of marriage, the pair separated in December 1992, with a divorce made official in August 1996. One year later, Diana died in a car accident in Paris at age 37.
In one letter shared by The Times, Diana wrote with candor to the Kassems, apologizing for canceling plans to go to the opera together because of the stress she felt.
“I am having a very difficult time and pressure is serious and coming from all sides. It’s too difficult sometimes to keep one’s head up, and today I am on my knees and just longing for this divorce to go through as the possible cost is tremendous,” Princess Diana reportedly wrote in a note dated April 28, 1996.
According to the outlet, Princess Diana also confided in the couple over fears that her phone at Kensington Palace was “constantly” bugged and thanked her friends for celebrating Christmas with her in 1995 when her sons, Prince William and Prince Harry, were at Sandringham with their father and the royal family.
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Kim Kardashian buys Princess Diana’s amethyst cross at auction
A necklace that belonged to Princess Diana has been acquired by Kim Kardashian.
Wednesday’s Royal and Noble Sale at Sotheby’s in London included the auctioning off of the Attallah Cross.
The US reality TV star won the auction after a five-minute bidding war between four participants.
Princess Diana frequently wore the amethyst cross pendant by opulent jewelry designer Garrard in the 1920s.
The princess most notably wore it in October 1987 to the London charity banquet for Birthright, an organization defending the human rights of pregnant and postpartum women.
Large amethyst stones are set in the cross-shaped pendant, which is encircled by 5.2-carat diamonds.
It was initially purchased by businessman Naim Attallah in the 1980s, and because of his acquaintance with Diana, he frequently lent it to her over a long period of time. The item was auctioned off by his estate.
In contrast to Sotheby’s pre-sale estimate of £80,000 to £120,000, reality TV star Kardashian paid a total of £163,800 for the cross.
IMAGE SOURCE,SOTHEBY’S Image caption, The Sotheby’s pre-sale estimate for the piece was £80,000 to £120,000
It was first bought by businessman Naim Attallah in the 1980s who, as a result of his friendship with Diana, loaned it to her several times over many years. It was his estate that put the item up for auction.
Reality TV star Kardashian paid a total of £163,800 for the cross, far higher than Sotheby’s pre-sale estimate of £80,000 to £120,000.
Head of jewellery at Sotheby’s London Kristian Spofforth said: “Jewellery owned or worn by the late Princess Diana very rarely comes on to the market, especially a piece such as the Attallah Cross, which is so colourful, bold and distinctive.
“To some extent, this unusual pendant is symbolic of the princess’s growing self-assurance in her sartorial and jewellery choices, at that particular moment in her life.”
It is not the first historic fashion item Kardashian has shown an interest in.
Image caption,Kardashian revealed she lost 16 pounds (7kg) to fit into Marilyn Monroe’s iconic dress At last year’s Met Gala, she wore a Marilyn Monroe gown that was loaned to her from Ripley’s Believe It or Not! museum.
The dress was worn by Monroe during her performance of Happy Birthday to US president John F Kennedy in 1962.
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Remembering the Massive Bombshells From Princess Diana’s Intense 1995 BBC Interview
Why so much ado about an interview given in 1995, by a person who died less than two years later?
For starters, it was no ordinary interview. Whenever Princess Diana spoke, the world took notice—and her sit-down with journalist Martin Bashir that aired on the BBC’s Panorama 25 years ago was packed with candid, eye-opening turns of phrase from Prince Charles’ estranged wife, and has continued to be described as sensational. Now, the same can be said of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s tell-all. During their two-hour interview with Oprah Winfrey, the couple held nothing back while recalling the conversations—and concerns—the royal family had about their son’s skin color, the “falsehoods” The Firm continued to perpetuate and why they really stepped away from their titles.
And today, while the world scrutinizes every word Meghan and Harry said, there’s still talk about Diana’s segment, which approximately 23 million people tuned in to watch on Nov. 20, 1995. In fact, the interview is now under renewed scrutiny with regard to how Bashir got the Princess of Wales to go on camera in the first place.
“The independent investigation is a step in the right direction,” Prince William—who historically has had no great love for the media due to their treatment of his mother and, down the road, his future wife, Kate Middleton—said in a statement released by Kensington Palace Nov. 18. “It should help establish the truth behind the actions that led to the Panorama interview and subsequent decisions taken by those in the BBC at the time.”
Pool Photograph/Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images
The investigation in question is in response to allegations from the late princess’ brother, Earl Charles Spencer, that Bashir used forged bank statements purporting to show that a former member of his security team had received money for sharing information about Diana. Moreover, it’s alleged that Bashir lied to Spencer about the queen and other senior royals in order to gain his trust and hasten a meeting. (Bashir has not yet personally responded to any of these allegations.)
People close to Diana, meanwhile, have said that she promptly regretted the whole thing—even before it had aired.
“I think the scales fell from her eyes and suddenly what had been rather a subversive or daring scheme—or however they [the BBC] had dressed it up for her—it suddenly in the cold light of day didn’t look like such a good idea,” Patrick Jephson, her former private secretary, told the Daily Mail in 2016 in response to a Mail on Sunday report that the BBC’s head of news at the time had purposely tried to keep Buckingham Palace in the dark about the Diana interview.
Express Newspapers Via AP Images
Not long after the broadcast, Queen Elizabeth II insisted that Charles and Diana, who had been separated since 1992, start divorce proceedings. Their split was finalized in 1996.
This hadn’t been the first time that Diana’s candor had made it into the public sphere, Andrew Morton’s biography utilizing recordings the princess made for him having been published in 1992. But something—maybe everything—about it rubbed the royals the wrong way. Here are the revelations that made it such an unforgettable hour:
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Lights, Cameras… Angst
“The most daunting aspect was the media attention,” Princess Diana told Martin Bashir on the BBC’s Panorama, “because my husband and I, we were told when we got engaged that the media would go quietly, and it didn’t; and then when we were married they said it would go quietly and it didn’t; and then it started to focus very much on me, and I seemed to be on the front of a newspaper every single day, which is an isolating experience, and the higher the media put you, place you, is the bigger the drop. And I was very aware of that.”
From the moment the press first got an inkling of a new romance between the very eligible Prince Charles and 19-year-old Lady Diana Spencer in 1980, they rarely gave her a moment’s piece, trailing her everywhere and hanging around outside her London flat. One intrepid so-called reporter even squeezed through a window at the nursery school where Diana was an aide, searching for a scoop.
She always assumed people would be more interested in her husband and his good works, “but I, during the years, you see yourself as a good product that sits on a shelf and sells well, and people make a lot of money out of you.”
JOHN SHELLEY/REX/Shutterstock
In the Deep End Down Under
Their 1983 tour of Australia and New Zealand that was widely praised as such a success was actually agony at times, Diana said.
“We went to Alice Springs, to Australia, and we went and did a walkabout, and I said to my husband: ‘What do I do now?’” she recalled. “And he said, ‘Go over to the other side and speak to [the press].’ I said, ‘I can’t, I just can’t.’ He said, ‘Well, you’ve got to do it.’ And he went off and did his bit, and I went off and did my bit. It practically finished me off there and then, and I suddenly realized—I went back to our hotel room and realized the impact that, you know, I had to sort myself out.”
After the trip, “I was a different person. I realized the sense of duty, the level of intensity of interest, and the demanding role I now found myself in.”
JSH TOUR/REX/Shutterstock
A Jealous Husband
Charles, the future King, didn’t exactly love playing second fiddle to his charming (if shy underneath it all) wife.
Asked if she was flattered by all the attention, she toldBashir, “No, not particularly, because with the media attention came a lot of jealousy. A great deal of complicated situations arose because of that.”
Eventually, Charles decided that they should do fewer joint engagements, so that on his own he would at least get some attention.
Tim Graham/Getty Images
The Real World
Diana became known as the People’s Princess for a reason. Not knowing at first what areas of public service she should get involved in when she first married Charles, patronages and advocating for causes being a large part of the job when you join The Firm, Diana explained, “I found myself being more and more involved with people who were rejected by society—with, I’d say, drug addicts, alcoholism, battered this, battered that—and I found an affinity there.”
“And I respected very much the honesty I found on that level with people I met, because in hospices, for instance, when people are dying they’re much more open and more vulnerable, and much more real than other people. And I appreciated that.”
No one from the palace ever steered her otherwise, she added, and “I’m lucky enough in the fact that I have found my role, and I’m very conscious of it, and I love being with people.”
Jayne Fincher/courtesy of HBO
Heir and a Spare
Diana openly acknowledged that her firstborn child being a boy was considered an extra-good thing by royal standards. And though she had previously said that, after Prince William was born, Charles was hoping for a daughter and was a wee bit disappointed when red-headed Prince Harry popped out instead, two boys was certainly better than two girls.
“It would have been a little tricky if it had been two girls—but that in itself brings the responsibilities of bringing them up, William’s future being as it is, and Harry like a form of a back-up in that aspect,” she said.
Anwar Hussein/Getty Images
They Called Her Crazy
Diana revealed that she experienced postnatal depression after William’s birth, “which no one ever discusses.” She said, “That in itself was a bit of a difficult time. You’d wake up in the morning feeling you didn’t want to get out of bed, you felt misunderstood, and just very, very low in yourself.”
Asked if she got help, the princess said, “I received a great deal of treatment, but I knew in myself that actually what I needed was space and time to adapt to all the different roles that had come my way. I knew I could do it, but I needed people to be patient and give me the space to do it.”
According to Diana, however, her in-laws didn’t know what to make of her.
“Well maybe I was the first person ever to be in this family who ever had a depression or was ever openly tearful,” she said. “And obviously that was daunting, because if you’ve never seen it before how do you support it?” Ultimately, “it gave everybody a wonderful new label: Diana’s unstable and Diana’s mentally unbalanced. And unfortunately that seems to have stuck on and off over the years.”
Photo by Jayne Fincher/Princess Diana Archive/Getty Images
A History of Self-Harm
Reports that Diana had harmed herself turned out to be true.
“For instance you have so much pain inside yourself that you try and hurt yourself on the outside because you want help, but it’s the wrong help you’re asking for,” she reflected. “People see it as crying wolf or attention-seeking, and they think because you’re in the media all the time you’ve got enough attention. But I was actually crying out because I wanted to get better in order to go forward and continue my duty and my role as wife, mother, Princess of Wales.
“So yes, I did inflict upon myself. I didn’t like myself, I was ashamed because I couldn’t cope with the pressures.”
She would “just” hurt her arms and legs. Asked if Charles understood why she was doing that, she said, “No, but then not many people would have taken the time to see that.”
Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images; Netflix
Detailing Her Eating Disorder
Diana confirmed that she also battled bulimia for years.
“You inflict it upon yourself because your self-esteem is at a low ebb, and you don’t think you’re worthy or valuable,” she said, comparing binge eating to “having a pair of arms around you, but it’s…temporary. Then you’re disgusted at the bloatedness of your stomach, and then you bring it all up again.”
After spending her days comforting others, she’d go home and comfort herself with food. But, she added, “It was a symptom of what was going on in my marriage. I was crying out for help, but giving the wrong signals, and people were using my bulimia as a coat on a hanger: They decided that was the problem—Diana was unstable.”
Kent Gavin/Mirrorpix/Getty Images
She’s No Dummy
Diana was aware that the general impression of her was that she wasn’t as intellectually deep as Charles, and she resented it.
“I made the grave mistake once of saying to a child I was thick as a plank, in order to ease the child’s nervousness, which it did,” she recalled. “But that headline went all round the world, and I rather regret saying it.”
She and Charles actually had many common interests, Diana said. “We both liked people, both liked country life, both loved children, work in the cancer field, work in hospices.”
As far as her own interests, “I don’t think I was allowed to have any,” she said of their relationship early on. “I think that I’ve always been the 18-year-old girl he got engaged to, so I don’t think I’ve been given any credit for growth. And, my goodness, I’ve had to grow.”
David Hartley/Shutterstock
Three Was a Crowd
In perhaps the most quoted, most remembered segment of the interview, Diana admitted to knowing early on that her husband had rekindled his romance with ex-girlfriend Camilla Parker Bowles.
Asked if the affair led to the breakdown of her and Charles’ relationship, she replied, “Well, there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded.”
Later on, however, on whether she bore any responsibility, Diana said, “I take full responsibility,” before quickly adding, “I take some responsibility that our marriage went the way it did. I’ll take half of it, but I won’t take any more than that, because it takes two to get in this situation.”
Anwar Hussein/Getty Images
Leading a Double Life
Even before they separated, Diana and Charles were effectively living separate lives. When “we went abroad we had separate apartments, albeit we were on the same floor, so of course that was leaked, and that caused complications,” she remembered. “But Charles and I had our duty to perform, and that was paramount.”
And, she continued, “we were a very good team in public.”
When Bashir pointed out that a lot of people might not understand how they lived like that, Diana retorted, “Well, that’s their problem. I know what it felt like.”
Simon & Schuster
A Little Misdirection
Diana denied “personally assisting” Andrew Morton with the writing of his explosive 1992 biography Diana: Her True Story, but she did allow her friends to speak to him, she said, to help set the record straight on her behalf while her life behind the scenes was spiraling.
“A lot of people saw the distress that my life was in, and they felt it was a supportive thing to help in the way that they did,” she told Bashir. The princess had thought that maybe a book would give people “a better understanding” of her. “Maybe there’s a lot of women out there who suffer on the same level but in a different environment, who are unable to stand up for themselves because their self-esteem is cut into two.”
She left out, however, that she submitted to interviews by proxy, Morton asking questions via her friend Dr. James Colthurst, who recorded her responses. Diana also gave Colthurst (who in turn showed them to Morton) a few pieces of private correspondence from Camilla to Charles, the author shared in the Mail on Sunday in 2017.
“However, due to Britain’s libel laws, I wasn’t at the time able to write that Prince Charles and Camilla were lovers, because it couldn’t be proved,” Morton recalled. “Instead, I had to allude to a ‘secret friendship.’”
Unlike with the BBC interview, Morton said, “She never regretted the taping sessions. As her friend filmmaker Lord Puttnam recalled: ‘She owned what she had done. She knew what she was doing and took a calculated risk, even though she was scared sh–less. But I never heard one word of regret, I promise you.’” (After she died, the book was republished as Diana: Her True Story—In Her Own Words.)
Still, Diana told Bashir, the book (which “shocked and horrified” the royal family) was certainly a turning point for her and Charles. “What had been hidden—or rather what we thought had been hidden—then became out in the open and was spoken about on a daily basis, and the pressure was for us to sort ourselves out in some way.”
The sorting out resulted in their separation being formally announced in December 1992, capping off the Queen’s “annus horribilis.”
Bryn Colton/Getty Images
No Affair With James Gilbey
Diana was sorry that her affectionate friend had been sucked into her sordid squabbles when a recording of a flirtatious phone call between them was leaked to The Sun in 1992.
“But the implications of that conversation were that we’d had an adulterous relationship, which was not true,” she insisted. The transcript was published “to harm me in a serious manner, and that was the first time I’d experienced what it was like to be outside the net, so to speak, and not be in the family.”
Jayne Fincher/Getty Images
“She Won’t Go Quietly”
It was Diana’s firm belief that, once she and Charles separated, the royal family had it out for her, that they viewed her as “a problem.”
They weren’t quite sure what to do, she continued, because “‘she won’t go quietly,’ that’s the problem. I’ll fight to the end, because I believe that I have a role to fulfill, and I’ve got two children to bring up.”
Referring to a brief break she took from the public eye in 1993, Diana said her plan was to “confuse the enemy,” explaining, “the enemy was my husband’s department, because I always got more publicity, my work was…discussed much more than him.” They tried to undermine her “out of fear,” she continued, “because here was a strong woman doing her bit, and where was she getting her strength from to continue?”
Shutterstock
“A” for Honesty
Diana cheekily gave Charles kudos to admitting to adultery in his own bombshell interview with Jonathan Dimbleby, author of the 1994 biography The Prince of Wales.
“I was pretty devastated myself. But then I admired the honesty, because it takes a lot to do that,” she shared. “To be honest about a relationship with someone else, in his position—that’s quite something.”
Terry Fincher/Getty Images
How She Broke the News to William
When she and Charles were separating, she went to Ludgrove, William’s boarding school in Berkshire, to tell him in person. She remembered advising her son “that if you find someone you love in life you must hang on to it and look after it, and if you were lucky enough to find someone who loved you, then one must protect it. William asked me what had been going on, and could I answer his questions, which I did.”
She reiterated to her then 10-year-old child that “there were three of us in this marriage, and the pressure of the media was another factor, so the two together were very difficult. But although I still loved Papa I couldn’t live under the same roof as him, and likewise with him.”
Asked how that may have affected him, Diana said William was “a deep thinker, and we don’t know for a few years how it’s gone in. But I put it in gently, without resentment or any anger.”
Ron Dadswell/REX/Shutterstock
Coming Clean About Her Own Affair
Whether Diana would have ever stepped out on Charles if she hadn’t been so unhappy, we’ll never know. But she did admit to being more-than-close-friends with former army officer James Hewitt, who had been her and her sons’ riding instructor (and was the subject of a much-denied rumor that he’s Harry’s real father). He published a tell-all book, Princess In Love, about their affair, which began in 1987, and Diana “really minded” that he had profited from something so private.
“I adored him,” she admitted. “Yes, I was in love with him. But I was very let down.”
Arthur Edwards – WPA Pool/Getty Images
Order of Succession
Asked if she thought Charles would become King one day, Diana replied, “Who knows what fate will produce, who knows what circumstances will provoke?”
Asked if Charles wanted to be King, she said, “There was always conflict on that subject with him when we discussed it, and I understood that conflict, because it’s a very demanding role, being Prince of Wales, but it’s an equally more demanding role being King. And being Prince of Wales produces more freedom now, and being King would be a little bit more suffocating. And because I know the character I would think that the top job, as I call it, would bring enormous limitations to him, and I don’t know whether he could adapt to that.”
And on whether he should be King, or should William skip a rung and become the next monarch, Diana said, “Well, then you have to see that William’s very young at the moment, so do you want a burden like that to be put on his shoulders at such an age? So I can’t answer that question.” But, once he’s of age, “My wish is that my husband finds peace of mind, and from that follows others things, yes.”
Bashir closed the interview by asking Diana why she agreed to talk to him.
“Because we will have been separated three years this December, and the perception that has been given of me for the last three years has been very confusing, turbulent, and in some areas— I’m sure many—many people doubt me,” she explained. “And I want to reassure all those people who have loved me and supported me throughout the last 15 years that I’d never let them down. That is a priority to me, along with my children.”
And no, the princess said, she was not just trying to stick it to Charles for what he (or his family) had put her through.
“I don’t sit here with resentment,” Diana said. “I sit here with sadness because a marriage hasn’t worked. I sit here with hope because there’s a future ahead, a future for my husband, a future for myself and a future for the monarchy.”
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Prince Harry reveals Princess Diana’s favourite £33 perfume still available
Prince Harry made a lot of revelations in his hugely talked about memoir Spare, mainly focused on his relationships with his family.
However, the Duke of Sussex also gave us an insight into his personal life, and there is lots of talk about his wonderful mother, the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
The father-of-two even revealed one of his mother’s favourite perfumes, and you may be surprised to hear how cheap it is.
Harry reveals Diana’s favourite perfume
Harry name checks ‘First’ by Van Cleef & Arpels, which you can pick up for £33.42 at Fragrance X. The scent is a blend of pink jasmine, aldehydic notes, amber sandalwood and vanilla. Stunning.
This wasn’t the only fragrance the mother-of-two loved. According to online site Celebrity Fragrance Guide, the blonde beauty had a few favourites that she often spritzed – and one of them was Penhaligon’s ‘Bluebell’, which you can still buy today but is pretty hard to get hold of. Penhaligon’s often takes it off their website from time to time. Normally priced at £386.02 for a l00ml bottle, the fresh and fruity fragrance has citrus headnotes, mixed in with essences of Lily of the Valley, jasmine and rose, as well as a drop of clove and cinnamon.
Diana was also known for her fabulous head of hair, and a product she swore by was Daniel Galvin’s ‘Love Your Highlights Clear Gloss’ and you can still purchase it today, for a mere £18. Amazing!
Daniel explained to HELLO!: “I looked after Diana for 10 years and always wanted to enhance her natural beauty through her hair colour. I customised Diana’s blonde to suit her and the highlights were placed in such a way, which gave her a natural, sunkissed look.
“Diana’s eyes sparkled and stood out, and this was thanks to my bespoke blonde; as I always say when you have the perfect hair colour, the first thing people should notice is their eyes.”
Source: hellomagazine.com
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Prince Harry thought Princess Diana faked her death – Revelations from his ‘Spare’ interviews
Prince Harry’s jaw-dropping claims about life within the British royal family continue in a series of new interviews he’s done to promote his new memoir, Spare.
The younger son of King Charles and the late Princess Diana spoke to three major media outlets on the eve of the book’s Tuesday release. They include Michael Strahan for Good Morning America on Monday preceded by Anderson Cooper for 60 Minutes and Tom Bradby for the U.K.’s ITV on Sunday.
That’s made for a lot of airtime, here are highlights…
Harry told Cooper he didn’t believe that his mother died in the 1997 Paris car crash. “She would never do this to us,” he recalled thinking. For “many many years” he thought it was “part of a plan” for her to disappear, as she was tormented by the press, and he and William would be summoned to join her later. He had “huge amounts of hope” that she was still alive and would reappear.
Princess Dianna and Prince Harry in 1992. (Photo: REUTERS/Dylan Martinez CMC/PN) He said he barely cried over Diana’s death, being unable to. He remembered feeling “guilt” while greeting mourners in the aftermath and shaking their wet, tear covered hands when he hadn’t yet cried himself. He shed his first tears at her burial, when the coffin was lowered, but didn’t again cry over it until years later. All through his teens, he never cried.
Harry spoke about obtaining the official investigation report on Diana’s death when he was 20. He recalled seeing the final photos of her and knowing that the last thing she saw was photographers taking pictures of her through the car window as she died. He said he was shielded by most graphic photos, crediting an adviser.
He also discussed recreating the drive through the Paris tunnel years later, going through twice, at the same speed, and finding it unbelievable that Diana died there because it seemed so unremarkable. He said William also went through the tunnel separately and did the same thing. While talking to Cooper, Harry said it was explained to the brothers that the events leading to the car crash — the speed, the paparazzi chasing the car and the chauffeur being drunk — was “like a bicycle chain” and “if you remove just one of those links from the chain, the end result doesn’t happen.”
Cooper asked if he’d reopen the inquest into her death and he replied, “I don’t even know if it’s an option now. But no, I think… would I like to do that now? It’s a hell of a question.” Asked if he feels he has the answers about what happened, he said, “Actually, no.. I don’t think I have. And I don’t think my brother thinks otherwise. I don’t think the world does. Do I need any more than I already know? No. I don’t think it would change much.”
Harry claims his stepmother planted stories about him and William to improve her reputation.
Diana famously called Camilla Parker Bowles the “third person” in her marriage, as she was involved with future King Charles before and during the couple’s marriage. After the 1996 divorce, Charles started seeing Camilla openly and Harry claims she began a media campaign to rehab her image after been branded the other woman for so long. He said her campaign involved trading information about other members of the royal family in exchange for good press in hopes of no longer being seen as “the villain.”
“That made her dangerous because of the connections that she was forging within the British press,” Harry told Cooper. “There was open willingness on both sides to trade information. And with a family built on hierarchy, and with her, on the way to being queen consort, there was gonna be people or bodies left in the street.” He felt he was one of these “bodies.” In his book, he wrote, “Camilla sacrificed me on her personal PR altar.”
Camilla with Prince William and Prince Harry in 2006. (Photo: Reuters) Harry said he and William also asked their “Pa” not to marry Camilla, which Charles did in 2005. While she made the future king happy, “We didn’t think it was necessary” that they marry, he said. “We thought that it was gonna cause more harm than good. And that if he was now with his person — surely that’s enough. Why go that far when you don’t necessarily need to?”
Despite what he claims Camilla did, Harry told Strahan, “I love every member of my family, despite the differences, so when I see her, we’re perfectly pleasant with each other. She’s my stepmother. I don’t look at her as an evil stepmother. I see someone who married into this institution and has done everything that she can to improve her own reputation and her own image, for her own sake.”
He and William were never as as close as it seemed.
In Harry’s book, he wrote about an alleged fight he had with his older brother over Markle, which resulted in William getting physical. Harry made it clear that while the world thought they were brothers bonded forever through grief, there was a wall between them. They lived separated lives. At school together, he said William pretended he didn’t know him.
However, they did share some warm moments and spend time together through their work as royals. And they had a pact, Harry claimed, that they would never leak stories about each other to the press, having been the victims of that through Camilla. But William broke the pact, Harry claimed.
Prince Harry and Prince William attend the preparations for the Concert for Diana at Wembley Stadium on June 30, 2007 in London, England. (Photo: Getty Images) Harry told Strahan their mother would be “sad” about their relationship today, but also “heartbroken” that William, through his press office, was involved in leaking stories about him and Markle. He maintained he would “never leak” stories about family members. He said he speaks his truth “with the words that come out of my mouth,” which is why he wrote his memoir, which he said is his life story, not a royal tell-all.
He told Bradby, “Those certain members have decided to get in bed with the devil to rehabilitate their image. But the moment that rehabilitation comes at the detriment of others, me and other members of my family, then that’s where I draw the line.”
Harry says royal family members were uneasy about his relationship with “biracial,” “American actress” Markle
He claimed in his book that while Charles was warm toward Markle at the start, William and others weren’t. Cooper asked what those negative feelings were based on, and Harry replied, “The fact that she was American, an actress, divorced, Black, biracial, with a Black mother.”
He said the British press jumped on Markle being biracial, making for a “feeding frenzy” and he thinks his family bought into that. “My family reads the tabloids,” he said. They’re “laid out at breakfast… So, whether you walk around saying you believe it or not, it’s still leaving an imprint in your mind. If you have that judgment based on a stereotype in the beginning, it’s really really hard to get over that.”
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in December. (Photo: REUTERS/Andrew Kelly) He feels his family and the press have blamed Markle for changes he’s made in his life. “A large part of it for the family, but also the British press and numerous other people is like, ‘He’s changed. She must be a witch.’ Yeah, I did change, and I’m really glad I changed. Rather than getting drunk, falling out of clubs, taking drugs, I have now found the love of my life and I now have the opportunity to start a family with her.”
Harry said his father and brother also became upset with him when he called out the “racial undertones” in tabloid stories about Markle early on. “They felt as though it made them look bad,” he said, “because “they didn’t have a chance or weren’t able to do that for their partners. What Meghan had to go through was similar in some part to what Kate and what Camilla went through — very different circumstances. But then you add in the race element, which was what the British press jumped on straight away. I went into this incredibly naive. I had no idea the British press were so bigoted. Hell, I was probably bigoted before the relationship with— with Meghan.”
He said the royals missed a “huge missed opportunity” in modernizing the monarchy through what Markle represented as a biracial woman.
Harried denied that he and Meghan Markle called the royal family racist in their 2021 Oprah interview.
Bradby said in the ITV interview, “In the Oprah interview, you accuse members of your family of racism…” Harry shot back, “No. The British press said that. Did Meghan ever say ‘they’re racist’?” Harry went on to say what he told Winfrey about there being “concerns [expressed] about [Archie’s] skin color” because she is biracial. When asked if he’d agree that was “essentially racist,” Harry said, “I wouldn’t. Not having lived in that family.”
He went on to explain the “difference between racism and unconscious bias,” saying, “The two things are different. Once it’s been acknowledged or pointed out to you as an individual, otherwise an institution, that you have unconscious bias, you, therefore, have an opportunity to learn and grow from that… otherwise, unconscious bias then moves into the category of racism.”
Harry, who wouldn’t reveal which member of the family talked about the skin color, did say that the royals said after the Oprah interview that they’d bring in a diversity czar, but, “That hasn’t happened. Everything they said was going to happen hasn’t happened.”
Harry on why he won’t renounce his royal title.
While talking about how he and wife Meghan Markle stepped down as senior royals in early 2020 and relocated to California, becoming financially independent from the royal family in the process, Cooper asked why they haven’t renounced their Duke and Duchess of Sussex titles. “And what difference would that make?” Harry asked in response.
In conversation with Strahan he elaborated, saying having been born into the royal family, “I can’t ever get out… I’m incredibly aware of my position and I’m incredibly grateful for the life that I’ve had and continue to live, but there’s no version of me ever being able to get out of this.”
He’s gone through extensive therapy, including using psychedelics.
Harry admitted he wishes he started therapy as a child after his mother’s death because he suppressed his feelings and turned to alcohol and drugs (cocaine, pot) to mask his pain. He said he felt “hopeless” and “lost” until his late 20s. He gave himself a hard time over being unable to cry about his mother’s death, admitting he’d watch online videos of her and try to cry unsuccessfully.
He’s been in therapy for the last seven years and has tried treatments involving ayahuasca and psilocybin or magic mushrooms. He told Cooper, “I would never recommend people to do this recreationally — but doing it with the right people if you are suffering from a huge amount of loss, grief or trauma, then these things have a way of working as a medicine. For me, they cleared the windshield, the windshield of the misery of loss. They cleared away this idea that I had in my head that — that my mother, that I needed to cry to prove to my mother that I missed her. When in fact, all she wanted was for me to be happy.”
He also credited being in the British military for saving him. He said being in uniform among the others made him “feel normal for the first time in my life.” He’s also purpose in his charitable work, including with the Invictus Games Foundation.
How he said goodbye to the queen.
Harry claimed his grandmother wasn’t “angry” when he and Markle said they’d step down as senior royals after Markle experienced suicidal thoughts over the tabloid feeding frenzy. He said the queen was just “sad” about it all.
He also talked about being in England when his grandmother became ill and said the royals didn’t invite him on a plane they took to rush to her deathbed. As a result, he arrived after she died. His aunt, Anne, Princess Royal, greeted him and asked if he wanted to say goodbye. He did and went to the queen’s bedroom, where he privately said goodbye. Talking about her death, he said he thought about how she had a “completed life” and would reunited with her husband, Prince Philip, who died the year before. It made him think about his mother’s tragic death and how she didn’t have a completed life.
Prince Harry and Queen Elizabeth in 2015. (Photo REUTERS/Anthony Devlin/Pool) He’s not speaking to most of his family.
Asked who he’s in touch with, Harry said he hasn’t spoken to Charles, William or Camilla for quite a while.
He can’t see returning to England in a senior royal role, saying it would “unsurvivable” under the scrutiny of the press, but said he “genuinely” believes the British monarchy should continue. He said there’s a place for it if it modernizes.
He said he and Markle have offered to apologize to members of the family for anything they did wrong, but whenever they say that, nobody can pinpoint to them specifically what they did. He said he’d love to have a private conversation, one that doesn’t get leaked, saying the estrangement “all started with them briefing daily against my wife with lies to the point of where my wife and I had to run away from my country.”
And while divide between them couldn’t be greater right now, he hopes to reconcile through “conversations and accountability.” If that doesn’t happen, he said that would be “very sad” but instead “I”ll focus on my life, my amazing family that I’m so very grateful to have… I’m not angry anymore. There are things that will still anger me, but I’m not angry anymore because I am exactly where I’m supposed to be.”
Harry will continue to plug the book, which doesn’t paint his brother or father in a favorable light, this week, including in a special, Prince Harry: In His Own Words, which will air on ABC News on Monday night at 8:30 p.m. He’ll keep at it — also appearing on Tuesday’s The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.
Source: Yahoo
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Meghan went to Princess Diana’s gravestone asking for ‘clarity and guidance’ – Prince Harry reveals
Prince Harry has described how Meghan Markle, who was then dating him, knelt beside Princess Diana’s grave and prayed for guidance.
He remembered the first time she visited Diana’s final burial place on the Althorp estate in his explosive memoir Spare, which went on sale early in Spain yesterday.
On the 20th anniversary of his mother’s passing, Harry recalled how they traveled by boat to the island where she is buried.
He had a moment to himself to contemplate before he realized Meghan too needed some alone time.
‘When I returned, she was on her knees with her eyes closed and her palms flat against the stone,’ he said, adding that she’d told him she’d asked Diana for ‘clarity and guidance’.
The visit happened in August 2017, around a year after the pair started dating.
When he visited the Queen’s body at Balmoral hours after she passed away, Prince Harry says his farewell words to her.
At her childhood home of Althorp House in Northamptonshire, the late Princess was put to rest in 1997. The burial was rededicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 2017 in advance of the 20th anniversary of her passing.
Following his father’s passing in 1992, Earl Spencer received the family estate of Althorp, where he now resides with his third wife, Karen, and their daughter, Lady Charlotte.
Prince Harry has mentioned how Meghan makes him think of his late mother.
In the couple’s bombshell Netflix series, released last month, he said: ‘So much of what Meghan is and how she is, is so similar to my mum.
‘She has the same compassion. She has the same empathy. She has the same confidence. She has this warmth about her.’
In a preview for his interview with Tom Bradby of ITV, Harry made some brand-new revelations today.
The Duke of Sussex described William’s ‘red mist’ in a fight over Meghan before admitting that he took cannabis, magic mushrooms and cocaine in another clip from his ITV interview, out on Sunday.
In addition, Harry insisted to Mr. Bradby that he wants to make amends with his family, despite the fact that the King has been hurt by his memoir and that it has caused the Royal Family’s deepest crisis since the passing of his mother in 1997.
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The reason Meghan Markle wore Princess Diana’s aquamarine ring to Ripple of Hope Gala
At Tuesday night’s Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Gala, Meghan Markle was the center of attention. The Duchess of Sussex arrived with Princess Diana‘s exquisite aquamarine ring and a white off-the-shoulder Louis Vuitton gown.
It had been four years since Markle, 41, reached for the special piece; she memorably debuted it as her “something blue” at her wedding reception with Prince Harry in 2018, and later wore it during the pair’s royal tour of Tonga that same year.
And this week, the duchess may have gravitated toward the bauble for more than just a pop of color.
“It’s interesting to know that the aquamarine’s light blue color symbolizes feelings of sympathy, trust and friendship – particularly ahead of the couple’s upcoming Netflix docuseries,” Maxwell Stone of UK jeweler Steven Stone said in a statement shared with Page Six Style.
Adding that the ring — which features an emerald-cut aquamarine flanked by small solitaire diamonds — “carries a great deal of sentiment” for the royals, Stone explained, “The eye-catching aquamarine was given to Princess Diana by her friend, Lucia Flecha de Lima, and created into a ring by Asprey in 1996.”
And while the jeweler described the stunning sparkler as “no doubt priceless,” he said that an aquamarine ring of equivalent size would be worth “around $98,000.”
he late Princess of Wales first wore the ring — whose center aquamarine is said to weigh in at a whopping 13 carats — during her 1996 tour of Australia. Some have speculated the spectacular stone was intended to stand in for her famous sapphire engagement ring from Prince Charles, following the couple’s highly publicized divorce.
Sadly, Diana only wore it on two occasions before her tragic death in 1997, according to Stone.
In addition to sympathy, trust and friendship, aquamarines are also associated with “tranquility, serenity, clarity, and harmony,” per the jeweler, along with “transformation and rebirth” and “purity, loyalty, hope and truth.”
That made it a fitting choice for the duchess ahead of the premiere of the Sussexes’ much-anticipated Netflix docuseries, “Harry & Meghan,” the first three episodes of which drop Thursday, Dec. 8. (The following three will stream on Dec. 15.)
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Prince Harry describes Meghan Markle’s compassion as that Princess Diana’s
Prince Harry compares Meghan Markle’s “compassion” and “warmth” to his late mother Princess Diana in their new Netflix documentary “Harry & Meghan.”
“So much of what Meghan is and how she is, is so similar to my mom,” Harry said in the first episode of the highly anticipated docuseries. “She has the same compassion, she has the same empathy, she has the same confidence. She has this warmth about her.”
During the episode, in which Harry repeatedly slams the press for “harassing” him his entire life, he expressed his deep concerns that Markle was going to suffer the same fate as Diana, who died in a car accident while being chased by paparazzi in 1997.
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Queen Elizabeth II image portrayed on Christmas sweater
Two royal Christmas sweaters were made by London-based Notjust Clothing, and they’re sure to please any royal lovers on your list this year.
The socially minded retailer’s 2022 Christmas collection include two British-made items: a commemorative Queen Elizabeth II style ($44) and a holiday-themed take on Princess Diana‘s famous black sheep sweater ($44).
The black sweater honoring the late monarch features a white illustration of a young Queen Elizabeth wearing her tiara along with a snowflake pattern and the words “Merry Christmas.”
On the back, the design says “1926 – 2022” above a festive Corgi wearing a Christmas hat and the message “Thank you for everything Ma’am.”
For Diana fans, Notjust has taken the late Princess of Wales’ famous black sheep sweater and given it a Christmas look, replacing the sheep with holiday reindeer — and of course, like the princess’ design, one of them stands out in bold black amongst a parade of white reindeer.
The sweaters are crafted from acrylic yarn made from recycled waste and, according to the brand, half of proceeds will go to youth sports charities Football Beyond Borders and Bloomsbury Football.
A representative for the brand — which has raised more than $100,000 for charity since 2017 — said Notjust chose to help organizations that “use the power of football to change the lives of young people” amid this year’s World Cup.
Princess Diana famously rocked her black sheep sweater to several polo matches in the early 1980s, causing women around the world to rush to copy the playful look.
The style has remained so popular over the years that in 2020, Warm & Wonderful re-released the iconic sweater ($295) in its original red, along with pink, baby blue and green shades.
While neither Princess Diana or Queen Elizabeth are with us this holiday season, fans can represent the late royals at their celebrations.
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Prince Harry, Prince William will be ‘quite uncomfortable’ with new seasons of ‘The Crown,’
The upcoming season of The Crown is going to be covering some of the most painful times in recent memory for the Royal Family, and it might prove to be very difficult for Prince William and Prince Harry to stomach.
ET recently sat down with royal expert Katie Nicholl, who helped shine some light on what the princes may be struggling with when it comes to season 5 of The Crown, which largely covers the 1990s — a particularly tumultuous and dark time for the family.
“I think this series is going to be quite uncomfortable viewing, not just for [Queen Consort] Camilla and [King] Charles but also for William and Harry,” Nicholl explained. “Scenes leading up to their mother’s death are going to be very, very uncomfortable for them.”
Princess Diana died in a shocking car crash in Paris in 1997, at the age of 36. At the time, William and Harry were 15 and 12, respectively.
“This is a period that they had to live out so publicly. We heard Harry talk about the very real impact it’s had on his life, and William as well,” Nicholl shared. “So for this to sort of be revisited, even if it’s done tastefully … for this to be brought up all over again is incredibly hard for William and Harry.”
“[There is] a sense that, really, their mother’s ghost can’t ever be laid to rest for them,” she added. “I think [that] is really still something that’s very real and very difficult for them.”
Nicholl explained that the “biggest problem” the royal family and critics of the show have with the current seasons is that it “is about people who are still alive today.”
“The events, yes, are 25 years old, but they still feel very current because they’re constantly still making headlines — largely through films and TV series like this,” she said. “Those early [seasons] felt like there was enough history, felt like there was enough distance. But this just feels uncomfortably close.”
“That being said, with all the media hype and the attention the series has been getting, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if this is the biggest rated [season] for the series, in terms of viewing figures,” Nicholl added.
Another element of awkwardness may stem from the casting of Dominic West — a real-life friend of Harry — to play a younger Charles.
“For Dominic West, going into that role playing Charles, during some of the most tumultuous years of the Royal Family — and at a time when Charles’ popularity was absolutely rock bottom — I think any actor would jump at the chance because, obviously, it’s a wonderful opportunity,” Nicholl said. “But [they might] also think twice about it as well. I mean, when they were making The Crown they would have known, given the queen’s age, given her frailty, [that] there was always a real risk that this series was going to go out when she was either close to death or indeed had died, as is the case.”
“So I think that is a big responsibility for the actors,” Nicholl said. “It’s not just a role, it’s not just a character, it’s not just a part. It’s a real person who now happens to be king, and it is the dredging up of a past which he’d much rather move on from.”
Season 5 of The Crown premieres Nov. 9 on Netflix.
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‘The Crown’ Season 5 Trailer Centers on Charles and Diana’s Explosive Divorce
Ahead of season 5’s debut on Nov. 9, Netflix finally debuted a fiery trailer for the new episodes of The Crown, giving audiences an extended look “a house divided” as Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s divorce takes center stage on creator Peter Morgan’s historical drama about the royal family.
Picking up in the early 1990s, the series will focus on the “most visual” era of the royals as they navigated newfound attention surrounding the Palace, which included many headline-grabbing events and scandals of the time.
“That’s the amazing thing about playing these people at this time, because in the journey of The Crown so far out of all the seasons, this is the most visual content we have of the royal family,” said Elizabeth Debicki, who makes a stunning transformation into Diana as the trailer shows her struggling in her marriage to Charles, which many have said always included a third person, Camilla Parker-Bowles.
As per tradition of the Emmy-winning series, a new cast has taken over the key roles, with Debicki now portraying the late princess after Emma Corrin originated the role in season 4 and Dominic West following in Julian Baring and Josh O’Connor’s footsteps as Charles, who was recently named king following his mother’s death in September.
Joining them is Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth II, Jonathan Pryce as Prince Philip, Lesley Manville as Princess Margaret, Claudia Harrison as Princess Anne, Olivia Williams as Charles’ longtime friend and eventual second wife as well as Jonny Lee Miller as John Major, Salim Daw as Mohamed Al Fayed and Khalid Abdalla as Dodi Fayed.
The trailer, set to a haunting version The Verve’s “Bittersweet Symphony,” also teases other notable moments from the early ‘90s, including Diana’s “revenge dress” to her controversial, sit-down interview with reporter Martin Bashir to the fire that broke out in Windsor Castle, which offers a fitting allegory to what is happening with the family at that time.
While Charles and Camilla’s “tampongate” was not seen here, it is another wild moment that West confirmed would be depicted in season 5. “I remember thinking it was something so sordid and deeply, deeply embarrassing [at the time],” he shared in a recent interview.
“Looking back on it, and having to play it, what you’re conscious of is that the blame was not with these two people, two lovers, who were having a private conversation,” he continued. “What’s really [clear now] is how invasive and disgusting was the press’s attention to it, that they printed it out verbatim and you could call a number and listen to the actual tape. I think it made me extremely sympathetic towards the two of them and what they’d gone through.”
Echoing that sentiment about the press, Debicki has said that “in the ‘90s everything had started to be filmed and also it was the birth of the 24-hour news cycle, so there’s just this incredible amount of content that we have access to.” And as a result, “Diana was the most photographed person in the world at that time.”
Of course, no matter how much Diana and Charles’ marriage is depicted this season, there’s no forgetting that this series is always about the queen, and how she managed to maintain her reign and family’s place in the ever-evolving British consciousness.
Following Emmy-winning turns by Claire Foy and Olivia Colman, Staunton is tasked with portraying Her Majesty in her later years until the series closes out with season 6. “I’m greatly honored,” Staunton previously told ET about being approached by creator Peter Morgan and his team to complete “the last lap” and finish out what the other two actresses started before her. “I don’t want to let the air go out of the balloon and I really have to bring it home. I would love to do that for all the people who have gone before me.”
In a later interview, she acknowledged the fans who were excited to see her join the franchise, saying, “Let’s just hope that works out for them because I’ve done it. Nothing I can do about it now!”
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Princess Diana lost so much weight between her wedding and honeymoon that her wedding ring had to be adjusted
In her later years, Princess Diana opened up about her struggles with an eating disorder.
She previously told a royal biographer she began experiencing bulimia following her engagement.
A new royal book claims that by the time of her honeymoon, Diana’s wedding ring was too big for her.
Princess Diana‘s struggle with bulimia took such a toll after her wedding that her ring had to be adjusted following her honeymoon, according to a new book.
Valentine Low, a Times of London royal correspondent, authored “Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind the Crown,” which was released in the UK on Thursday. In the book, he traces the modern history of the royal family through the lens of courtiers, a term used for the people working within each royal household.
In the chapter “Growing Up,” Low covers the experience of Michael Colborne, a private secretary who worked for Charles and Diana early into their marriage. Colborne, the author wrote, witnessed not only the “disintegration” of the couple’s marriage, which began after their 1981 wedding but the beginning of Diana’s struggle with bulimia nervosa, an eating disorder.
According to Low, Charles had summoned Colborne to Balmoral, Scotland, where he and Diana spent some time following their tumultuous two-week honeymoon in 1981. It was there that Low wrote Diana opened up to the private secretary about how unhappy she was and, after an argument between her and Charles, that the prince threw her wedding ring at him.
“Colborne heard Charles and Diana having a massive row. Then Charles suddenly appeared, and threw something at Colborne: it was Diana’s wedding ring, which Colborne somehow managed to catch,” the author wrote.
“Diana had lost so much weight that it no longer fitted and needed to be adjusted,” he added.
Diana’s ring required an adjustment soon after their wedding in July 1981. David Levenson/Getty Images Then 20 years old, Diana had already shown signs of her condition for months. The UK’s National Health Service describes it as an eating disorder and mental health condition which involves the individual eating “a lot of food in a very short amount of time (binge eating) and then making themselves sick” in order to prevent weight gain.
According to Andrew Morton’s 1992 biography, based on confession tapes recorded by the princess, Diana’s condition began before her wedding to Charles.
“The bulimia started the week after we got engaged and would take nearly a decade to overcome,” she said on the tapes, according to Vogue. “My husband put his hand on my waistline and said: ‘Oh, a bit chubby here, aren’t we?’ and that triggered off something in me.”
Her wedding ring is also not the only item to have been sized down due to her struggle with bulimia. As Vogue also reported, her wedding dress designer said when they began fittings for the big day, Diana’s waist measured between 26 to 27 inches. But by her wedding in July 1981, her waist dropped to 23 inches.
Later in life, the princess used her experience to become an advocate for others, according to Elle Magazine.
During a keynote address in 1993, she opened up public discourse surrounding eating disorders and touched on how they can affect an individual’s overall health.
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Princess Diana lost so much weight between her wedding and honeymoon, new book reveals
Princess Diana‘s struggle with bulimia took such a toll after her wedding that her ring had to be adjusted following her honeymoon, according to a new book.
Valentine Low, a Times of London royal correspondent, authored “Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind the Crown,” which was released in the UK on Thursday. In the book, he traces the modern history of the royal family through the lens of courtiers, a term used for the people working within each royal household.
In the chapter “Growing Up,” Low covers the experience of Michael Colborne, a private secretary who worked for Charles and Diana early into their marriage. Colborne, the author wrote, witnessed not only the “disintegration” of the couple’s marriage, which began after their 1981 wedding, but the beginning of Diana’s struggle with bulimia nervosa, an eating disorder.
According to Low, Charles had summoned Colborne to Balmoral, Scotland, where he and Diana spent some time following their tumultuous two-week honeymoon in 1981. It was there that Low wrote Diana opened up to the private secretary about how unhappy she was and, after an argument between her and Charles, that the prince threw her wedding ring at him.
“Colborne heard Charles and Diana having a massive row. Then Charles suddenly appeared, and threw something at Colborne: it was Diana’s wedding ring, which Colborne somehow managed to catch,” the author wrote.
“Diana had lost so much weight that it no longer fitted and needed to be adjusted,” he added.
Diana’s ring required an adjustment soon after their wedding in July 1981.David Levenson/Getty Images Then 20 years old, Diana had already shown signs of her condition for months. The UK’s National Health Service describes it as an eating disorder and mental health condition which involves the individual eating “a lot of food in a very short amount of time (binge eating) and then make themselves sick” in order to prevent weight gain.
According to Andrew Morton’s 1992 biography, based on confession tapes recorded by the princess, Diana’s condition began before her wedding to Charles.
“The bulimia started the week after we got engaged and would take nearly a decade to overcome,” she said on the tapes, according to Vogue. “My husband put his hand on my waistline and said: ‘Oh, a bit chubby here, aren’t we?’ and that triggered off something in me.”
Her wedding ring is also not the only item to have been sized down due to her struggle with bulimia. As Vogue also reported, her wedding dress designer said when they began fittings for the big day, Diana’s waist measured between 26 to 27 inches. But by her wedding in July 1981, her waist dropped to 23 inches.
Later in life, the princess used her experience to become an advocate for others, according to Elle Magazine.
During a keynote address in 1993, she opened up public discourse surrounding eating disorders and touched on how they can affect an individual’s overall health.
Source: Yahoo.com