Read Diana in Search of Herself Online

Authors: Sally Bedell Smith

Diana in Search of Herself (56 page)

Spencer did not see Bashir again; he became suspicious when he compared the notes he had taken at the earlier meetings with what Bashir said in Diana’s presence and found discrepancies in the details.
But Bashir had struck a nerve with Diana, who had long suspected she was being spied on by the royal family. Over the next month, she and Bashir discussed the terms of a wide-ranging interview. “She was off on her own bat, having had her various insecurities fed by Bashir very cleverly,” said a man who knew her well; among other things, he said, Bashir convinced Diana that her apartment was bugged.

Bashir also benefited from the consequences of a
News of the World
report in early August that Diana was having “
secret trysts” with English rugby captain Will Carling at Kensington Palace. The source of this information was Carling’s former personal assistant Hilary Ryan, who had no evidence of any intimacy between Diana and Carling, but said, “he’s been running around after her like a puppy.”

The implication was that Diana had another affair with a married man. “
I have done nothing wrong,” Diana said. “We were never alone together.” But comments by Carling and his wife, Julia, to several tabloids undercut her denial. Julia said that her marriage was strong, “
however much someone is trying to destroy what you have.” She added: “This has happened to [Diana] before, and you hope she won’t do these things again, but she obviously does.” Will Carling publicly pledged not to see Diana again and said, “
It was flattering that the Princess of Wales was interested in me—and that is probably where I made my mistake.” Admitting he had hurt Julia, he said, “That is unforgivable.”

On September 24, the
News of the World
asserted that Diana and Carling were still seeing each other. The evidence was trumped-up—a visit Carling made to Kensington Palace to deliver rugby shirts for William and Harry when Diana wasn’t even at home, and a chance encounter in a London health club. But less than a week later, the Carlings announced their
separation, and once again, Julia pointed the finger at Diana, saying, “
Recent pressure and tensions have produced this situation.… It hurts me very much to face losing my husband in a manner which has become outside my control.”

The press lambasted Diana.
Today
asked, “
Is Will Carling merely another trophy for a bored, manipulative and selfish princess?”
The Sun
called her a “
homewrecker,” and the
Daily Express
wondered, “
Is no marriage and no man safe from the wife of the heir to the throne?”

Several years after the fact, Carling said in his memoir,
My Autobiography
, that Diana had started their friendship by inviting him for coffee at the Harbour Club, then regaling him with gossip about famous people: “
She said she found President Bill Clinton impressive in private, but she considered Hillary, his wife, to be overambitious.” “Out of the blue” in mid-1995, Carling said, “she asked me about my marriage to Julia,” and he confessed he was unhappy. “Her remark broke the ice.… That was her gift: Inoffensively and humorously, she had shown her concern.” While Carling admitted he had been “very attracted to [Diana],” he said, “I never made a pass at her,” which left open the possibility that Diana had taken the initiative as she had with Hewitt. Carling deepened the ambiguity by adding, “If I had a sexual relationship with her, I wouldn’t say I had.”

Diana insisted to close friends that she did not have a physical relationship with Carling. “She always denied an affair,” said one friend. “I believed her because she admitted to others.” Clearly Diana didn’t have the same strong attachment for Carling she had felt for Hewitt and Hoare. “She made a lot of jokes about Carling,” recalled a friend who spoke to Diana frequently at the time. “She would answer the phone, ‘Mrs. Carling.’ But then she realized it was getting out of control.” Within weeks of the first tabloid disclosure, Diana had dropped Carling “
like a hot brick,” in the words of
Today
. Afterward, Diana gave no sign of missing him.

The Carling scandal reinforced Diana’s desire to show herself in a good light on television. Toward the end of October, Diana and Martin Bashir had agreed on an interview plan—
ironically enough, only days after public relations adviser Gordon Reece gave a dinner party to introduce her to Lord Wakeham, the new chairman of the Press Complaints Commission. Diana told Wakeham that she favored a privacy law to protect people from media intrusions, even as she was secretly plotting her own invasion of the royal family’s privacy.

Diana and Bashir agreed to tape on November 5, Guy Fawkes Day, a national holiday when her staff would be away from Kensington Palace. The program was scheduled to air November 20—the forty-eighth wedding anniversary of the Queen and Prince Philip. For Diana’s purpose—to demonstrate her strength and her independence—the timing seemed perfect.
She even had an idealized new image to show the world, her first
Harper’s Bazaar
cover. The magazine’s editor, Liz Tilberis, said she had originally been unaware that Diana had arranged the cover to coincide with
Panorama
, but then realized that Diana “
knew exactly what she was doing.”
Indeed, the shoot with Diana’s favorite photographer, Patrick Demarchelier, was on October 13, far along in Diana’s scheme with Bashir. Diana had planned another symbolic event two days after the airdate: her arrival in Argentina for a four-day “working visit.”

Diana told neither her close aides nor her close friends about the interview; no one in her family knew, either, not even Charles Spencer. She did consult her psychic Rita Rogers, however. “
I supported her choice,” Rogers later said. On November 5,
Diana opened the door at Kensington Palace herself, further proof of the project’s secrecy. The four-man crew took two hours to set up and spent three hours filming the interview, which was edited down to fifty-five minutes.


Diana was a very unusual interviewee,” one of the BBC filmmakers told the
Sunday Express
. “She was behaving like she was an extra producer.” Diana insisted to one close friend that she had not rehearsed, although she said she had known all the questions in advance. But according to Barbara Walters, who discussed the interview with Diana after ABC paid $642,000 for the U.S. broadcast rights, “
Panorama
was very well planned. All the questions were submitted in advance, and she rehearsed. I thought it was a superb performance.”

Signs of her preparation were evident in contrived lines such as “three of us in the marriage” and her unattributed quotation of a passage from
An Evil Cradling
, a book by Brian Keenan, a former hostage: “
There’s no better way to dismantle a personality than to isolate it.”

At one point during the interview, a member of the BBC crew joked, “
It’s a different kind of birthday present for Charles,” to which Diana replied, “That is exactly when I want you to announce it in public.” On the morning of November 14, Charles’s forty-seventh birthday, just after she opened a new patient center at Broadmoor, Diana called a senior Buckingham Palace official to inform him of the interview.

The royal family was stunned that Diana would conduct a television interview behind the back of the Queen and her top advisers. Since they still didn’t know the full extent of her cooperation with Andrew Morton, this was her first overt breach of trust, and the royal family viewed her actions as unforgivable.

In the days before the November 20 broadcast, Diana tried to reassure various friends, telling them over and over, “You will be proud of me,” and “There is nothing controversial.” Palace officials noted Diana’s apparent sincerity. As Richard Kay explained to his
Mail
readers, Diana believed the
film would “
counter hostile media portrayals of her by showing a patient, rational woman.” She defended her secrecy by telling Kay, “If the Queen knew, then the Palace would know and … the program’s very idea would have been crushed.”

The interview was more devastating than anyone imagined. Before an
audience of 15 million in Britain and many millions more around the world, Diana discussed the misery of her marriage, excruciating details of her bulimia, Charles’s infidelity with Camilla, her doubts about his fitness to be king, and her adultery with James Hewitt. She confirmed the legitimacy of the Squidgy tape, although she went out of her way to deny adultery with James Gilbey. While she admitted she had allowed her friends to talk to Andrew Morton, she denied giving him any “
personal help,” saying “I never met him.” She specified that she did not want a divorce, and she emphasized her wish to be “
a queen of people’s hearts” and an ambassador for Britain who would “
give affection” and “help other people in distress.” She used the word “strong” to characterize herself four times, and she defiantly proclaimed, “
She won’t go quietly, that’s the problem. I’ll fight to the end.” When Bashir asked if Diana would rather see William succeed the Queen than Charles, she said simply, “
My wish is that my husband finds peace of mind, and from that follows other things.”

Diana spoke calmly, but she looked haunted, her eyes rimmed with dark makeup. People who knew her were thunderstruck. One friend was mystified by Diana’s “psychobabble.” “When I heard her talking, it wasn’t Diana talking,” he said. He also considered it “her suicide note: brilliant and terrifying.” Rosa Monckton, one of Diana’s closest friends, later wrote in
The Sunday Telegraph
that
Panorama

was born of some basic desire to hurt those whom she felt had betrayed her…. It was Diana at her worst.”

Most of her friends interpreted her comments about Hewitt as pure revenge against Charles. “I said, ‘
You said you adored Hewitt. How could you say that so openly?’ ” recalled Diana’s friend Elsa Bowker. “She said, ‘I have to vindicate myself.’ ” According to another friend of Diana’s, “She said she loved Hewitt because she thought love would make things seem better.” Yet another friend said that Diana made the comment about Hewitt “only to annoy Oliver Hoare.”

The only member of Charles’s set to speak out was Nicholas Soames, who said on television after the broadcast that Diana showed “
the advanced stages of paranoia.” He also characterized parts of the interview as “toe-curlingly dreadful.” Since Soames was Minister of Defense in the Conservative government, Downing Street hastily pointed out that he was speaking “
in a personal capacity”; Soames then retreated from his harshness, saying he was “not questioning the Princess of Wales’s state of mind.”

Press reaction was nearly as forceful. Even Richard Kay was moved to
write, “
Everywhere was the stench of revenge. She laid waste her husband and her love rival with the skill of a woman betrayed.” Andrew Neil said in the
Daily Mail
that Diana “
must now expect the wrath of the Establishment to come down on her head.” Paul Johnson sprang to her defense in the same newspaper, declaring that “
manipulative she may be, but she is in no way nuts.” But
The Daily Telegraph
’s venerable columnist William Deedes wrote that “
some part of her performance appeared to confirm … her reputation for being unstable.… virtually the entire programme was devoted to her analysis of a broken marriage. It was not so much an interview as an inquest.” Pondering her statement that she would “not go quietly,” Deedes wondered, “How in the world could she believe that expressing herself in that way would enhance her stature?”

The public reacted quite differently. Three-quarters of the respondents in a Gallup survey said she was right to appear on television, and forty-six percent had a better opinion of Diana than before. Eighty-five percent believed she should be given an ambassadorial role for Britain. Only fourteen percent saw revenge as her motive, while seventy-seven percent thought she just wanted to present her side of the story. Eighty-four percent regarded her as truthful, seventy-four percent found her strong, nearly a third found her manipulative, and a quarter thought she was unstable. Diana’s comments about Charles did him significant damage. In the summer of 1993, only thirty-three percent of Gallup respondents considered him unfit to be king, but after
Panorama
, that number had risen to forty-six percent.

Diana was jubilant over her popular support. Richard Kay reported that she had “
no regrets” over “any element” of the interview, and that she believed she had “finally won the independence she has craved.” As the interview was broadcast, Diana appeared at a glamorous fund-raising gala for cancer research looking “radiant and unfazed,” in the words of one guest. Yet all was not right with Diana.
The next morning, she went to her colonic irrigation clinic, where she spent two hours having her bowels purged.

When Martin Bashir asked Diana why she decided to speak out on television, she gave her most revealing—and disturbing—answer. She said she was concerned that the public perception of her had become “
very confusing” and “turbulent,” and she feared that “many people doubt me.… I want to reassure all those people who have loved me and supported me throughout the last fifteen years that I’ve never let them down.… The man on the street, yup, because that’s what matters to me more than anything else.” This connection strengthened when Diana received 6,000 letters from “
desperately unhappy” women in the first week
after the TV broadcast. “I’m overwhelmed by their response,” Diana said. “I’m trying to respond to or meet as many as I can.”

She had crossed a line. Diana Spencer was long gone, and so was the traditional royal princess. Diana had been carried away by her celebrity. She couldn’t sustain relationships with friends or lovers, and her sons were pushing toward adolescence and its accompanying separation. Like an aging, isolated Hollywood star, she sought the love of an amorphous “public,” and no one around her seemed capable of restraining her growing need for popular adulation. Not only did Diana believe in her celebrity, she had grown accustomed to using it, as both a weapon and a palliative.

By describing herself in
Panorama
as the “queen of people’s hearts,” Diana didn’t know quite what she meant beyond providing love to people in need: the ultimate global nurturer. In a sense, she was assuming her traditional childhood role—first comforting her father and brother, then other children. She had intended to take care of Prince Charles as well, but her instability had prevented her from carrying that out. She had immediately been thrown into motherhood, which brought her great satisfaction, but it wasn’t enough. So she had taken to ministering to the sick and needy, first in Britain, then throughout the world.

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