Author: bang3

  • Can Trump run again in 2028? The rules on the next election after he stormed to victory

    Can Trump run again in 2028? The rules on the next election after he stormed to victory

    Former president Donald Trump stormed to victory in the 2024 presidential election, securing another four years in the White House – but could he make it eight?

    In short, probably not.

    The 22nd Amendment of the US Constitution, introduced 1951, prohibits presidents for running more than two total terms.

    The rule states that ‘no person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice’ and ‘no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of President more than once.’

    Since Trump was 45th President of the United States from 2016 to 2020 and will soon be the 47th President from 2024, he will have maxed out the tenure by 2028.

    However, the incoming leader has suggested that a third term isn’t completely off limits for him.

    Former president Donald Trump stormed to victory in the 2024 presidential election, securing another four years in the White House - but could he make it eight?
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    Former president Donald Trump stormed to victory in the 2024 presidential election, securing another four years in the White House – but could he make it eight?

    Trump's election victory on Wednesday also makes him the first president in over 130 years – and only the second in history – to win a non-consecutive second term
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    Trump’s election victory on Wednesday also makes him the first president in over 130 years – and only the second in history – to win a non-consecutive second term

    Supporters of Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump, Stephanie Smith, left, Sandi Steinbeck, center, and Thomas Brewer, right, cheer during a GOP election watch party at the Ahern Hotel, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, in Las Vegas
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    Supporters of Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump, Stephanie Smith, left, Sandi Steinbeck, center, and Thomas Brewer, right, cheer during a GOP election watch party at the Ahern Hotel, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, in Las Vegas

    The 78-year-old mused about being a ‘three-term president’ during a National Rifle Association event in May.

    To achieve this, he would need to overturn the 22nd Amendment – entailing an arduous political process that would be unlikely to succeed.

    Trump would have to secure a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress or a constitutional convention called by two-thirds of state legislatures to even propose a new amendment.

    This would then require approval from three-quarters of state legislatures or state conventions.

    The former president has also previously indicated that he would retire after 2028 rather than challenge the 22nd Amendment.

    ‘I wouldn’t be in favor of a challenge. Not for me. I wouldn’t be in favor of it at all,’ he told Time magazine in April this year.

    ‘I intend to serve four years and do a great job. And I want to bring our country back. I want to put it back on the right track.’

    Donald Trump regained the White House on Wednesday after being declared the winner of the 2024 U.S. presidential election just after 5.30am
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    Donald Trump regained the White House on Wednesday after being declared the winner of the 2024 U.S. presidential election just after 5.30am

    Supporters of Republican Party candidate Donald Trump celebrate as Republican candidate Donald Trump surpassed 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the 2024 US presidential election in New York, United States on November 06, 2024
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    Supporters of Republican Party candidate Donald Trump celebrate as Republican candidate Donald Trump surpassed 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the 2024 US presidential election in New York, United States on November 06, 2024

    Trump’s election victory on Wednesday makes him the first president in over 130 years – and only the second in history – to win a non-consecutive second term.

    Only one other American president was re-elected after a gap of four years between terms.

    That was Grover Cleveland, who served as the 22nd president after the 1884 election, and as the 24th president after the campaign of 1892.

    Cleveland was governor of New York when he was tapped as the Democratic Party’s nominee for president in 1884.

    He was known for pushing for a reduction of tariffs that had been put in place during the Civil War, though his second term was marred by economic depressions and industrial strikes.

    The 78-year-old politician will also become the oldest president ever inaugurated, beating President Joe Biden‘s record by five months.

  • INVITÉE RTL – Florent Pagny : “Face à la maladie, mon père n’a jamais baissé les bras, ce n’est pas dans sa nature”, confie sa fille Ael

    INVITÉE RTL – Florent Pagny : “Face à la maladie, mon père n’a jamais baissé les bras, ce n’est pas dans sa nature”, confie sa fille Ael

    Ael Pagny, fille de Florent et photographe, est l’invitée de RTL. Elle publie un livre de photos inédites “Pagny par Ael” aux éditions HarperCollins.

    Ael Pagny, invitée de RTL Matin du 5 novembre 2024.

    Je m’abonne à la newsletter « Infos »

    Ael Pagny, la fille de Florent Pagny et photographe de 25 ans, publie son premier ouvrage intitulé Pagny par Ael, disponible dès le 6 novembre. Ce livre rassemble des photos inédites prises sous son regard de fille, couvrant trois années marquantes de la vie de son père.

    La série de photos débute en 2021, lors de la tournée des 60 ans de Florent Pagny. On y découvre un artiste flamboyant, heureux de retrouver la scène. Puis, survient l’annonce de son cancer du poumon, qu’il surnomme “l’interrupteur”. “Il est surnommé ainsi parce que cela a mis notre vie en pause”, explique Ael, invitée de RTL ce mardi.

    Malgré cette épreuve, elle a choisi de poursuivre son projet photographique : “C’est une extension de moi, quelque chose que je fais tout le temps. Mais nous restons une famille pudique, je ne l’ai donc pas photographié dans ses moments les plus intimes ou difficiles”.

    La seule photo de Florent Pagny à l’hôpital

    Dans cet ouvrage, une seule photo montre Florent Pagny à l’hôpital, lors de sa dernière séance de radiothérapie. “Même si l’image ne rappelle pas de bons souvenirs, nous étions contents car c’était la dernière, et nous espérons que ce sera la dernière pour toujours”, se remémore-t-elle.

    À lire aussi

    Paul Watson, défenseur des baleines, est emprisonné au Groenland depuis juillet 2024.

    Cette photo est suivie d’une série au Mont-Saint-Michel, après plusieurs mois de chimiothérapie. On y voit Florent Pagny, chauve, s’appuyant sur une canne, avec un corbeau en arrière-plan. C’est la photo préférée d’Ael. Elle apprécie que “chacun puisse l’interpréter à sa manière. On peut y voir la malédiction qui s’en va, ou simplement une belle image“.

    Ael souligne que dans la lutte contre la maladie, son père n’a jamais baissé les bras, car “ce n’est pas dans sa nature”.

    Une famille soudée

    Durant ce projet, elle a immortalisé des moments familiaux précieux. “Nous étions en famille, comme toujours. Nous faisions une petite séance photo, je pense qu’il était content. Il n’aime pas trop être pris en photo, mais si c’est moi, ça ne le dérange pas“.

    J’ai plus appris sur moi-même en tournée, en prenant des photos, que sur lui. Je me suis rendu compte que j’aime vraiment capturer des concerts ou des spectacles, être dans ma bulle”, confie-t-elle.

  • Prince William’s olive branch to Harry: Prince of Wales publicly names his brother for the first time in six years as he pays fond tribute to their mother Diana

    Prince William’s olive branch to Harry: Prince of Wales publicly names his brother for the first time in six years as he pays fond tribute to their mother Diana

    Prince William has taken a conciliatory step in his feud with Prince Harry by publicly naming him for what is believed to be the first time in six years.

    Speaking in a new documentary, William recounts how Princess Diana took the brothers to a homeless shelter in London as children to show the realities of life outside the palace.

    The film, titled ‘Prince William: We Can End Homelessness’, includes poignant unseen photos of William and Diana at the Passage in Westminster.

    In one, taken when Princess Diana visited with William on 14 June 1993 just days before his eleventh birthday, the young Prince is seen studiously playing chess with a homeless man at the shelter.

    Another, taken in December that year, shows a suited-and-booted young William standing alongside his mother at the shelter, his arms stuffed with presents to give.

    Prince William in ITV documentary: ‘ We can end homelessness’

    Prince William has publicly named Harry for what is believed to be the first time in six years
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    Prince William has publicly named Harry for what is believed to be the first time in six years

    Prince William and Diana, Princess of Wales, during a visit to The Passage in London
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    Prince William and Diana, Princess of Wales, during a visit to The Passage in London

    The documentary reunites the brothers on screen, if only via an old photo of both boys visiting the shelter in 1993
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    The documentary reunites the brothers on screen, if only via an old photo of both boys visiting the shelter in 1993

    A young Prince William plays chess during a visit to The Passage
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    A young Prince William plays chess during a visit to The Passage

    ‘My mother took me to the Passage, she took Harry and I both there… I’d never been to anything like that before and I was a bit anxious as to what to expect,’ explains William.

    ‘My mother went about her usual part of making everyone feel relaxed and having a joke with everyone…I remember having some good conversation, playing chess and chatting.

    ‘You meet people, like I did then, who put a different perspective in your head.’

    The emotive opening highlights how the Prince’s passion to end homelessness is driven by memories of his mother.

    The film emphasises how trauma and family breakdown are common causes of homelessness, the former being sadly familiar to the Prince of Wales.

    Alongside the death of his mother, William continues to be estranged from his younger brother.

    Until this film, it is understood William has not uttered his brother’s name in a public speech or interview since 2018 when the two princes, alongside the Princess of Wales and Meghan Markle, were interviewed at the Royal Foundation Forum.

    The documentary also reunites the brothers on screen, if only via an old photo of both boys visiting the shelter in 1993.

    Filming also coincided with another personal trauma: the cancer diagnosis of his wife, the Princess of Wales.

    Insiders acknowledge that filming took a little longer because of everything the Prince was ‘dealing with’, but added he was ‘very accommodating’ despite the challenges.

    Cameras started rolling in June last year when the Prince launched his project Homewards, which focuses on ending homelessness in six UK areas: Aberdeen; Bournemouth, Christchurch & Poole; Lambeth; Newport; Northern Ireland and Sheffield.

    Speaking in a new documentary, William recounts how Princess Diana took the brothers to a homeless shelter in London as children to show the realities of life outside the palace
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    Speaking in a new documentary, William recounts how Princess Diana took the brothers to a homeless shelter in London as children to show the realities of life outside the palace

    King Juan Carlos I of Spain, Prince Charles, Diana and William and Harry sit on the steps of Marivent Palace on August 10, 1987
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    King Juan Carlos I of Spain, Prince Charles, Diana and William and Harry sit on the steps of Marivent Palace on August 10, 1987

    Diana and her sons Prince Harry and Prince William leave after attending the 1991 Royal Tournament, held at Earls Court Exhibition Centre in London
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    Diana and her sons Prince Harry and Prince William leave after attending the 1991 Royal Tournament, held at Earls Court Exhibition Centre in London

    Prince William is pictured offering help while at The Passage in Kensington Palace
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    Prince William is pictured offering help while at The Passage in Kensington Palace

    A look at William and Diana ahead of his documentary 'Prince William: We Can End Homelessness'
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    A look at William and Diana ahead of his documentary ‘Prince William: We Can End Homelessness’

    The Prince of Wales behind the scenes filming a documentary for the Homewards Campaign
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    The Prince of Wales behind the scenes filming a documentary for the Homewards Campaign

    We see the Prince on public engagements and in interviews with the director, Leo Burley, but the palace are tight-lipped on precisely when the Prince sat down to talk.

    What emerges is a Prince serious about making his mark.

    ‘I feel with my position and my platform, I should be delivering change,’ he says.

    ‘I feel compelled to act because I don’t want to just talk about it. I don’t want to just listen. I actually want to see someone smile because their life has been made better. So therefore building a project is the only way I can see at the moment to try and alleviate and help people who are in a much less fortunate or a very difficult situation.’

    Such a statement could be interpreted as rhetoric against traditional royal ribbon-cutting and an indication he could become a rather radical King.

    William is a modern man who prefers to watch box sets rather than reading, and it’s already been suggested he could be the first British monarch to break ties with the Church of England.

    Others close to the current King point out that Charles was also a pioneering Prince with projects like the traditionalist Dorset village of Poundbury.

    At other points in the film we catch glimpses of the person behind the prince. When meeting 21-year-old Lainey, a young girl experiencing homelessness who is training to work at Pret, he jokes: ‘Listen, if anyone can figure out how to work a cappuccino machine they’re amazing. Well done, honestly. Those machines, I look at them and I’m like: ‘you need a degree to work this. They’re crazy.’

    After meeting William, she reflects: ‘Even though he’s like rich and people see him as some poshy…he didn’t judge…I just felt like he was one of my mates’.

    Other stars of the show include the Sheffield-based community activist Safiya Saeed and advocate Sabrina Cohen-Hatton, who was formerly homeless.

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    Prince William and Harry at the opening of a fountain built in the memory of Diana in London's Hyde Park
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    Prince William and Harry at the opening of a fountain built in the memory of Diana in London’s Hyde Park

    Harry and William attend the unveiling of a statue of their mother at The Sunken Garden in Kensington Palace
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    Harry and William attend the unveiling of a statue of their mother at The Sunken Garden in Kensington Palace

    A look at William during filming for 'Prince William: We Can End Homelessness' on ITV1 and ITVX
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    A look at William during filming for ‘Prince William: We Can End Homelessness’ on ITV1 and ITVX

    Another look at Prince William as he offers his time at the Passage in Kensington
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    Another look at Prince William as he offers his time at the Passage in Kensington

    The film, titled 'Prince William: We Can End Homelessness', includes poignant unseen photos of William and Diana at the Passage in Westminster
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    The film, titled ‘Prince William: We Can End Homelessness’, includes poignant unseen photos of William and Diana at the Passage in Westminster

    Homewards aims to find successful charity models, zoning in on the Salvation Army in Cardiff who brought former rough sleeper Wayne into his own home.

    In a powerful scene, Wayne is brought to Windsor Castle to meet with Prince William.

    Wayne’s experiences are deeply moving, as is the knowledge that the meeting was filmed in the same location where the Princess of Wales filmed her cancer announcement in March.

    The filmmakers also confront William about the criticism that his wealth and (numerous) homes make him an ill-suited poster boy for a homelessness project.

    ‘I think if I answered every critic I’d be here all day,’ he responds.

    ‘Criticism drives you forward. I think it’s right to question, but at the end of the day we are pushing forward to deliver change and hope and optimism into a place that frankly has had very little of it for a long time. I hope I can bring something that’s not been done before.’

    It’s a response that might not satisfy his detractors, but it is clear that William cares deeply about the issue not in spite of his life and experiences, but because of them.

    ‘Many people can relate to trauma. Many people can relate to family breakup and loss,’ says Homewards advocate Ms Cohen-Hatton.

    ‘I think the prince’s ability to relate to people on that human level is because of some of the experiences that he’s had himself.’

    The two-part documentary will air on Wednesday 30 and Thursday 31 October at 9pm on ITV1 and ITVX.

  • Real reason David and Victoria Beckham ditched Prince Harry and Meghan Markle revealed

    Real reason David and Victoria Beckham ditched Prince Harry and Meghan Markle revealed

    David and Victoria Beckham were once good friends with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, however this appears to no longer be the case.

    Prince Harry with David Beckham

    The pair had been friends for a number of years (Image: Owen Humphreys – WPA Pool/Getty Images)

    David Beckham was spotted at a royal engagement earlier this week with Prince William, which was a welcome surprise for many royal fans.

    However, while the pair have been pictured together before, and are rumoured to be good friends, some people were left wondering why Beckham had not been seen with Prince Harry, who was in the UK less than 24 hours before at the WellChild Awards.

    Despite the fact the footballer had been at Harry’s wedding to wife Meghan Markle in May 2018,it appears relations between the Beckhams and Sussex’s have become strained over recent years, with Beckham now seemingly bonding more with Harry’s brother Prince William.

    Royal expert Richard Eden claimed a number of reasons have resulted in David and Victoria Beckham drifting away from Harry and Meghan, including their views on family.

    He wrote in The Daily Mail: “David had always been an ardent royalist, who would stand up for the Queen’s Speech every Christmas, dressed in his Sunday best. Years later, he queued for 12 hours to view the Queen’s coffin when her body was lying in state.

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    Prince William and David Beckham pose in front of one of the new London Air Ambulance Charity helicopters

    Prince William and David Beckham pictured together at a royal engagement this week (Image: GETTY)

    “So it is, perhaps, no surprise that the Sussexes’ attacks on the Royal Family failed to impressed the Beckhams.

    “‘Both David and Victoria put great importance on family and would never, ever turn on their relations the way that Harry and Meghan did,’ one of their associates tells me.

    “‘The truth is that Victoria never really liked Meghan much. She was friendly and welcoming to her but is not bothered about staying in touch.’”

    The Beckhams’ reportedly began experiencing problems with the couple before their 2018 wedding. According to The Daily Mail, the footballer and his fashion designer wife had helped Meghan and even let her stay in their Los Angeles pad when she experienced problems with paparazzi while visiting her mum in America.

    Victoria also came to Meghan’s aid after she moved into Nottingham Cottage at Kensington Palace, it has been claimed. The fashion designer reportedly gave Meghan advice on make-up and a member of her staff provided her with help on facials and hairdressing all free of charge.

    However, this became public news soon after, with sources claiming that Meghan believed it was the Beckhams who leaked it to the press, which they denied.

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    David and Victoria Beckham walking hand in hand

    The couple attended Harry and Meghan’s 2018 wedding (Image: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)

    Although the couples stayed in contact, with David and Victoria attending the 2018 wedding ceremony, they were not invited to the evening reception, which is likely to have strained relationships further. Eden then reported that David flew to Australia later that same year to attend the Invictus Games at the duke’s request. However, when the football legend got there, Prince Harry would not see him, he claimed.

    According to royal biographer Tom Bower, it was Meghan who made this decision. Bower is reported to have said in his book Revenge: “She wanted no competition in the media from David. It seemed she was not prepared to tolerate anything flattering regarding the Beckhams and the Games to appear in the media.”

    The relationship between the couples is now believed to be distant, with David instead sharing a closer bond with William and Princess Kate.

    Eden said in The Daily Mail: “Given that David owns a football club in Miami and the couple have an increasingly prominent position in American society, it might seem natural that they would join the court of Harry and Meghan.

    “Instead, the Beckhams are sticking with the Windsors. If power couples were like football teams, this match would be a 2-0 result to William and Catherine.”

  • Princess Diana’s biographer Andrew Morton says the final season of the Crown will ‘stir up the settled slit of loss’ over death of royal

    Princess Diana’s biographer Andrew Morton says the final season of the Crown will ‘stir up the settled slit of loss’ over death of royal

    Princess Diana‘s biographer Andrew Morton has claimed the upcoming series of The Crown will ‘stir up the settled slit of loss’ over the royal.

    The final instalment of the Peter Morgan biopic, which is released on Netflix on Thursday, will dramatise the weeks before the late Princess of Wales‘s death and the fall-out within the royal family.

    Speaking in this week’s Radio Times, Mr Morton,  who penned Diana’s ‘unauthorised, authorised biography’ five years before her death, said that the ‘gamey’ series is set to reopen closed wounds.

    ‘For many of us who lived through those dramatic days, it’s going to stir up the settled silt of remembrance and loss. Which is why The Crown team has been at pains to emphasise how sensitively the princess’s untimely death has been handled,’ he wrote.

    He also recalled how he found out the then Princess of Wales had died

    Princess Diana 's biographer Andrew Morton has claimed the upcoming series of The Crown will 'stir up the settled slit of loss' over the royal. She is pictured in 1997
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    Princess Diana ‘s biographer Andrew Morton has claimed the upcoming series of The Crown will ‘stir up the settled slit of loss’ over the royal. She is pictured in 1997

    Elizabeth Debicki as Diana with her sons .Netflix releases first look images from Part 1 of the final series of The Crown
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    Elizabeth Debicki as Diana with her sons .Netflix releases first look images from Part 1 of the final series of The Crown

    Andrew Morton writes in this week's issue of the the Radio Times
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    Andrew Morton writes in this week’s issue of the the Radio Times

    ‘Like millions around the world, I vividly remember that fateful day. I was staying with friends for the Edinburgh Festival and was woken by my host with the news. Disbelieving at first, when it gradually began to sink in, I booked the last seat on the morning flight to London.

    ‘During the journey, a Frenchman came over and handed me a note that said in effect: “I would like to apologise on behalf of the French nation.” At the time the French paparazzi, rather than a drunk driver, were being blamed for the crash.’

    The emotional first four episodes cover the tragic car crash in Paris that killed Princess Diana in August 1997 – alongside her lover Dodi Fayed and their chauffeur Henri Paul – and the Royal Family ’s reaction to it, as well as the summer holiday Diana and Dodi enjoyed in St Tropez prior to the tragedy.

    The Paris scenes were shot in the French capital, while a yacht was hired for the St Tropez scenes, although these were actually filmed in Mallorca.

    For sensitivity reasons the exact moment of Diana’s death is not re-created, but there are controversial scenes in which Charles tenderly converses with an imaginary Diana in the cabin of the royal plane as he accompanies her body from Paris to London , and later when she also appears to the Queen.

    Critics who have seen these scenes called them ‘farcical’ for portraying Diana as a ghost, but series creator Peter Morgan has insisted that wasn’t the intention.

    ‘I never imagined it as Diana’s ghost in the traditional sense,’ he told Variety magazine. ‘It was her continuing to live vividly in the minds of those she has left behind.’

    The Crown was devised by Morgan after the success of his 2006 film about the Royal Family’s reaction to Diana’s death, The Queen.

    William, Harry and Charles at the funeral for Princess Diana in 1997
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    William, Harry and Charles at the funeral for Princess Diana in 1997

    Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki), Prince Charles(Dominic West) and The Queen (Imelda Staunton) appear on the 'House Divided' posters for series five of controversial Netflix drama 'The Crown.'
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    Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki), Prince Charles(Dominic West) and The Queen (Imelda Staunton) appear on the ‘House Divided’ posters for series five of controversial Netflix drama ‘The Crown.’

    And the series – which has earned 21 Emmys and dozens of BAFTA nominations, not to mention some criticism for its historical inaccuracies – covers the same ground, but using fresh information gleaned in the 17 years since the Oscar-winning movie was made.

    In fact, the scripts had to be updated all the time as the Royal Family were plunged into headlines throughout the filming period, not only with the Queen’s death but also following the release of Prince Harry’s memoir Spare.

    ‘I assumed that Charles is an emotional and rather open-hearted guy in spite of the buttoned-up exterior he has to have in public,’ Dominic West, who plays the then Prince, told Weekend Magazine.

    ‘But when Harry wrote his book and said he never hugged him or anything, we had to change that slightly.’

    Images show Diana being hounded by paparazzi shortly before her death
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    Images show Diana being hounded by paparazzi shortly before her death

    There is also a glimpse into her love life with Dodi
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    There is also a glimpse into her love life with Dodi

    Charles looks panicked following the death of Diana in the Crown
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    Charles looks panicked following the death of Diana in the Crown

    Another shows the Princess appearing as a ghost to the Queen
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    Another shows the Princess appearing as a ghost to the Queen

    The first few episodes were particularly tough for the whole cast as Diana’s last days with new love Dodi aboard his father’s yacht were re-created.

    At the end of series five we met US model Kelly Fisher, who Dodi was dating when he started seeing Diana.

    While he wooed the princess on a family yacht, Jonikal, Kelly was left alone on another boat. She later claimed they had been engaged.

    For Elizabeth Debicki, who plays Diana, filming these scenes was daunting. ‘Even though I had a physical break before this, I was probably always thinking about what was to come,’ she says.

    ‘We see her going on holiday with the boys to St Tropez and then on to Paris. Much of it was actually a lovely time.

    ‘We were in a very beautiful part of the world so I constantly let that just wash over me and tried to sort of relax, knowing what was to come.’

    The story then picks up at Balmoral where the family has to come to terms with the devastating news.

    For Jonathan Pryce, who plays Prince Philip, filming the scenes brought back emotional memories of Diana’s death.

    ‘I remember turning on the radio and hearing something about Diana and Paris and I thought, “What the hell?”’ he says.

    ‘And then turning on the television and it was such a shock. Both my wife and I found ourselves quite weepy about it, and I never thought I would cry over a member of the Royal Family.

    ‘When we were filming in Scotland, the director of the episode around Diana’s death put together a reel of footage for me and I couldn’t stop crying.

    Thanks to the efforts of the hair, make-up and costume teams, Imelda Staunton, who stars as Queen Elizabeth II in the final series, felt like the monarch every single day for two and half years of filming
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    Thanks to the efforts of the hair, make-up and costume teams, Imelda Staunton, who stars as Queen Elizabeth II in the final series, felt like the monarch every single day for two and half years of filming

    Both the characters of Charles and the Queen appear stressed in the final season
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    Both the characters of Charles and the Queen appear stressed in the final season

    ‘Neither could the cameraman who’d filmed it, or the director. It was an extraordinary moment. I was reliving waking up and listening to the radio.’

    The difficulty of that time is re-created as we see Charles telling William and Harry their mother has died, as well as dealing with the demands of the nation who wanted the family to be seen.

    ‘It’s sort of the worst period of Charles’s life so there are lots of scenes of him trying to come to terms with Diana’s death and breaking the news to his sons, trying to help them mourn and having varying degrees of success at that,’ says Dominic.

    RE-CREATING THE ‘SACRED’ BLUE SWIMSUIT MOMENT

    Princess Diana pictured in St Tropez

    Princess Diana pictured in St Tropez

    The Crown pulled out all the stops when it came to re-creating Diana and Dodi’s last summer in St Tropez.

    ‘Gottex, the company that made all of Diana’s swimwear, made all of ours for us,’ says costume designer Sid Roberts.

    ‘We just adjusted it to whatever Elizabeth felt comfortable with. That 90s shape is very high cut on the thigh, and it goes right up and quite high on the bottom as well. So we just made those adjustments with Gottex.’

    And the effort paid off for Elizabeth Debicki.

    ‘I really love the blue swimsuit Diana wears when she walks out to the end of the diving board on the yacht and sits down,’ she says.

    ‘There was just something about that swimsuit and re-creating that moment that felt very sacred.’

    ‘There were some really heavy scenes and a lot of tears for Charles. But I love crying, so it was great.

    ‘Then there were a lot of set-piece teas at Windsor Castle or Christmas Day or family photos or weddings where all of us were there and they were the biggest joy because you’re in a room and everyone looks like a member of the Royal Family so it’s hilarious. Then Imelda walks in and you go, “My God, there’s the Queen!”’

    The final six episodes of the series, which will be available in December, will see the family moving on from Diana’s death and cover William and Kate’s budding romance at St Andrews, finishing with Charles and Camilla’s wedding in April 2005.

    The university scenes were actually filmed at St Andrews and the wedding at York Minster.

    Netflix boss Ted Sarandos has explained why the series ends there. ‘It was the cut-off to keep it historical, not journalistic,’ he said. ‘By stopping almost 20 years before the present day, it’s dignified.’

    Dominic – whose gardener wife Catherine FitzGerald is friends with Charles in real life – says he found himself fighting the King’s corner.

    ‘I really like him and admire him. I think he’s a good guy who gets a lot of stick and I didn’t want to add to that,’ he says.

    ‘But there were plenty of people around me who were giving the opposite point of view so hopefully what comes out is compassionate but relatively well-balanced.’

    Fans will once again revel in the re-creation of key moments and occasionally uncanny portrayals of characters we know so well, although Dominic reveals he dispensed with the use of ‘ear plumpers’ for this series.

    ‘They made my ears go out but it was quite a faff and they were quite uncomfortable and didn’t make much difference,’ he says. ‘They didn’t make me look any more like Charles, unfortunately.’

    Instead he concentrates more on an impression of the character rather than a complete likeness, and reveals he and Olivia Williams, who plays Camilla, had ‘trigger phrases’ to get into character.

    ‘My main one was based on an interview with Charles on a plane to Australia when he said, “I just do it for jolly old Britain”.

    ‘Olivia would say, “Modern democracy” to get into her role and then I’d say, “Jolly old Britain” and we’d start the scene.’

    For Imelda Staunton, his on-screen mother, it was the outfits that made the difference.

    ‘Everything I wear has been handmade and all those details help,’ she says.

    ‘We do the make-up and when the wig goes on we say, “There we go, that’s it.” But then, actually, the lipstick does it.

    ‘It’s like putting all the ingredients into a fantastic meal. They have to be right and it has to be cooked for the right amount of time, but every single day for two and a half years they’ve made me feel like I’m the Queen.’

  • Donald Trump wins the 2024 US presidential election with a stunning victory over Kamala Harris…Congratulations sir

    Donald Trump wins the 2024 US presidential election with a stunning victory over Kamala Harris…Congratulations sir

    Donald Trump has pulled off an astounding political comeback and regained the White House after being declared the winner of the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

    He becomes the first president in over 130 years – and only the second in history – to win a non-consecutive second term.

    His defeat of Vice President Kamala Harris marks a remarkable return for a twice-impeached president, who left office in 2021 on the back of claims that he had incited an assault on the U.S. Capitol building, and who was convicted earlier this year on multiple counts of business fraud.

    The 78-year-old Trump will also become the oldest president ever inaugurated, beating President Joe Biden’s record by five months.

    He pulled off his remarkable victory on a night reminiscent of 2016, sweeping the key swing states of North Carolina, Georgia and Pennsylvania.

    Associated Press called Wisconsin at 5.34am (ET) Wednesday and the race just three minutes later.

    Harris never conceded the race. Instead former Rep. Cedric Richmond – her campaign co-chair – said after midnight Wednesday that the vice president would not be addressing supporters until ‘tomorrow.’

    Donald Trump has pulled off an astounding political comeback and regained the White House as he's declared the winner of the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

    Donald Trump has pulled off an astounding political comeback and regained the White House as he’s declared the winner of the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

    He becomes the first president in over 130 years to win a non-consecutive second term. (Pictured: Donald, wife Melania and their son Barron on stage in West Palm Beach as Trump delivered his victory speech on Tuesday night).

    He becomes the first president in over 130 years to win a non-consecutive second term. (Pictured: Donald, wife Melania and their son Barron on stage in West Palm Beach as Trump delivered his victory speech on Tuesday night).

    The 78-year-old Trump will also become the oldest president ever inaugurated, beating President Joe Biden's record by five months. (Pictured: Vice President-elect JD Vance on stage in West Palm Beach with Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner).

    The 78-year-old Trump will also become the oldest president ever inaugurated, beating President Joe Biden’s record by five months. (Pictured: Vice President-elect JD Vance on stage in West Palm Beach with Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner).

    Trump's victory brings an end to a tumultuous 2024 campaign - punctuated with Joe Biden's dramatic withdrawal from the race in July, as well as two shocking attempts on Trump's life (Trump is pictured after surviving an assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania).

    Trump’s victory brings an end to a tumultuous 2024 campaign – punctuated with Joe Biden’s dramatic withdrawal from the race in July, as well as two shocking attempts on Trump’s life (Trump is pictured after surviving an assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania).

    His defeat of Vice President Kamala Harris marks a remarkable return for a twice-impeached president.

    The pivotal moment came when North Carolina was called for Trump at 11:19pm (ET).

    Then, the quiet crowd at the official Republican watch party, held in a convention center in Florida’s West Palm Beach, erupted in a release of nervous energy.

    At the same time, the mood at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort – where he was sat amid friends and family watching the results roll in – switched from cautious optimism to ‘a sense of destiny’, one attendee said.

    Later at the convention center in the early hours of Wednesday morning, Trump was joined on stage by his jubilant family and campaign staff, as he addressed his adoring fans and declared: ‘We’re going to help our country heal.’

    ‘This was, I believe, the greatest political movement of all time,’ he said. ‘This is a magnificent victory for the American people, that will allow us to make America great again.’

    Certainly, Trump’s resounding win brings an end to a tumultuous 2024 campaign – punctuated with Biden’s dramatic withdrawal from the race in July, as well as two shocking attempts on Trump’s life.

    But his inflammatory rhetoric and propensity for personal attacks means he will now lead a divided country that shows little sign of healing.

    After announcing he would run again back in November 2022, Trump comfortably saw off other Republican hopefuls – including Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former governor of South Carolina Nikki Haley – to secure the Party nomination in March this year.

    Entering the summer, he held a comfortable polling lead over President Biden, 81, whose record on the economy and immigration, as well as the obvious problem of his advancing age, were proving disastrous among voters.

    The now notorious CNN television debate between the two presumptive nominees on June 27 – in which Biden froze and mumbled, appearing unable to clearly answer even basic questions – only helped Trump further.

    On July 13, while addressing crowds at rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, the bullet of would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks ripped through Trump’s right ear. After being swarmed by Secret Service agents, Trump rose to his feet – his shoes missing and his face bloodied – pumping his fist in the air and shouting: ‘Fight! Fight! Fight!’

    Just days later, he received a hero’s welcome in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at the Republican National Convention.

    MAGA fans donned mock bandages on their ears in solidarity with the former president and, in a stirring speech on the final night, Trump told a packed-out convention center that he would be a ‘president for all of America’.

    On July 13, while addressing crowds at rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, the bullet of a would-be assassin ripped through Trump's right ear. Just days later, he received a hero's welcome (pictured) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at the Republican National Convention.

    On July 13, while addressing crowds at rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, the bullet of a would-be assassin ripped through Trump’s right ear. Just days later, he received a hero’s welcome (pictured) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at the Republican National Convention.

    MAGA fans donned mock bandages on their ears in solidarity with the former president and, in a stirring speech on the final night, Trump told a packed-out convention center that he would be a 'president for all of America'.

    MAGA fans donned mock bandages on their ears in solidarity with the former president and, in a stirring speech on the final night, Trump told a packed-out convention center that he would be a ‘president for all of America’.

    But, just three days later, everything changed. Holed up in Camp David with his family, Biden posted a bombshell letter on X announcing that he was withdrawing from the 2024 race.

    ‘I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term,’ he wrote, before endorsing Kamala Harris as his replacement on the Democratic ticket within the hour.

    Harris swiftly corralled support, raking in more than $100 million in donor cash in 24 hours. As she formally accepted the party nomination at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago the following month – a star-studded event featuring the likes of Oprah, Eva Longoria and Kerry Washington – she was polling comfortably ahead of Trump.

    Harris then trounced Trump in the first and last TV debate between the pair on September 10. His wild accusation that Haitian migrants were ‘eating the dogs […] eating the cats’ of American citizens was an instant internet meme.

    In fact, such was Harris’s surging popularity that a second attempt to assassinate Trump – on his West Palm Beach golf course just days later – barely moved the needle.

    Fresh pain came for the Trump campaign as his running mate – and now the Vice President-elect – Ohio Senator JD Vance, was hit by a string of disinterred comments in which he attacked female Democrats.

    In the most damning, from a 2021 interview, he called Harris, and other women who don’t have children of their own, ‘childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives’.

    Indeed, a gender divide swiftly became a key feature of the 2024 race.

    Trump’s role in helping to reverse Roe v Wade in 2022, removing the constitutional right to an abortion and returning the decision on related laws to the states, has proven particularly unpopular with female voters.

    But, just three days later, everything changed. Holed up in Camp David with his family, Biden announced that he was withdrawing from the 2024 race. He endorsed Kamala Harris as his replacement on the Democratic ticket within the hour and she swiftly corralled support, raking in more than $100 million in donor cash in 24 hours.

    But, just three days later, everything changed. Holed up in Camp David with his family, Biden announced that he was withdrawing from the 2024 race. He endorsed Kamala Harris as his replacement on the Democratic ticket within the hour and she swiftly corralled support, raking in more than $100 million in donor cash in 24 hours.

    Fresh pain came for the Trump campaign as JD Vance was hit by a string of disinterred comments in which he attacked female Democrats.

    Fresh pain came for the Trump campaign as JD Vance was hit by a string of disinterred comments in which he attacked female Democrats.

    The final ABC/Ipsos poll, published this Sunday, had Harris with an 11-point advantage among women.

    In the end, however, it seems abortion wasn’t the silver-bullet issue Harris had hoped for. In Florida, Governor DeSantis’s controversial 6-week abortion ban was also on the ballot. But, despite having won every other pro-abortion ballot measure since Roe was overturned, Democrats failed for the first time on Tuesday, falling short of the 60 percent of votes needed to overturn the Florida ban.

    Trump, meanwhile, has made substantial inroads with male voters this year. Despite concerns that he and Vance were making the campaign – complete with a shirt-ripping Hulk Hogan – too ‘bro-tastic’, it appears a strong male voter turnout helped Trump clinch it in the end.

    In recent weeks, Harris’s healthy poll lead waned, as she finally buckled to pressure to submit herself to rigorous TV interviews. Her rambling and often incoherent answers to questions drew ire even among fans, with veteran Dem strategist David Axelrod last month accusing Harris of going to ‘word salad city’.

    In the final days of the campaign, pollsters were almost unanimous in their verdict: this race was too close to call.

    Some Trump-friendly analysts, however, pointed to the fact he is consistently under-polled, and that a dead-heat suggested he had the advantage.

    Certainly, the immigration crisis on the Southern border, the state of the economy and inflation, as well as the Biden-Harris administration’s record on foreign affairs – from the botched Afghanistan withdrawal in 2021, to Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and the outbreak of war in Israel last year – all worked in Trump’s favor.

    Following his victory, Trump must now prepare for government once again, undoubtedly drawing from a band of MAGA loyalists who have stuck with him through roiling controversies.

    In 2016, he brought in officials from the Republican National Committee as well as from the armed forces who were seen as moderating influences.

    This time around, he controls the RNC with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, at the helm. Meanwhile, military officers who served in his first administration, such as his Chief of Staff, General John Kelly, have warned Trump is not fit for office.

    Trump’s opponents fear his new administration will be packed with extremists who will empower the president to do as he pleases.

    Following his victory, Trump must now prepare for government once again. In 2016, he brought in officials from the Republican National Committee as well as from the armed forces who were seen as moderating influences. (Trump is pictured at the RNC in July with Melania).

    Following his victory, Trump must now prepare for government once again. In 2016, he brought in officials from the Republican National Committee as well as from the armed forces who were seen as moderating influences. (Trump is pictured at the RNC in July with Melania).

    This time around, he controls the RNC with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump (pictured with husband Eric in October), at the helm.

    This time around, he controls the RNC with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump (pictured with husband Eric in October), at the helm.

    Despite concerns that he and Vance were making the campaign too 'bro-tastic', it appears a strong male voter turnout helped Trump clinch it in the end. (Trump's son Barron is pictured at a rally on July 9).

    Despite concerns that he and Vance were making the campaign too ‘bro-tastic’, it appears a strong male voter turnout helped Trump clinch it in the end. (Trump’s son Barron is pictured at a rally on July 9).

    Elon Musk has been very active on the campaign trail. Trump has promised him a role in his administration, aimed at reducing government waste.

    Trump has also promised RFK a major health role in his administration.

    Trump’s opponents fear his new administration will be packed with extremists who will empower the president to do as he pleases. He has promised Elon Musk (left) a role in the administration, aimed at reducing government waste. Trump also promised RFK (right) a major health role.

    On day one in 2017, Trump immediately signed an executive order banning travel from seven mostly Muslim countries.

    This time, he has promised to fire the special counsel who is prosecuting him on election interference charges, free some inmates convicted of January 6 offenses, and begin large-scale deportations of illegal immigrants.

    Despite the ignominy of those Jan 6 riots and his false ‘stolen vote’ claims after Biden narrowly defeated him in 2020, the American public have softened their opinion on his first term over the last four years, choosing instead to remember the strong economy and secure borders that he oversaw.

    Boldly launching his campaign on the back of unexpectedly disappointing 2022 midterm results for Republicans, it was Trump’s sheer force of personality that ultimately saw him grip the party’s grassroots and surge back to unshakeable public prominence.

    Tim Murtaugh, Team Trump’s communications chief, told the Daily Mail that the key moment came in closing hours of the race, when Trump donned an apron and manned the fry station at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania last month.

    Despite the ignominy of the Jan 6 riots (pictured) and Trump's false 'stolen vote' claims after Biden narrowly defeated him in 2020, the American public have softened their opinion on his first term over the last four years.

    Despite the ignominy of the Jan 6 riots (pictured) and Trump’s false ‘stolen vote’ claims after Biden narrowly defeated him in 2020, the American public have softened their opinion on his first term over the last four years.

    Tim Murtaugh, Team Trump's communications chief, told the Daily Mail that the key moment came in closing hours of the race, when Trump donned an apron and manned the fry station at a McDonald's in Pennsylvania last month (pictured).

    Tim Murtaugh, Team Trump’s communications chief, told the Daily Mail that the key moment came in closing hours of the race, when Trump donned an apron and manned the fry station at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania last month (pictured).

    It was Trump's sheer force of personality that ultimately saw him grip the party's grassroots and surge back to unshakeable public prominence. (Donald and Melania, pictured as he is sworn in as the 45th president in 2017).

    It was Trump’s sheer force of personality that ultimately saw him grip the party’s grassroots and surge back to unshakeable public prominence. (Donald and Melania, pictured as he is sworn in as the 45th president in 2017).

    ‘It wasn’t necessarily the act of making French fries or running the drive-thru window,’ he said.

    ‘It was when he made his approach in the motorcade down the street in Bucks County [PA]. There were 10,000 people lining the street, ten deep on both sides, and that was not a crowd that we built.’

    The McDonald’s stunt was meant to be unadvertised, but a local paper got hold of the details and published a story, bringing out a spontaneous crowd.

    In the end, an equally spontaneous and sizeable voter turnout – both in early ballots and on Election Day itself – buoyed Trump to victory and kick-started a second term that no doubt will be as dramatic and consequential as the first.

  • David and Victoria Beckham ‘horrified’ by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle for key reason

    David and Victoria Beckham ‘horrified’ by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle for key reason

    David and Victoria Beckham used to be friends with the Sussexes, but a source claimed Victoria “never really liked” Meghan.

    Harry and Meghan are no longer friends with the Beckhams

    Harry and Meghan are no longer friends with the Beckhams (Image: Getty)

    David and Victoria Beckham are “horrified” by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s criticism of the Royal Family, it has been claimed.

    The couple “have not been impressed” with the Sussexes’ TV appearances in which they have made a wide range of damaging claims about the royals.

    Royal expert and journalist Richard Eden says Prince William’s recent work with David Beckham shows that the former footballer has sided with the Windsors over Harry and Meghan.

    Speaking to the Daily Mail Palace Confidential show, Mr Eden said: “It says that he (David) wants to be associated with royalty, and it is also interesting in the context of Prince Harry because Beckham has been good friends with him in the past. He attended Harry and Meghan’s wedding.

    “From everything I have heard, he and his wife Victoria have not been impressed with the way Harry and Meghan have behaved.

    David helped Prince William raise money for the London Air Ambulance service

    David helped Prince William raise money for the London Air Ambulance service (Image: Getty)

    “For them, family is everything. They are really close to both sets of parents and families. This idea of going on TV and attacking their family…if you talk to an associate of theirs who said it just horrified them.

    “It is really everything they don’t agree with.

    “The Beckhams are becoming increasingly well known in America, David has this soccer team in Miami. You’d think they could be a part of that court of Harry and Meghan…that really hasn’t happened. They have made clear they want to align themselves with the Windsors.”

    Mr Eden’s comments come after David helped William raise money for the London Air Ambulance service earlier this week.

    The Beckhams pictured at Harry and Meghan's wedding in 2018

    The Beckhams pictured at Harry and Meghan’s wedding in 2018 (Image: Getty)

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    David explained his involvement in the cause as he and William met staff and crew at RAF Northolt.

    They also climbed aboard a helicopter and posed for pictures in order to help raise awareness.

    In recent years, various reports have alleged that relations between the Sussexes and the Beckhams has soured.

    A source told the Daily Mail: “Both David and Victoria put great importance on family and would never, ever turn on their relations the way that Harry and Meghan did.

    “The truth is that Victoria never really liked Meghan much. She was friendly and welcoming to her but is not bothered about staying in touch.”

  • EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: Photographer Terence Donovan threatened to blackmail Diana’s secret biographer Andrew Morton unless he paid him £70,000 for a picture of the Princess

    EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: Photographer Terence Donovan threatened to blackmail Diana’s secret biographer Andrew Morton unless he paid him £70,000 for a picture of the Princess

    Society photographer Terence Donovan threatened to blackmail Diana’s then-secret biographer Andrew Morton unless he paid him £70,000 for the iconic tiara picture of the Princess used in the book.

    Diana gave Morton a sheaf of private pictures for the book she thought had been taken by her favourite snapper Patrick Demarchelier, inadvertently including the Donovan portrait.

    ‘He told us that if the price wasn’t met, he would tell the world that Diana was involved in the book,’ Morton tells Radio Times.

    ‘All our attempts to camouflage her involvement would have come to naught. She’d no longer have “wiggle room” to work out her future arrangements with her husband.’

    Fortuitously, Donovan, who killed himself aged 60 in 1996, kept his mouth shut for less.

    Society photographer Terence Donovan (pictured) threatened to blackmail Diana's then-secret biographer Andrew Morton unless he paid him £70,000 for the iconic tiara picture of the Princess used in the book
    +6

    Society photographer Terence Donovan (pictured) threatened to blackmail Diana’s then-secret biographer Andrew Morton unless he paid him £70,000 for the iconic tiara picture of the Princess used in the book

    Diana (pictured) gave Morton a sheaf of private pictures for the book she thought had been taken by her favourite snapper Patrick Demarchelier, inadvertently including the Donovan portrait
    +6

    Diana (pictured) gave Morton a sheaf of private pictures for the book she thought had been taken by her favourite snapper Patrick Demarchelier, inadvertently including the Donovan portrait

    'He told us that if the price wasn't met, he would tell the world that Diana was involved in the book,' Morton (pictured with the book in 1992) tells Radio Times
    +6

    ‘He told us that if the price wasn’t met, he would tell the world that Diana was involved in the book,’ Morton (pictured with the book in 1992) tells Radio Times

    Fortuitously, Donovan, who killed himself aged 60 in 1996, kept his mouth shut for less
    +6

    Fortuitously, Donovan, who killed himself aged 60 in 1996, kept his mouth shut for less

    SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn wasn’t the only one not warbling at the Cenotaph. 

    Prince William was mute during the singing of O God Our In Ages Past. His Blues and Royals great coat has no pockets which meant that he went on parade without a hymn sheet. 

    A source says it was suggested that he fold a sheet into the deep cuffs on his coat, his non-saluting arm to avoid it slipping out embarrassingly, but he decided against it. At least he knew the words to his dad’s anthem.

    Michael Sheen doesn’t much resemble Prince Andrew in forthcoming A Very Royal Scandal but the disgraced duke should fret more about the preachy Welsh windbag’s capacity to embarrass the royals.

    He handed back his OBE in 2017, protesting against William’s appointment as Prince of Wales.

    He also took aim at FA president William for cheering on England’s footballers on the eve of last year’s World Cup.

    He’ll surely depict Andrew warts and all… with an emphasis on the warts.

    Michael Sheen (pictured) handed back his OBE in 2017, protesting against the principle of the heir to the throne being appointed Prince of Wales
    +6

    Michael Sheen (pictured) handed back his OBE in 2017, protesting against the principle of the heir to the throne being appointed Prince of Wales

    Multifarious squawks of relief from the partridge and pheasant community at David Cameron‘s appointment as Foreign Secretary

    An enthusiastic marksman with his shotgun, Cameron has been inundated with invitations to country shoots over the coming months. 

    He will now be too busy. Worse, he will have to withdraw his re-application for membership of Tory grandee watering hole White’s.

    Former Tory chairman Norman Fowler recalls the bafflement of health minister Virginia Bottomley when she succeeded David Mellor and wrote a two-hour slot for ‘shopping’ in her official diary.

    Her staff collapsed in convulsions of laughter. It transpired that was the code priapic Mellor used when he sneaked off to meet his mistress Antonia de Sancha.

    Superannuated weather forecaster Sian Lloyd whips up a feminist storm on Radio 4’s forthcoming documentary Scorchio by giving retired BBC weatherman Bill Giles a thermal belt: ‘We won’t have made it as women till we have someone doing the weather of Bill Giles’s age and of Bill Giles’s size.’ 

    Gratuitously adding: ‘Bill’s belly would cover most of Wales!’

    Superannuated weather forecaster Sian Lloyd (pictured) whips up a feminist storm on Radio 4's forthcoming documentary Scorchio by giving retired BBC weatherman Bill Giles a thermal belt
    +6

    Superannuated weather forecaster Sian Lloyd (pictured) whips up a feminist storm on Radio 4’s forthcoming documentary Scorchio by giving retired BBC weatherman Bill Giles a thermal belt

  • The Crown will deal a fresh blow to William and Harry with overblown dramatisation of last phone call with Princess Diana – despite brothers insisting it was a ‘short and rushed’ chat

    The Crown will deal a fresh blow to William and Harry with overblown dramatisation of last phone call with Princess Diana – despite brothers insisting it was a ‘short and rushed’ chat

    The final series of Netflix‘s royal drama The Crown will depict the last time Prince William and Prince Harry spoke to their mother – but it will not be a true reflection of the conversation.

    The first instalment of series 6 will cover the final weeks of Princess Diana‘s life before the fatal car crash with Dodi Fayed in August 31, 1997 at the Pont de l’Alma tunnel in Paris, but as a fictionalised version of events, viewers can expect to see some embellishment of the facts.

    In epsisode four of the final series, the late Diana, Princess of Wales, is depicted as frustrated while in Paris with Dodi Fayed, and desperate to return to the UK to see her sons.

    After missing one opportunity to speak with them on the phone, Diana finally manages to have a call with Prince William and Prince Harry, in which they have a heartfelt exchange.

    However, according to Prince Harry and Prince William’s accounts of the last phone call he ever had with his mother, this version of events does not quite ring true.

    Series six of The Crown will depict the final phone call Princess Diana shared with her sons Prince William and Prince Harry before she died
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    Series six of The Crown will depict the final phone call Princess Diana shared with her sons Prince William and Prince Harry before she died

    In the episode, Diana calls Balmoral, where her sons are on holiday with their father.

    During the phone call, William asks his mother if she’s going to marry Dodi Fayed, to which Diana says she is not.

    He then explains all the newspapers in the UK are reporting that the pair are engaged.

    Diana replies: ‘I am emphatically not going to marry Dodi. To be honest, I cant wait to come home.’

    Prince William and Prince Harry have only spoken once about their final phone call with their mother - and can't remember much of what was said
    +2

    Prince William and Prince Harry have only spoken once about their final phone call with their mother – and can’t remember much of what was said

    William then asks his mother if she is ok. She nods and says: ‘I’m ok. Its just a bit mad here. I don’t really understand how I ended up here. Mummy just needs to make some changes to her life, thats all. But that’s not your problem – thats mine.’

    In a tender moment, she tells her sons she loves them and they reply to say they love her too. She promises to return home the following evening to see them.

    Later in the episode, Diana comes to her untimely death in the car accident.

    Although it is true that Prince William and Prince Harry shared a phone call with their mother on the last day she was alive, their recollections of the call do not reflect the Netflix series’ depiction.

    Speaking in a 2017 documentary Diana: Our Mother, the Princes discussed for the first time the details of their ‘desperately rushed’ final call with the late royal.

    Recalling the chat, they expressed their regret that they were desperate to go back outside and play with their cousins, who were also at Balmoral.

    Harry said: ‘I can’t really, necessarily, remember what I said. But all I do remember is probably, you know, regretting for the rest of my life how short the phone call was.

    ‘And if I’d known that was the last time I was going to speak to my mother – the things I would have said to her.’

    The fact that Harry, who was 12 at the time of his mother’s death, cannot remember the details of his final conversation with Diana suggests it was not a chat where deep feelings were expressed – rather, an ordinary discussion because neither Diana nor the princes knew it would be their final conversation.

    William also said of the call: ‘Harry and I were in a desperate rush to say goodbye, you know, ‘see you later’.’

  • The ‘landmark’ Panorama interview with Diana enthralled the nation on this day in 1995 and won plaudits for the BBC. Yet it was a masterpiece only of cruelty and deceit which shamed those involved

    The ‘landmark’ Panorama interview with Diana enthralled the nation on this day in 1995 and won plaudits for the BBC. Yet it was a masterpiece only of cruelty and deceit which shamed those involved

    It has been almost three decades since Diana sat down to give a television interview often discussed as a broadcasting landmark – and a moment in royal history.

    Princess Diana‘s sit-down Panorama interview with Martin Bashir aired on this day in November 1995. Some 20million people tuned in to watch.

    Yet today the broadcast is seen as a landmark of a very different sort – as a shameful of deceit which besmirched the reputation of the BBC and caused great damage to Diana and those close to her.

    The interview took place on a Sunday in 1995 at Kensington Palace, after the staff had left for the evening. The reporters and their camera gear entered Diana’s sitting room under the pretence to the staff that they were there to install a new hi-fi system.

    Diana during her interview with BBC journalist Bashir, which was watched by 20million people after it aired on November 20, 1995
    +14

    Diana during her interview with BBC journalist Bashir, which was watched by 20million people after it aired on November 20, 1995

    Diana agreed to speak with Bashir to set the record straight following speculation about her marriage to Prince Charles
    +14

    Diana agreed to speak with Bashir to set the record straight following speculation about her marriage to Prince Charles

    Diana didn't shy away from Bashir's hard-hitting questions, going against the Palace's unspoken rule about remaining quiet
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    Diana didn’t shy away from Bashir’s hard-hitting questions, going against the Palace’s unspoken rule about remaining quiet

    Diana had agreed to speak with Bashir to set the record straight following speculation about her marriage to Prince Charles, which by that point had broken down. And the result was explosive.

    It was during this interview that the princess said ‘there were three of us in the marriage, so it was a bit crowded’ – a reference to Charles’s affair with his now wife, Queen Camilla.

    She spoke of her early expectations of life with Prince Charles and how she had ‘desperately wanted it to work’ in light of her own parents’ divorce.

    Diana also opened up about the health issues she’d silently faced, which included bulimia, post-partum depression, and self-harm, leading to her being labelled by others as unstable and mentally unbalanced.

    ‘It was a symptom of what was going on in my marriage,’ Diana revealed on Panorama. ‘I was crying out for help, but giving the wrong signals.’

    As well as admitting to her own extramarital affairs, Diana also suggested that Charles might not be cut out for the throne.

    ‘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,’ she said of her ex-husband.

    The Daily Mail's front page the day after Princess Diana's shocking Panorama interview
    +14

    The Daily Mail’s front page the day after Princess Diana’s shocking Panorama interview

    Fourteen years after their wedding, Diana described her marriage as 'crowded' in the infamous Panorama interview
    +14

    Fourteen years after their wedding, Diana described her marriage as ‘crowded’ in the infamous Panorama interview

    Pictured: The Prince and Princess of Wales at Buckingham Palace after their wedding at Westminster Abbey on July 29, 1981
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    Pictured: The Prince and Princess of Wales at Buckingham Palace after their wedding at Westminster Abbey on July 29, 1981

    As for whether Diana saw herself as one day being Queen, she said: ‘No, I don’t, no.

    ‘I’d like to be a queen of people’s hearts, in people’s hearts, but I don’t see myself being Queen of this country. I don’t think many people will want me to be Queen,’ the then-35-year-old added.

    ‘Because I do things differently because I don’t go by a rule book, because I lead from the heart, not the head, and albeit that’s got me into trouble in my work, I understand that. But someone’s got to go out there and love people and show it.’

    Diana felt that the royal household saw her as a ‘threat of some kind’ but that ‘every strong woman in history has had to walk down a similar path’.

    The 54-minute interview was the final nail in the Wales’ marriage, and less than a month later, divorce papers were filed upon the Queen’s advice.

    Her revelations came after Jonathan Dimbleby‘s interview where Charles admitted his adultery and she didn’t shy away from hard-hitting questions about her time as a royal.

    Its controversial nature ensured that a very small team in the BBC knew of it, and the decision was taken not to tell BBC Chairman Marmaduke Hussey what was afoot, as his wife, Lady Susan Hussey, was close to the Queen.

    According to Diana’s close friend Debbie Frank, the princess admitted her regret about speaking to Bashir in a frantic call  24 hours before the interview aired.

    It was during the interview the princess sensationally said 'there were three of us in the marriage, so it was a bit crowded'
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    It was during the interview the princess sensationally said ‘there were three of us in the marriage, so it was a bit crowded’

    Pictured: Prince Charles, Princess Diana and their children watch the march past on a dais on the mall as part of the commemorations of VJ Day in August 1995
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    Pictured: Prince Charles, Princess Diana and their children watch the march past on a dais on the mall as part of the commemorations of VJ Day in August 1995

    Pictured: Diana Princess, Prince Harry, Prince William and Prince Charles on William's first day at Eton in 1995, two months before the bombshell interview
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    Pictured: Diana Princess, Prince Harry, Prince William and Prince Charles on William’s first day at Eton in 1995, two months before the bombshell interview

    She made the call despite realising it was too late to stop the interview being aired, said Debbie, who added that the princess only calmed down when she saw polls that showed the public had reacted well to it.

    Debbie told the Sunday People: ‘She called me the day before it aired and said, “I’ve done this big thing and I hope it’s the right thing and doesn’t create too many waves. I needed to tell my story – it’s time people heard the truth”.

    ‘She sounded quite breathy and in a highly charged state. She was worried the public might turn against her and that she had said the wrong thing.’

    But while the Panorama interview allowed Diana public support as she stepped into the world as an independent woman, it shook with the tragedies necessitating its existence.

    Twenty-five years after Diana’s interview first aired, it emerged that Martin Bashir had secured his interview with the princess by falsifying documents.

    In 2021 the official The Dyson report, found that ‘Bashir seriously breached BBC rules by mocking up fake bank statements to gain access to the princess,’ via the BBC.

    Understandably aghast, Diana’s brother Earl Spencer was said to believed his vulnerable sister had been trapped in a web of lies by Bashir who had established ‘coercive control’ over her.

    Martin Bashir was found to have shown Diana's brother, Earl Spencer, false bank statements
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    Martin Bashir was found to have shown Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, false bank statements to gain access to the family

    Diana's brother Earl Spencer claimed several crimes had been committed and his vulnerable sister was spun a web of lies by Bashir
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    Diana’s brother Earl Spencer claimed several crimes had been committed and his vulnerable sister was spun a web of lies by Bashir

    In his inquiry, Lord Dyson found that Bashir deceived Earl Spencer into introducing the journalist to his sister by showing him forged bank statements that falsely suggested individuals were being paid to keep the Princess under surveillance.

    Royal biographer Andrew Morton also said Bashir told Diana the security forces were planning to kill her. He said Bashir warned her: ‘They’re going to wipe you.’

    It was also alleged that Diana was shown a ‘faked abortion “receipt”‘ which suggested Charles had been romantically involved with one of the royal nannies.

    Bashir admitted at the time to having the documents forged but denied ever showing them to anybody.

    The report slammed BBC bosses, including former director-general Tony Hall, for covering up information on how Bashir was able to secure the interview.

    In 2021, the Prince of Wales hit out at Bashir’s shocking tactics to obtain his exclusive with his late mother.

    The inquiry plunged the Corporation into one of the worst crises in its history, with Diana’s two sons William and Harry accusing it of ruining their mother’s life with its ‘deceitful’ interview and helping to bring about the tragic chain of events that led to her death two years later.

    In a televised statement, William railed: ‘This Panorama programme holds no legitimacy and should never be aired again. It effectively established a false narrative which, for over a quarter of a century, has been commercialised by the BBC and others.’

    Prince William demanded a boycott of the 1995 interview following Lord Dyson's report, blasting Bashir's 'false claims' to fuel the 'paranoia and isolation' of his mother's final years
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    Prince William demanded a boycott of the 1995 interview following Lord Dyson’s report, blasting Bashir’s ‘false claims’ to fuel the ‘paranoia and isolation’ of his mother’s final years

    Prince Harry's decision to use footage of the interview in his Netflix docuseries came despite both brothers previously slamming the BBC over the interview
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    Prince Harry’s decision to use footage of the interview in his Netflix docuseries came despite both brothers previously slamming the BBC over the interview

    Prince William lays into BBC over Martin Bashir Panorama interview

    ‘Our mother was an incredible woman who dedicated her life to service. She was resilient, brave, and unquestionably honest,’ Prince Harry added. ‘The ripple effect of a culture of exploitation and unethical practices ultimately took her life.’

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were also criticised for using elements of the interview in their explosive Netflix docuseries Harry & Meghan, which aired last November.

    Midway through the first episode of the series, clips are shown of Princess Diana speaking to the journalist.

    Sources close to Prince of Wales at the time said he would have been ‘furious’ that his brother appeared to ignore his plea that the Panorama interview never be aired again.

    ‘Sadly once more it shows the gulf between the two brothers couldn’t be wider,’ one told the Mirror.

    Before the clip is shown, Harry, speaking about his mother’s struggles with press intrusion, says: ‘I think she had a lived experience of how she was struggling living that life. She felt compelled to talk about it.

    ‘Especially in that Panorama interview. I think we all now know that she was deceived into giving the interview. But at the same time she spoke the truth of her experience.’

    Both brothers received ‘unconditional apology’ letters from the BBC over Bashir’s conduct and the 25-year cover up.