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  • ITV I’m A Celebrity fans convinced Dean McCullough’s campmates have ‘rumbled’ plan

    ITV I’m A Celebrity fans convinced Dean McCullough’s campmates have ‘rumbled’ plan

    I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! fans – and star contestants – are growing tired of seeing Dean take on all the trials, but seem to be realising why it keeps happening

    I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! fans think the contestants are starting to turn on Dean McCullough.

    The 33-year-old radio host may be rubbing some of his fellow campmates the wrong way – for a variety of reasons. While the radio host has admitted he is an early riser and knows to be chipper first thing – as his early morning radio show job demands it of him – he may be antagonising fellow campmates.

    In recent episodes of the ITV reality show, N-Dubz star Tulisa Contostavlos has made it clear she does not appreciate him singing loudly first thing in the morning when she is still trying to sleep. Despite her politely sharing this news, he continued to loudly sing at her in scenes that aired on Monday.

    While others are getting frustrated by the fact he keeps getting nominated by the public to take on all of the challenges. Loose Women star Jane Moore particularly objected to Dean being nominated for a sixth trial when she is desperate to undertake one herself. She turned to Dean – who is also sick of being nominated – and suggest he stay silent in order to avoid being nominated.

    I'm A Celeb fans think the stars of the show have realised Dean McCullough is getting the most airtime
    Jane Moore suggested Dean ‘zip it’ in the hope others might get the chance to do a trial 
    Image:
    ITV/REX/Shutterstock)

    Her remark suggests she’s noticed his behaviour could be considered attention seeking and leading to him getting the most airtime. Viewers watching along have suggested the campmates are beginning to get wise to Dean’s behaviour and how it might be portrayed in the show.

    One fan wrote on X: “Everyone clocking Dean and him always being chosen for the trials #ImACeleb.” Another wrote: “Love how they are all seeing through Dean’s act #ImACeleb.” And another wrote: “Not once has dean asked ‘but why do they keep picking me, what am I doing wrong’ for these trials like most usually do at this point. Because he knows why. He knows what he’s doing and he wants the air time. Stop voting for this loser! #ImACeleb.”

    Another typed: “Sounds like all the camp mates are onto Dean and have had enough #ImACeleb.” And other berated the radio host for the way he sang at Tulisa after she asked him not to. One wrote: “Can’t Dean just respect anyone’s wishes please like just don’t sing while Tulisa is asleep? #ImACeleb.” And another typed: “Dean is really annoying. As the president of the Tulisa fan club I would like him to apologise to her #ImACeleb.”

    On Monday, Dean undertook a trial called Jack and the Scream Stalk. He had to scale a huge construction while safely attached to a safety line and dip his hand into various boxes – filled with critters such as spiders and scorpions – to retrieve stars. It was his most successful trial to date – as he retrieved 10 stars out of a possible 12 before falling from the structure. Dean’s valiant efforts won him a round of applause from hosts Ant and Dec – and an ostrich egg dinner for the camp.

  • Zoe Ball quits Radio 2 Breakfast, Scott Mills taking over

    Zoe Ball quits Radio 2 Breakfast, Scott Mills taking over

    Zoe Ball, 53, announced on her Radio 2 Breakfast Show that she is stepping down from the role after six years, with her final show set to air on December 20.

    Getty Images Zoe Ball smiling in a black jacket and brown scarf.Getty Images

    Ball said she will miss her listeners and colleagues but not getting up early

    Ball heaped praise on her successor: “Scott and I go way back to our Radio 1 days, when he was doing early mornings before me. He’s been a close friend for years, and I’m beyond thrilled it’s him taking over the Breakfast Show.

    “Breakfast has always been his dream. He’s not only a blooming brilliant producer but one of the best in radio. I can’t wait to tune in on the school run!”

    Mills recently stood in for Ball when she took a few weeks off from her show.

    Trevor Nelson, who currently presents in the evenings Monday to Thursday, will replace Mills as the presenter of the 2pm to 4pm weekday afternoon show from January.

    Nelson said: “I’m looking to have lots of fun and will be bringing a bit of soul to the new show.”

    Meanwhile, DJ Spoony will extend his weekly edition of The Good Grove (Friday nights – 9-11pm) to four weekly shows on Monday – Thursday nights and Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Kitchen Disco will be extended from one to two hours, kicking off on Friday nights at 9pm.

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    Zoe Ball in 1997, smiling in an orange top

    Ball hosted the BBC One Saturday morning children’s show Live and Kicking in 1997

    Ball first joined BBC Radio in October 1997 as the co-host of the Radio 1 Breakfast Show with co-presenter Kevin Greening. From October 1998 to March 2000, Zoe hosted the programme solo, the first woman to do so.

    Helen Thomas, head of Radio 2, said: “Zoe has woken up the nation on Radio 2 with incredible warmth, wit and so much joy since January 2019.

    “I’d like to thank her for approaching each show with as much vim and vigour as if it were her first. I’m thrilled that that she’ll remain an important part of the Radio 2 family.”

    She was the BBC’s highest-paid on-air female presenter in 2023/24.

    Her salary of between £950,000 and £954,999 ranked her second on the list of top-earning talent behind Gary Lineker, according to the corporation’s annual report published in July.

    Many more stars don’t make the list, with several of them almost certainly earning more than Ball and Lineker but they are not named because the BBC does not have to disclose the salaries of stars who are paid through production companies.

    The latest figures from radio industry body Rajar state that Ball’s programme is the most listened to breakfast show in the UK.

    But it dipped by 146,000 listeners to 6.28 million in the most recent quarter, according to industry figures from Rajar.

    BBC Radio 2 is the UK’s most listened to radio station, with a weekly audience of 13.3 million, the figures show.

    At the 2024 Audio and Radio Industry Awards, also known as the Arias, Scott Mills won gold for the best music entertainment show, while Ball won bronze for the best music breakfast show.

  • RICHARD KAY: Diana told me three tycoons had offered her holidays in the summer after her divorce. Tragically, the one she picked began a whirlwind chain of events that ended in her death

    RICHARD KAY: Diana told me three tycoons had offered her holidays in the summer after her divorce. Tragically, the one she picked began a whirlwind chain of events that ended in her death

    Spring 1997 and the newly independent Princess Diana‘s busy diary was filling with engagements. There was a planned meeting with new Prime Minister Tony Blair at Chequers, a forthcoming trip to Washington to discuss her landmines campaign at the White House with First Lady Hillary Clinton and in late June the highlight of her year, the glamorous sale in New York of 79 of her couture dresses.

    Beyond that were the school holidays — and her calendar was happily blank. This was her first post-divorce summer and she would have William and Harry for the early weeks of their break.

    Her divorce from Prince Charles had set down strict rules about their sons — second and third in line to the throne — from where she could take them abroad, to their security and even the kind of airlines and vehicles they would be travelling in. Crucially, she also had to have the Queen’s permission if they went out of the country.

    Diana had agreed to all this as part of her £17 million settlement with the Royal Family that included the loss of her HRH title.

    It meant that finding somewhere to go was not straightforward.

    ‘I can’t just get on a plane and book into a hotel,’ she told me. ‘We don’t travel light, the boys have their policemen.’

    But she also felt it was important to take the princes somewhere special so they would be in no doubt that, even without her royal status, she had no intention of letting standards slip.

    In previous years she had spared no expense taking the boys white-water rafting in America, to Disneyland and on beach holidays to France and Spain.

    The solution presented itself unexpectedly as she attended a gala performance of Swan Lake by the English National Ballet at the Royal Albert Hall on June 3.

    Joining her in the royal box was the then Harrods owner, Mohamed Al Fayed, a sponsor of the event.

    Romance: Diana on the Al Fayed yacht Jonikal off Portofino, Italy, in August 1997
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    Romance: Diana on the Al Fayed yacht Jonikal off Portofino, Italy, in August 1997

    Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed in Saint Tropez, France in August 1997
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    Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed in Saint Tropez, France in August 1997

    Later, over dinner at the Churchill Hotel in Mayfair, the Egyptian-born Al Fayed casually made his pitch. It was an invitation phrased with cosy informality: ‘If you’re at a loose end, come down and see us.’


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    Fayed’s death a week ago at 94 transported me back to that night when Diana, glittering in diamonds and pearls borrowed from Crown jewellers Garrard’s, and wearing a knee-skimming sequinned Jacques Azagury dress, telephoned me excitedly to relay the news.

    By then, in fact, Al Fayed‘s was not the only holiday on offer to her — there were two others. Both had complications for Diana.

    One was from the American billionaire Teddy Forstmann, who offered her a house in The Hamptons, the exclusive Long Island resort favoured by affluent New Yorkers. The other was from Asian electronics mogul Gulu Lalvani, who had invited her to join his family at their holiday home in Thailand.

    The two men’s interest in the princess extended beyond mere hospitality. Lalvani, a divorcee 23 years her senior who had taken her dancing at Annabel’s, the Berkeley Square nightclub, wanted to date her. Unmarried Forstmann had ambitions to run for U.S. president, and saw in the princess the ideal partner to make that dream a reality.

    How different the course of history might have been had she spent the summer with either of them.

    She was not interested romantically in Lalvani or Forstmann — though she did sometimes daydream about going from being the wife of the future King to a president’s consort.

    For a few days she entertained the idea of two holidays, one with Fayed and the other with Lalvani — until a fax arrived at Kensington Palace jokily addressed to ‘Princess Gulu’.

    It was from the Hong Kong-Chinese entrepreneur David Tang, an old friend, but for once Diana had a sense of humour failure. From then on only one destination was under consideration — the Castel de St Therese, the four-acre Fayed family compound near St Tropez in the South of France with its helipad, garaging for 50 cars, swimming pools, tennis courts, jet skis and private discotheque, all screened by landscaped gardens and patrolling security guards.

    Bobbing offshore was the Jonikal, the 937-ton yacht Al Fayed conveniently took possession of after the princess accepted his invitation, and which was to play such a key role in the summer’s unfolding events.

    Why did she choose the Fayed offer, and what attracted her to this colourful and swaggering businessman? Their shared outsider status was certainly significant. Fayed had been shunned by the Establishment, who denied him his yearning for a British passport, while Diana felt rejected by a cold and haughty Royal Family. As a friend of Fayed’s put it to me that week: ‘You have to understand that, like Mohamed, the princess has been persecuted by the Establishment.’

    Almost all her friends warned the princess against accepting the Fayed hospitality. Some were aghast that she would even contemplate a proposal from a man whose central role in 1994’s cash for questions scandal at Westminster laid him open to allegations of bribery, wrecked the political careers of Neil Hamilton and Jonathan Aitken and destroyed the Conservative government of John Major.

    From the moment he bought Harrods in 1985, Fayed had been fighting off inquiries about the source of his wealth, about his business methods and even of his name. But Diana bridled at suggestions that her judgement was wrong. She had, after all, had every opportunity to spot charlatans who pirouetted around her former husband. ‘Oilers’, she called the people who sucked up to the Prince of Wales.

    Dodi Al Fayed's spurned girlfriend, former Calvin Klein underwear model Kelly Fisher
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    Dodi Al Fayed’s spurned girlfriend, former Calvin Klein underwear model Kelly Fisher

    One in particular stuck in her memory — the crooked oil tycoon Armand Hammer, later unmasked as a KGB spy — who lavished gifts on the couple in the early years of their marriage.

    The Al Fayed she knew was a warm family man, whose four children with his second wife Heini Wathen were close in age to her own — and also got on well with William and Harry.

    She had been a guest at the Fayed home in Surrey and liked Finnish-born Heini. The couple’s children — Jasmine, Karim, Camilla and Omar — then aged between nine and 16, had been on playdates at the palace.

    Camilla Fayed, a few months younger than Harry and now a successful restaurateur, recalled that she and her siblings used to ‘hang out’ with the young princes in the Kensington Palace nursery where there were computer games and a widescreen TV — gifts, incidentally, from Harrods.

    Certainly, Diana thought she had the measure of Al Fayed.

    Only a few weeks before making his invitation, she told me how he had asked her to inaugurate a new escalator at his Knightsbridge store. The princess refused, even though he offered £25,000 to one of her charities. ‘Too tacky,’ she told me, adding triumphantly: ‘So it’s No to the Pharaoh!’

    But if her friends cautioned her against the holiday offer, one figure did not — Raine, her former stepmother with whom she had reconciled in the years following the break-up of the royal marriage.

    For a long time the two women had been estranged — Diana was said to have once pushed her down the stairs at Althorp, the Spencer family home.

    Slowly she came to depend on the wise counsel of the woman who had nursed her father, the 8th Earl Spencer, through a stroke. The two met frequently for cosy lunches and Raine’s position as a director of Harrods International sealed the deal.

    Fayed had also been a significant figure in the late Lord Spencer’s life. A frequent guest at events in the store, Johnny Spencer was also among the handpicked guests Mohamed flew to Paris for the grand reopening of the Villa Windsor, the former home of the exiled King Edward VIII and his American wife Wallis Simpson, he had lavishly restored (and renamed) for £10 million in 1989.

    Most weeks would see Spencer pottering in the Harrods toy department looking for presents for his grandchildren or shopping for picnic and barbecue equipment. After her father’s death in 1992, the Harrods owner had taken a close interest in the princess’s welfare. When she shopped he would be sure to unexpectedly bump into her, alerted to her presence by his security team.

    Some believe there was a calculated wilfulness about the princess’s friendship with both Al Fayed and Raine.

    There had been no reconciliation between Raine and the rest of the Spencer family and it is entirely possible that one reason Diana re-established contact with the woman she once dubbed ‘Acid Raine’ was to annoy her family and particularly her mother, Frances Shand Kydd, with whom she had a difficult relationship.

    Did she cultivate Fayed for the same reason, knowing how much it would irritate the royals? It’s highly likely. Certainly once the news of her holiday broke — and she managed to keep it secret for six weeks — she was outraged by the criticism directed at her.

    Mr Al-Fayed with Princess Diana attending a charity dinner for the Harefield Heart Unit held at Harrods, London, in February 1996
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    Mr Al-Fayed with Princess Diana attending a charity dinner for the Harefield Heart Unit held at Harrods, London, in February 1996

    Mr Al-Fayed (right) with Prince Charles (with his back to camera) and Diana during a Harrods-sponsored polo match in 1987
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    Mr Al-Fayed (right) with Prince Charles (with his back to camera) and Diana during a Harrods-sponsored polo match in 1987

    In turn, she complained bitterly that Fayed — or at least his money — was welcomed by the Royal Family. For years he had sponsored the Queen’s favourite event, the Royal Windsor Horse Show, sitting with the monarch in the Royal box as recently as that May.

    Prince Philip, meanwhile, had dined in the Harrods boardroom and Prince Charles patronised Turnbull & Asser, the gentleman’s outfitters in St James’s, which was owned by Fayed’s brother Ali.

    Diana also let it be known that she had sought the Queen’s permission for the trip and there had been no objections.

    Raine was a reassuring support. ‘Mohamed,’ she said, ‘makes Diana laugh and was a shoulder to cry on in difficult times.’

    Diana had been in the South of France for less than 48 hours when news of her presence at Al Fayed’s home became front-page news. Nothing illustrated the princess’s unsavoury predicament more than photographs of her sunbathing next to a man viewed by officials as unfit to hold a British passport.

    It was the start of a sequence of events that was to end abruptly seven weeks later in tragedy. At that moment the last thing on Diana’s mind was romance. In London, she was still involved with heart surgeon Hasnat Khan and she had no idea that her host had urgently summoned his eldest son Dodi to join the family gathering.

    Mohamed Al Fayed pictured with his son Dodi at a perfume launch in Harrods in 1988

    Mohamed Al Fayed pictured with his son Dodi at a perfume launch in Harrods in 1988

    Nor when Dodi, 41, arrived on the conveniently berthed Jonikal three days later on Bastille Day (July 14) was Diana aware that he had installed his girlfriend, the former Calvin Klein underwear model Kelly Fisher, on another of the family yachts anchored nearby.

    More than ten years later, when the inquest into the deaths of Diana and Dodi was finally held in London, a transcript was read out to the jury of a telephone conversation between Ms Fisher and Dodi, to whom she claimed she had been engaged until the princess entered his life.

    In the call, which Ms Fisher recorded, she rages: ‘You even flew me down to St Tropez, to sit on a boat while you seduced Diana all day and f***** me all night. You left me abandoned on the boat for two days . . . Why are you doing this when all I did was love you?’

    Diana, it must be said, was completely unaware of the fact that she was, now, the ‘third person’ in a relationship. But she, too, had a secret — she had spent the night before she and the boys flew out to St Tropez with Khan, for what would turn out to be their last night together.

    But now two things were happening to her: she was enjoying Dodi’s attention, and she found herself happily immersed in the Fayed family atmosphere of adults and children all playing and laughing together, something she had craved for 30 years, ever since, as a six-year-old, her parents’ marriage had split up.

    ‘The Fayed family set-up was a big draw for her,’ says a friend. ‘She longed to be part of a family which did things together so naturally, all mucking in. It was so relaxed.’

    This was, of course, all that she had ever wanted with Charles — an uncomplicated family life and the deeply ingrained contentment of being wanted and loved. Had Diana been alive today she would undoubtedly, in so many ways, have recognised, and adored, the same easy informality that William and Kate have created with their children George, Charlotte and Louis and which also embraces Kate’s parents Michael and Carole Middleton.

    But her friendship with the Fayed family was far more complex.

    In those few short weeks Diana had, unwittingly perhaps, become a rich man’s trophy.

    Twice denied British citizenship, the man who dispensed cash-stuffed brown envelopes to Tory MPs, appeared on the verge of an even greater triumph: step-grandfather to the next King but one.

    Diana and Dodi’s tragic deaths in a high-speed crash in Paris changed everything. In the months that followed, Al Fayed moved from grief-stricken father to making deranged accusations about Prince Philip supposedly masterminding the accident.

    Some years later at a bizarre Harrods lunch — where he falsely claimed to be serving me the testicles of a stag shot on his Highlands estate — he asked me to join his team at the inquest into the accident. I was already a Crown witness and declined.

    He shrugged and rattled a pill box in my ear before slipping it into my pocket. ‘Viagra,’ he grinned. ‘Very good for the bedroom.’ The ‘pills’ were harmless sweeteners.

    As we parted, I couldn’t help reflecting on the many facets of my host. To Diana he was a man of kindness and humour, but in the years since her death, his outlandish claims about her pregnancy, her last words and how she died overwhelmed all other sentiments.

    Ten days or so after the tragedy, a hand-delivered letter arrived for me at the Daily Mail. It was on Harrods notepaper and it was from Mohamed. English was not his first language and the writing in block capitals was laboured. In it, he thanked me for being a friend to Diana and, briefly, to his son.

    He spoke of his loss and all our losses. It was extraordinarily touching. Was that the real Mohamed Al Fayed? Somehow I fear we will never know.

  • Stars of the show: Three of Princess Diana’s gowns are sold for £1.3million at auction after being bought for just £120,000 by a grandmother saving money to buy a house in 1997

    Stars of the show: Three of Princess Diana’s gowns are sold for £1.3million at auction after being bought for just £120,000 by a grandmother saving money to buy a house in 1997

    Three of Princess Diana‘s gowns have sold at auction for £1.3 million – shattering their expected sale prices.

    A red Bruce Oldfield silk gown which was worn by the Princess to the Hot Shots film premiere in 1991 had a minimum estimated sale price of $200,000 (£160,450) but was sold on Friday for $571,500 (£458,480).

    A custom-made black velvet and ivory Catherine Walker dress she wore to a private event sold for $508,000 (£407,540) – more than eight times its lower estimate of $60,000 (£48,130).

    The same designer’s black and jade gown, which Diana wore to a gala in Canada in 1991, had a minimum estimate of $100,000 (£80,220) but also went for $571,500.

    Julien’s Auctions, in Beverly Hills, California, sold the gowns as part of its Legends: Hollywood & Royalty auction.

    Three of Princess Diana 's gowns have sold at auction for £1.3 million ¿ shattering their expected sale prices, including a red Bruce Oldfield silk gown worn to the Hot Shots film premiere in 1991, which sold for $571,500 (£458,480)
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    Three of Princess Diana ‘s gowns have sold at auction for £1.3 million – shattering their expected sale prices, including a red Bruce Oldfield silk gown worn to the Hot Shots film premiere in 1991, which sold for $571,500 (£458,480)

    A custom-made black velvet and ivory Catherine Walker dress worn by Princess Diana to a private event sold for $508,000 (£407,540) ¿ more than eight times its lower estimate of $60,000 (£48,130)
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    A custom-made black velvet and ivory Catherine Walker dress worn by Princess Diana to a private event sold for $508,000 (£407,540) – more than eight times its lower estimate of $60,000 (£48,130)

    Martin Nolan, the auction house’s executive director, said: ‘Our record-breaking sale of these gowns exceeded all expectations.’

    The dresses were originally bought by Ellen Petho, an American businesswoman who paid $150,000 for five of Princess Diana’s dresses at a Christie’s auction in New York in June 1997, using money she had saved to buy a house.

    The gowns had been donated by Princess Diana to raise money for charity, two months before her death.

    Mrs Petho, who died in January aged 82, also raised more than £1 million for charity by putting the dresses on display in the US.

    Her daughter, Karrie, 60, told the Mail: ‘Our mother read the inscription inside [the auction catalogue] about Prince William telling his mother that the dresses shouldn’t sit in her closet; that they should be out in the world and doing good.

    ‘I think that’s what inspired her.’

    The same designer's black and jade gown, which Diana wore to a gala in Canada in 1991, had a minimum estimate of $100,000 (£80,220) but also went for $571,500
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    The same designer’s black and jade gown, which Diana wore to a gala in Canada in 1991, had a minimum estimate of $100,000 (£80,220) but also went for $571,500

    Mrs Petho’s widower, Louis, 83, sold the gowns on Friday to help raise money for a scholarship fund for mature art and design students.

    Other items in the auction included a pink Givenchy dress worn by Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast At Tiffany’s, which sold for $444,500 (£356,600), and the wedding rings of actors Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, which went for $190,500 (£152,830).

  • A half-smoked cigar, a tray of tooth-marked chocolates and maids still turning down the bed: PETRONELLA WYATT reveals how Mohamed Al Fayed led her on a macabre tour of Dodi’s flat… frozen in time 10 years after his death

    A half-smoked cigar, a tray of tooth-marked chocolates and maids still turning down the bed: PETRONELLA WYATT reveals how Mohamed Al Fayed led her on a macabre tour of Dodi’s flat… frozen in time 10 years after his death

    The phoney pharaoh, as Mohamed Al Fayed was called, blew hot and cold when it came to the media.

    So I wasn’t surprised when, shortly after having agreed to be interviewed by me for this newspaper sometime in 2009, I took a call from his press secretary to say it was off.

    He suggested, however, that I get in a taxi to Al Fayed’s flat in Park Lane and try to change his mind. Like the cat in the adage, I dithered.

    Al Fayed, the Egyptian-born owner of Harrods and father of Dodi, had an unsavoury reputation where women were concerned.

    I hoped that changing his mind would not involve some sort of amorous exertion on my part.

    Petronella Wyatt recalls how when she met Mohamed Al Fayed in 2009, it turned into 'one of the most disturbing afternoons of my life'. Pictured: Al Fayed with the late Princess Diana
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    Petronella Wyatt recalls how when she met Mohamed Al Fayed in 2009, it turned into ‘one of the most disturbing afternoons of my life’. Pictured: Al Fayed with the late Princess Diana

    Tragedy: Diana with Dodi Fayed caught on CCTV before their death in Paris on 31 August 1997
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    Tragedy: Diana with Dodi Fayed caught on CCTV before their death in Paris on 31 August 1997

    Diana pictured with Dodi Fayed in St Tropez a week before their deaths following a car crash
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    Diana pictured with Dodi Fayed in St Tropez a week before their deaths following a car crash

    Dodi Fayed's home in Park Lane, London, which was turned into a living shrine by his father
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    Dodi Fayed’s home in Park Lane, London, which was turned into a living shrine by his father

    But it had been more than ten years since Dodi was killed alongside Princess Diana and I was curious to see if Al Fayed, who had an extraordinary capacity to swathe bitter facts in illusion, had something new to say.

    What moved him was a hatred of the Establishment, whose members, he believed, had laughed at him for so long, denied him a British passport and then murdered his son.

    None of his people ever contradicted him because they were largely charlatans and cowards who surrounded him in a dense herd.

    Al Fayed, who died last month at the age of 94, was a bully and not averse to making threats.

    What followed that day was one of the most disturbing afternoons of my life.

    It began simply enough. A doorman opened the street entrance and I rang the bell to Al Fayed’s apartment. I had never met him and didn’t expect that he would come to the door, but he did.

    He was wearing a dressing gown over a grey suit and smelled of expensive unguent. I couldn’t change his mind about the interview, but he didn’t want me to leave, either.

    He made his purpose clear, like the horse trader he was at heart. ‘Why don’t we have a romantic dinner tonight?’

    My nerves hit thermonuclear levels. I had no intention of dining with him and said so. ‘How about tomorrow night?’ he persisted.

    ‘No, absolutely not. Not the rest of the week, either.’ His eyebrows rose like the wings of an eagle. ‘No?’ he said. ‘Then I will show you something. Something few people have seen.’

    Al Fayed pictured at Westminster Abbey, following the funeral service for Princess Diana in 1997
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    Al Fayed pictured at Westminster Abbey, following the funeral service for Princess Diana in 1997

    This didn’t calm me down, until he made it clear that he wanted advice and thought I was a judicious woman.

    What he hoped to show me was Dodi’s flat, which was next door. I wondered why he wanted me to look at a presumably empty apartment.

    His eyes welled up (Al Fayed cried very easily) and I felt a sudden rush of sympathy for him.

    With Dodi’s death had gone not only his beloved son, but also his hopes of being accepted by the Establishment he hated yet yearned to join – an ambition he had attempted to realise, fruitlessly, for much of his life.

    With Dodi's death had gone not only his beloved son, but also his hopes of being accepted by the Establishment he hated yet yearned to join – an ambition he had attempted to realise, fruitlessly, for much of his life
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    With Dodi’s death had gone not only his beloved son, but also his hopes of being accepted by the Establishment he hated yet yearned to join – an ambition he had attempted to realise, fruitlessly, for much of his life

    He took off his robe and I noticed he wore a silver tie of extraordinary width and thickness. On such a short man it seemed absurd.

    We walked across the hall and arrived at Dodi’s flat. To this day, I still can’t quite believe what I saw.

    In Dickens’ Great Expectations, the embittered Miss Havisham lives out her life in the remnants of her wedding dress, preserving the moment of her betrayal in her ghastly surroundings.

    Al Fayed had done something even worse.

    He had built an organic, living shrine to his dead son. It was as if he expected Dodi to walk through the door at any second and pick up the threads of his existence.

    It was a denial of death, of the tragedy in Paris. Al Fayed’s agony was that of a man thrown into a situation so intolerable that he had created a world of make-believe.

    Mohamed Al-Fayed died, aged 94, on the eve of the 26th anniversary of the high speed crash in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel, Paris, where Dodi, 42, and Diana, 36, were killed in 1997
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    Mohamed Al-Fayed died, aged 94, on the eve of the 26th anniversary of the high speed crash in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel, Paris, where Dodi, 42, and Diana, 36, were killed in 1997

    In the hall were photographs celebrating the 1981 film Chariots Of Fire.

    Al Fayed had helped to finance the project so that Dodi, who had no discernible talents, could realise his dream of becoming a big-shot film producer.

     (Dodi was given the title of executive producer.)

    The actual producer, David Puttnam, had thrown Dodi off the set after he tried to give the cast cocaine, but I listened politely as Al Fayed painted a picture of an unappreciated genius, with the qualities of Jesus Christ and Cary Grant combined.

    It was uncomfortable. Al Fayed’s fish eyes flicked to and fro, searching my face for the slightest sign of dissent. Al Fayed was on the brink. I knew I was talking to a man who had lost his mind when I saw Dodi’s bedroom.

    It was decorated in muted colours and the floor was thickly carpeted. What disturbed me was the sense of it waiting for its former occupant.

    A maid was turning down the bed, plumping up the pillows for a man who had been dead for more than ten years.

    Jardinieres massed with green leaves lent it the air of a crypt. I noticed a withered object in what appeared to be an ashtray. It was half a cigar, waiting for its owner to come back and finish it.

    Al Fayed could no more avoid lying than the rest of us can avoid blinking, but until then I had no idea of the extent to which he lied to himself.

    Princess Diana was everywhere, depicted in the most awful chocolate box paintings, presumably commissioned by Al Fayed himself. They were huge – and, worse, they were fantasies.

    The man who had set his hopes on his son marrying a princess had not been defeated by facts.

    In death, he had married them. One painting depicted Diana in what appeared to be a wedding dress; another with her arms, strangely elongated, around Dodi’s waist.

    In the living room, more paintings and photographs of the Princess adorned the walls.

    Al Fayed had been silent all this time. Then he turned to me, like a viper. ‘If you tell anyone about this…’ He let the ellipsis hang in the air like a noose.

    I was well aware that Al Fayed was often described as brutal. His efforts to obtain a British passport were obstructed by successive Home Secretaries, who must have had good reason. I said nothing at all, which seemed to satisfy him.

    The tour continued. There was a sweet, sickly smell to the place. It reminded me of a film set that had been long abandoned by the crew.

    Mr Al-Fayed with his son Dodi, pictured in 1988. Mr Al-Fayed spent long hours in the mausoleum where Dodi is buried, mourning his son
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    Mr Al-Fayed with his son Dodi, pictured in 1988. Mr Al-Fayed spent long hours in the mausoleum where Dodi is buried, mourning his son

    On a table was a tray of mouldering Charbonnel et Walker chocolates. There were tooth marks on them, as if Dodi had tried them and thrown them back in the box. The sight made me nauseous.

    All the while, domestic servants scurried here and there, attending to this temple constructed by a modern Ozymandias. Al Fayed was crying. I felt that I shouldn’t be there.

    ‘What shall I do with it?’ he asked. I didn’t answer.

    READ MORE: The Egyptian tycoon who bought his way into the heart of society – then went to war on royals he blamed for his son’s tragic death

    Mr Al Fayed at the opening of the Egyptian Room in Harrods - which featured busts of himself and, later, a statue commemorating Diana and his son Dodi
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    Mr Al Fayed at the opening of the Egyptian Room in Harrods – which featured busts of himself and, later, a statue commemorating Diana and his son Dodi

    The grotesque futility of Dodi’s life – the drugs; the failed relationships with models of whom his father didn’t approve; the desperate affair with Diana, which none of her friends thought would last beyond a summer – was denied and ignored in this strange monument to a son.

    In its way, it was as great a testament to love as the Taj Mahal, warped though it was.

    In these rooms, Dodi had become an impresario, a hero among men and the one and only love of a princess.

    It was all nonsense. No one understood why Diana had even glanced at Dodi. I knew the Princess, and it baffled me.

    She had been in love with the heart surgeon Hasnat Khan, but it had ended and I supposed her vanity was hurt.

    Al Fayed knew Raine Spencer, Diana’s stepmother, and they cooked up the holiday in the South of France where Dodi and Diana became close, weeks before their deaths in 1997.

    Diana wasn’t in love with Dodi, and she wasn’t having his child. I dreaded seeing a painting of her cradling a baby, but that was too much, even for Al Fayed.

    I turned and noticed that he had left. I was alone in this hell. A silk cravat was carefully folded on one of the soft furnishings.

    I recognised it as one Dodi had worn in a photograph. I touched it, half expecting it to disintegrate.

    The whole place had an unhealthy air, in which living things couldn’t survive.

    I took one last look at the 7ft-tall Diana in her wedding dress and walked out of the door.

  • US museum buys collection of Princess Diana’s dresses from fashion designer Jacques Azagury for an estimated £100,000 after reading about them on MailOnline

    US museum buys collection of Princess Diana’s dresses from fashion designer Jacques Azagury for an estimated £100,000 after reading about them on MailOnline

    When couturier Jacques Azagury decided to auction his collection of Princess Diana memorabilia, including ‘twin’ versions of some of her most iconic gowns, he expected the auction house to be packed with frantic bidders.

    But, just 24 hours after the Daily Mail revealed that the designer was selling the dresses, along with Christmas cards and letters from the princess, patterns of the gowns and a toile, which have been kept in a vault for 26 years, he was offered a snap sale.

    Collector Renae Plant, who runs a 3D interactive online museum of Diana’s outfits, is estimated to have paid £100,000 for the entire collection after reading about the auction, at Lay’s Auctioneers, in Penzance, Cornwall, which featured in Tuesday’s copy of this newspaper.

    The dresses are now heading for Los Angeles, where they will be preserved by The Princess & The Platypus Foundation and displayed in the Princess Diana Museum.

    Tonight she said: ‘I saw the story on dailymail.com and… I then reached out to Jacques directly because I worked with him in the past and I was thrilled when he accepted my bid.

    Princess of cool: Diana wore this stunning ice blue dress in June 1997
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    Princess of cool: Diana wore this stunning ice blue dress in June 1997

    Princess Diana attends a dinner held by the American Red Cross in Washington DC in 1996
    +4

    Diana attends a gala for her 36th birthday at the Tate Gallery in 1997
    +4

    Dazzling: Two of Azagury’s ‘Famous Five’ outfits

    Jacques Azagury (pictured left) Diana's fashion designer, with the dresses he created for her
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    Jacques Azagury (pictured left) Diana’s fashion designer, with the dresses he created for her

    ‘I now have more than 80 pieces of clothing once connected to Princess Diana and I am currently working on an exhibition of my entire collection which will go around the world.

    ‘I’m delighted that the whole collection is going to one museum as a complete story. My one fear was that items would be sold separately and they would be all over the place.’

    It is now almost 40 years since Azagury met the princess: he was showing his 1985 autumn/winter New Romantics Collection at London’s Hyde Park Hotel, now the Mandarin Oriental. He went on to create a ballerina-length gown, with a royal blue organza skirt and black bodice embroidered with blue stars, which she wore to a mayoral dinner at Florence’s Palazzo Vecchio, in 1985.

    The last five dresses that he created for the princess he dubbed the ‘Famous Five’. They were made after her separation from Prince Charles when she could be more daring. She so loved them that she kept them and they are now believed to belong to Princes William and Harry.

    Azagury always created a ‘twin’ of each gown he made for the princess in the same measurements at the same time as the original and filed it away. Now, after retiring and closing his eponymous shop in Knightsbridge, he has sold his Diana memorabilia.

    In total he designed 18 outfits for the princess. The Famous Five include red silk column dress that Diana wore to a Red Cross Gala dinner in Washington on June 17, 1997, an ice blue silk georgette number, hand beaded with crystal bugle beads, that she wore on June 3, 1997, for a Royal Gala Performance of Swan Lake and a black Chantilly lace column, embroidered with sequins and beads, that Diana wore to celebrate the centenary of Tate Britain, on her 36th birthday, on July 1, 1997.

    Mimi Connell-Lay, of Lay’s Auctioneers said: ‘We are very happy to have been able to advise Mr Azagury in this matter and broker such a successful outcome for all parties.’

  • Diana’s last days – and the death of The Crown: As its final series airs, the cast of The Crown reveal how the tragedy in Paris – and the Queen’s death – made for a sombre mood on set

    Diana’s last days – and the death of The Crown: As its final series airs, the cast of The Crown reveal how the tragedy in Paris – and the Queen’s death – made for a sombre mood on set

    Death hangs over the sixth and final series of The Crown. Filming had just started when it was announced the Queen – whose unswerving sense of duty and dedication have always been the beating heart of this all-encompassing biography of her reign – had died last September.

    Along with the nation many of the cast went into mourning, but then filming resumed and The Crown’s version of Her Majesty had to be brought back to life.

    ‘We started filming, and then very soon afterwards the Queen died, so it was quite difficult to be honest,’ says Imelda Staunton, who won acclaim for her portrayal of the Queen in the fifth series and was speaking, along with the rest of the cast, before the current actors’ strike.

    ‘We carried on with as much dignity and grace as they have always done on The Crown, but obviously there was a very different feel in the world and in England, and even more so on The Crown.

    ‘We couldn’t do anything differently. We had to carry on, but we were all a wee bit sad. I think it probably just informed our mood rather than altering the material. But there’s no doubt it was different.’

    Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana in the final series of The Crown. The first four episodes not only cover the fatal car crash in Paris but also Diana and Dodi's summer holiday in St Tropez, which came before the tragedy
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    Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana in the final series of The Crown. The first four episodes not only cover the fatal car crash in Paris but also Diana and Dodi’s summer holiday in St Tropez, which came before the tragedy

    It’s another death, however, that is the primary focus of the storyline as the first half of the series is released.

    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.

    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.

    Dominic West (centre) as Prince Charles with Rufus Kampa (left) as Prince William and Fflyn Edwards as Prince Harry
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    Dominic West (centre) as Prince Charles with Rufus Kampa (left) as Prince William and Fflyn Edwards as Prince Harry

    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,’ says Dominic West, who plays the then Prince.

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

    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
    +3

    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

    ‘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.’

  • Victoria Beckham gushes over ‘cute and heartwarming’ husband David as he whips up a HUGE roast at their Cotswolds home… despite her 25 year-long diet of JUST fish and veg!

    Victoria Beckham gushes over ‘cute and heartwarming’ husband David as he whips up a HUGE roast at their Cotswolds home… despite her 25 year-long diet of JUST fish and veg!

    They recently shed light on their idyllic home life in his Netflix documentary.

    And Victoria Beckham continued to give glimpses into the showbiz world’s most famous family as she took to Instagram on Sunday.

    The former Spice Girl, 49, shared a video of her footballer husband David, 48, in the kitchen of their Cotswolds home making a delicious roast dinner before sharing a snap of the star at the dinner table alongside two Elf On A Shelf dolls.

    She added captions alongside the snaps reading: ‘Could he get any cuter?… Warms my heart! (and really makes me laugh). Dinner with the elfs [sic].’

    Victoria did not confirm if she ate the roast, given the renowned claims that she has ‘eaten the same meal for 25 years, as David previously said: ‘She only eats grilled fish, steamed vegetables; she will very rarely deviate from that.’

    Victoria Beckham continued to give glimpses into the showbiz world's most famous family as she took to Instagram on Sunday
    +10

    Victoria Beckham continued to give glimpses into the showbiz world’s most famous family as she took to Instagram on Sunday

    The former Spice Girl, 49, shared a video of her footballer husband David, 48, in the kitchen of their Cotswolds home making a delicious roast dinner before sharing a snap of the star at the dinner table alongside two Elf On A Shelf dolls
    +10

    The former Spice Girl, 49, shared a video of her footballer husband David, 48, in the kitchen of their Cotswolds home making a delicious roast dinner before sharing a snap of the star at the dinner table alongside two Elf On A Shelf dolls

    The vast roast looked divine but was no doubt resisted by Victoria given her strict diet
    +10

    The vast roast looked divine but was no doubt resisted by Victoria given her strict diet

    Victoria did not confirm if she ate the roast, given the renowned claims that she has 'eaten the same meal for 25 years, as David previously said: 'She only eats grilled fish, steamed vegetables; she will very rarely deviate from that'
    +10

    Victoria did not confirm if she ate the roast, given the renowned claims that she has ‘eaten the same meal for 25 years, as David previously said: ‘She only eats grilled fish, steamed vegetables; she will very rarely deviate from that’

    Earlier this year, Rio Ferdinand also spoke about Victoria’s militant diet, and even said: ‘I’ve never seen her eat anything. I don’t remember anything that sticks out of my memory, to be honest.’

    Victoria meanwhile told Vogue Australia last year that her husband made her tastes ‘sound boring’ when in fact she fills her diet with ‘healthy fat’ and regularly does detoxes where she abstains from drinking alcohol.

    She said: ‘I mean, talk about making me sound boring! No. What he meant is that he’s never met anyone who is more disciplined with the way that they eat…

    ‘I eat lots of healthy fat: fish, avocado, nuts, that sort of thing. I do drink alcohol, unless I have a reason not to.

    ‘I’ll detox from anything for three to six months where I won’t drink. I’m quite extreme in anything I do, whether it’s eating or working out or drinking or not drinking.’

    David and Victoria have been married for 24 years and often chronicle their life on social media with their combined 118m followers.

    As well as family life, Victoria also plugs her eponymous fashion and beauty collections and was sharing a beauty tutorial on Sunday.

    She looked sensational as she spoke followers through her bronzed make-up, with her hair pinned off her face seemingly while freshly styled.

    David and Victoria have been married for 24 years and often chronicle their life on social media with their combined 118m followers
    +10

    David and Victoria have been married for 24 years and often chronicle their life on social media with their combined 118m followers

    As well as family life, Victoria also plugs her eponymous fashion and beauty collections and was sharing a beauty tutorial on Sunday
    +10

    As well as family life, Victoria also plugs her eponymous fashion and beauty collections and was sharing a beauty tutorial on Sunday

    David looked overjoyed with his culinary efforts
    +10

    David looked overjoyed with his culinary efforts

    Prior to their roast dinner, Victoria once again poked fun at David as she took a sneaky video of him dancing in the gym. She took to her Instagram Stories on Friday to share an amusing video of David busting a move while working out.

    She also posted a snap of their Elf On A Shelf as the Beckham family got into the festive spirit and resumed the annual fun of finding the elf hidden around the home.

    Victoria hilariously shared a video of her husband David standing with his back to her as he worked out in the gym, sporting black shorts and a grey T-shirt.

    David was seen shaking his hips while A Ray of Sunshine by Wham! belted out on the speakers, completely unaware he was being filmed by his wife.

    Sharing his moves with her followers, Victoria described his dancing as ‘cute’ and questioned whether he had been inspired by the new Netflix Wham! documentary.

    Victoria also gave an insight into the Beckham’s first day of elf on the shelf antics, sharing a picture of the elf bizarrely sandwiched between two pieces of bread.

    The elf was joined by a message which read: ‘I was cold but now I’m toasty,’ in a pun on its sandwiched bread placement.

    Prior to their roast dinner, Victoria once again poked fun at David as she took a sneaky video of him dancing in the gym. She took to her Instagram Stories on Friday to share an amusing video of David busting a move while working out
    +10

    Prior to their roast dinner, Victoria once again poked fun at David as she took a sneaky video of him dancing in the gym. She took to her Instagram Stories on Friday to share an amusing video of David busting a move while working out

    She also posted a snap of their elf on the shelf as the Beckham family got into the festive spirit and resumed the annual fun of finding the elf hidden around the home
    +10

    She also posted a snap of their elf on the shelf as the Beckham family got into the festive spirit and resumed the annual fun of finding the elf hidden around the home

    Victoria wrote alongside the snap: ‘It’s that time of year again,’ before adding in another message: ‘Nice effort @davidbeckham.’

    Elsewhere, their eldest son Brooklyn, 24, also gave an insight into his recent getaway to Costa Rica, posting snaps from the trip.

    He shared black and white shots of him in a white T-shirt and a flatback cap as he lounged on a lavish boat during the balmy day out.

    Brooklyn, who is married to Nicola Peltz, captioned the post: ‘Thank you Costa Rica for having me [heart emoji].’

    Elsewhere, their eldest son Brooklyn, 24, also gave an insight into his recent getaway to Costa Rica, posting snaps from the trip
    +10

    Elsewhere, their eldest son Brooklyn, 24, also gave an insight into his recent getaway to Costa Rica, posting snaps from the trip

  • Romeo Beckham, 21, cuts a casual figure in a black T-shirt as he joins brother Cruz, 18, and glamorous girlfriend Mia Regan, 21, at the British Fashion Awards after party

    Romeo Beckham, 21, cuts a casual figure in a black T-shirt as he joins brother Cruz, 18, and glamorous girlfriend Mia Regan, 21, at the British Fashion Awards after party

    Romeo Beckham seemed in high spirits as he hit the star-studded British Fashion Awards after party with younger brother Cruz and girlfriend Mia Regan on Monday.

    The Brentford footballer, 21, displayed his several arm tattoos in a plain black T-shirt as he cosied up to his glamorous model girlfriend, 21.

    Romeo kept his look cool in a pair of oversized black trousers which he teamed with a pair of trainers and a dazzling silver chain necklace.

    He arrived wearing a pair of black sunglasses and lovingly draped his oversized blazer over Mia’s shoulders as they arrived.

    The model looked sensational as she changed into a eye catching figure hugging semi-sheer Diesel beige metallic maxi dress for the after party held at Aberconway House in honour of Edward Enninful who was given the Trailblazer award that night.

    Romeo Beckham seemed in high spirits as he hit the star-studded British Fashion Awards party at Aberconway House with younger brother Cruz, (left) and girlfriend Mia Regan on Monday night
    +14

    Romeo Beckham seemed in high spirits as he hit the star-studded British Fashion Awards party at Aberconway House with younger brother Cruz, (left) and girlfriend Mia Regan on Monday night

    The Brentford footballer, 21, displayed his several arm tattoos in a plain black T-shirt as he cosied up to his glamorous model girlfriend Mia, 21, at the event held in honour of Edward Enninful who was given the Trailblazer award that night
    +14

    The Brentford footballer, 21, displayed his several arm tattoos in a plain black T-shirt as he cosied up to his glamorous model girlfriend Mia, 21, at the event held in honour of Edward Enninful who was given the Trailblazer award that night

    She accessorised the ensemble with a pair of dazzling drop earrings and a stunning diamond necklace.

    The couple were joined at the party by David and Victoria Beckham‘s youngest son Cruz, 18, who dressed smartly in a striped shirt and a black tie.

    He added a trendy tweed hat to the look and kept comfortable in a pair of black Converse.

    The siblings seemed in high spirits as they put their arms around one another to pose for photos.

    Earlier in the evening, Romeo and Mia looked incredible as they attended the British Fashion Awards at the Royal Albert Hall.

    The couple cut stylish figures as they both matched in all black ensembles for the prestigious evening of fashion.

    Romeo showed off his uncanny resemblance to father David, as he added a black blazer with shiny lapels over his simple black after party outfit.

    Meanwhile his girlfriend Mia looked sophisticated in a fitted black blazer and mini skirt.

    The model cinched in her waist with a shiny black corset, while also showed off her slender legs in the skirt which featured mesh and block colour panels.

    Romeo kept his look cool in a pair of oversized black trousers which he teamed with a pair of trainers and a silver chain necklace
    +14

    Romeo kept his look cool in a pair of oversized black trousers which he teamed with a pair of trainers and a silver chain necklace

    He arrived wearing a pair of black sunglasses and draped his oversized blazer over Mia's shoulders as they arrived
    +14

    He arrived wearing a pair of black sunglasses and draped his oversized blazer over Mia’s shoulders as they arrived

    The model looked sensational as she changed into an eye catching figure hugging semi-sheer beige metallic maxi dress for the after party
    +14

    The model looked sensational as she changed into an eye catching figure hugging semi-sheer beige metallic maxi dress for the after party

    She accessorised the ensemble with a pair of dazzling drop earrings and a stunning diamond necklace
    +14

    She accessorised the ensemble with a pair of dazzling drop earrings and a stunning diamond necklace

    The couple were joined at the party by David and Victoria Beckham's youngest son Cruz, 18, who dressed smart in a striped shirt which he teamed with a black tie and tweed hat
    +14

    The couple were joined at the party by David and Victoria Beckham’s youngest son Cruz, 18, who dressed smart in a striped shirt which he teamed with a black tie and tweed hat

    The siblings seemed in high spirits as they wrapped their arms around one another to pose for photos
    +14

    The siblings seemed in high spirits as they wrapped their arms around one another to pose for photos

    Trailblazer Edward Enninful and Nicole Scherzinger posed up a storm for pictures
    +14

    Trailblazer Edward Enninful and Nicole Scherzinger posed up a storm for pictures

    Earlier in the evening, Romeo and Mia looked incredible as they attended the British Fashion Awards at the Royal Albert Hall
    +14

    Earlier in the evening, Romeo and Mia looked incredible as they attended the British Fashion Awards at the Royal Albert Hall

    The star finished the ensemble with some beige and black toed heels.

    She scraped her hair back in a tight slick back bun and accessorised the outfit with some long silver earrings.

    After struggling with their long distance relationship back in May, the pair now eem to be back on track.

    Romeo recently openly gushed over Mia saying ‘crazy how lucky I am’ in a recent chat.

    A-listers such as Kate Moss, Amal Clooney and Gwyneth Paltrow walked the red carpet at the British Fashion Awards 2023.

    The event, presented by jewellery brand Pandora returned to the iconic London venue, the Royal Albert Hall on Monday evening.

    The evening, hosted by British broadcaster Maya Jama and musical artist Kojey Radical, celebrated 16 awards. TFA nominees and winners are voted for by an international judging panel made up of over 1000 industry experts.

    The event serves as the main fundraiser for the BFC Foundation. which supports the future growth and success of the British fashion industry through its focus on education, grant-giving, and business mentoring.

    The BFC also went back to having some gender-based design awards for the first time since the pandemic, splitting the best British designers into menswear and womenswear categories.

    Leading industry figures were recognised such as Valentino Garavani with the Outstanding Achievement award, make-up artist Charlotte Tilbury with the Special Recognition Award, and the late Joe Casely-Hayford with a posthumous special recognition award.

    Sam Smith accepted the Cultural Innovator trophy as they were honoured for creating viral fashion moments, such as their unforgettable latex clad appearance at the 2023 Brit Awards.

    The couple cut stylish figures as they both matched in all black ensembles for the prestigious evening of fashion
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    The couple cut stylish figures as they both matched in all black ensembles for the prestigious evening of fashion

    Romeo showed off his uncanny resemblance to father David , as he added a black blazer with shiny lapels over his simple black after party outfit
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    Romeo showed off his uncanny resemblance to father David , as he added a black blazer with shiny lapels over his simple black after party outfit

    Meanwhile his girlfriend Mia looked sophisticated in a fitted black blazer and mini skirt
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    Meanwhile his girlfriend Mia looked sophisticated in a fitted black blazer and mini skirt

    After struggling with their long distance relationship back in May , the pair are now back on track
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    After struggling with their long distance relationship back in May , the pair are now back on track

    Speaking about Sam’s award Caroline Rush, chief executive officer at the British Fashion Council, said Sam was is ‘a true cultural innovator who has fearlessly pushed the boundaries of both fashion and entertainment.

    ‘Smith’s unapologetic and groundbreaking style choices have dominated the industry in 2023 and we are incredibly grateful for their continued support of U.K. designers.’

    The awards ceremony kicked off in style, with global superstar Usher welcoming the audience of leading designers, artists, creatives, and tastemakers for a night celebrating the global fashion community, asking ‘How does fashion make you feel?’.

    The evening started with METTE’s Pandora performance, followed with a performance from Cultural Innovator Award winner Sam Smith and ended with a DJ set by Skepta at the afterparty.

    The British fashion industry paid tribute to Dame Vivienne Westwood and her fearless approach to design and activism and recognised Joe Casely-Hayford with a posthumous Special Recognition Award for his incredible contributions to fashion and culture.

    Each winner received a unique trophy designed by stylist, art director and 2022 NEW WAVE: Creative in collaboration with British glass production company.

  • David and Victoria Beckham beam as they meet ‘passionate and inspiring’ Barack Obama at his charity event alongside children Cruz and Harper

    David and Victoria Beckham beam as they meet ‘passionate and inspiring’ Barack Obama at his charity event alongside children Cruz and Harper

    Showbiz royalty met with political royalty on Thursday, when four sixths of the Beckham clan joined former President Barack Obama at a charity event.

    David and Victoria, aged 48 and 49 respectively, took their youngest kids Cruz, 18, and Harper, 12, to meet Obama while throwing their support behind his charity, The Obama Foundation, where they shared sweet snaps from the meeting.

    The couple posed for the images alongside the former POTUS alongside gushing captions lauding him for his work with the charity.

    On an official Instagram account, the Obama Foundation lists its work as: ‘Our mission is to inspire people to take action, empower them to change their world, and connect them so they can achieve more together.’

    David took to Instagram to pen: ‘I was Honoured to spend time with @BarackObama in support of the incredible work the @ObamaFoundation is doing to empower the next generation of leaders around the world…

    Showbiz royalty met with political royalty on Thursday, when four sixths of the Beckham clan joined former President Barack Obama at a charity event
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    Showbiz royalty met with political royalty on Thursday, when four sixths of the Beckham clan joined former President Barack Obama at a charity event

    David and Victoria, aged 48 and 49 respectively, took their youngest kids Cruz, 18, and Harper, 12, to meet Obama while throwing their support behind his charity, The Obama Foundation, where they shared sweet snaps from the meeting
    +8

    David and Victoria, aged 48 and 49 respectively, took their youngest kids Cruz, 18, and Harper, 12, to meet Obama while throwing their support behind his charity, The Obama Foundation, where they shared sweet snaps from the meeting

    The couple posed for the images alongside the former POTUS alongside gushing captions lauding him for his work with the charity
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    The couple posed for the images alongside the former POTUS alongside gushing captions lauding him for his work with the charity

    ‘A towering example of grace and humility, it was so inspiring to hear about the innovative projects that are changing young lives and improving communities…

    ‘Thank you Mr President it was a privilege to hear you speak with such passion and conviction.’

    Victoria meanwhile added: ‘Such an honour to welcome and host @barackobama in support of the incredible work the @obamafoundation is doing to empower the next generation of leaders around the world…

    ‘Thank you for all that you do to change young lives and improve communities. Thank you Mr President.@Davidbeckham’.

    The meeting of minds was not their first, as David joined his LA Galaxy teammates in visiting the White House to meet the former President in 2012.

    After her meeting with Obama, Victoria attended a launch for the eyewear and fragrance line of her eponymous fashion brand.

    The event was hosted by Vogue, where she was interviewed by Vogue editor Lilah Ramzi and also joined by Harper who looked trendy in an all-black ensemble.

    Alongside a series of snaps, she added a caption reading: ‘Thank you @voguemagazine, @thewebster and my friends for an amazing lunch and talk!…

    The meeting of minds was not their first, as David joined his LA Galaxy teammates in visiting the White House to meet the former President in 2012
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    The meeting of minds was not their first, as David joined his LA Galaxy teammates in visiting the White House to meet the former President in 2012

    The event was hosted by Vogue, where she was interviewed by Vogue editor Lilah Ramzi and also joined by Harper who looked trendy in an all-black ensemble
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    The event was hosted by Vogue, where she was interviewed by Vogue editor Lilah Ramzi and also joined by Harper who looked trendy in an all-black ensemble

    The event was hosted by Vogue, where she was interviewed by Vogue editor Lilah Ramzi and also joined by Harper who looked trendy in an all-black ensemble
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    The event was hosted by Vogue, where she was interviewed by Vogue editor Lilah Ramzi and also joined by Harper who looked trendy in an all-black ensemble

    ‘So thrilled for my fashion, #VBFragrance and #VBEyewear to be here in Miami. Loved meeting all of the #Vogue100 ladies and thank you @lhd for hosting us and @lilahramzi for our wonderful talk. Kisses from Miami xx

    ‘I’m wearing my #VBSS24 white suit, coming soon to VictoriaBeckham.com and 36 Dover Street!!’

    The duo of events came after a hilarious social media exchange in the famous family, when their eldest son Brooklyn was caught by surprise when he found himself tagged in his mother’s unusual social media post on Tuesday.

    The aspiring chef and photographer, 24, awkwardly brushed-off his mother after she publicly asked him whether he wanted his baby tooth back.

    The former Spice Girl, 49, took to Instagram to share that she discovered Brooklyn’s baby tooth that she kept when it feel out years ago.

    Alongside a photo of the grimy tooth on the kitchen counter, Victoria wrote: ‘Found this old baby tooth…. Do you want it back???? @brooklynpeltzbeckham @davidbeckham’.

    Unsurprisingly, Brooklyn politely declined his mothers offer to have his nearly 20-year-old tooth back.

    She looked sensational in her sleek white suit
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    She looked sensational in her sleek white suit

    The former Spice Girl took to Instagram to share that she discovered Brooklyn's baby tooth that she kept when it feel out years ago
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    The former Spice Girl took to Instagram to share that she discovered Brooklyn’s baby tooth that she kept when it feel out years ago