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- <text id=93TT0760>
- <title>
- Dec. 13, 1993: Windsor Of Discontent
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 13, 1993 The Big Three:Chrysler, Ford, and GM
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ROYALTY, Page 99
- Windsor Of Discontent
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Princess of Wales blames the press for driving her into
- seclusion. Is it an act of despair or just more intrigue?
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Helen Gibson/London
- </p>
- <p> For sheer tumult and intrigue, Princess Diana's relationship
- with her husband can't compare with her relationship with the
- press. The latter has certainly been more faithful than the
- former; but after untold millions of photos, miles of film and
- acres of newsprint, the most chronicled woman in the world has
- decided it is time to jilt the cameras that love her so.
- </p>
- <p> Diana used a luncheon speech at the Headway National Head Injuries
- Association in London to denounce the press corps and declare
- her freedom. "When I started my public life 12 years ago," she
- said, "I understood that the media might be interested in what
- I did...but I was not aware of how overwhelming that attention
- would become, nor the extent to which it would affect both my
- public duties and my personal life." Then came the bombshell.
- At the end of the year, once she had completed her scheduled
- events, she noted, "I will be reducing the extent of the public
- life I have led so far."
- </p>
- <p> She talked of finding some way to continue her charitable work
- in private, while allowing more time with her sons William,
- 11, and Harry, 9. In light of the rumors of a break with the
- palace, Diana explicitly claimed to have the Queen's blessing.
- But she made no mention of her husband at all. "She pointedly
- excluded the Prince of Wales," observed Brian Hoey, author of
- several books on the royals. "What she's saying is that she
- has finished with him." By the time she sat down, she was blinking
- back tears.
- </p>
- <p> This Thursday marks the first anniversary of the Waleses' official
- separation--a year that has taken its toll on the entire family.
- Diana threw herself into her many charities, but she kept some
- distance from Buckingham Palace. It was hard to know who was
- dissing whom. The Princess was conspicuously absent from Trooping
- the Color in June and the Queen Mum's birthday in August.
- </p>
- <p> Even as Charles seemed to regain his footing, with successful
- foreign trips, there came reports that the princess was falling
- apart. Diana grew suddenly allergic to the cameras that follow
- her everywhere. "You make my life hell," she yelled at a photographer
- who ambushed her outside a London movie theater. She spent more
- and more nights alone at Kensington Palace, watching TV. There
- were reports that she was once again suffering from bulimia.
- Last month she left a royal charity gala in tears: "a migraine"
- was the official explanation.
- </p>
- <p> She seemed determined to laugh off the alarms a few days later,
- when she appeared at a London benefit. She told the crowd, "You're
- very lucky to have your patron here today. I was supposed to
- have my head down the loo for most of the day. [But] if it
- is all right with you, I thought I would postpone my nervous
- breakdown."
- </p>
- <p> In a curious way, Diana has grown more dependent on the reporters
- and photographers whom she lambasted last week. No matter what
- her standing at the palace, she remains the ubiquitous cover
- girl. She has cannily used writers and reporters to her advantage,
- particularly Andrew Morton, whose intimately sympathetic account
- of her collapsing marriage triggered the break a year ago.
- </p>
- <p> The latest expose came on Nov. 7, when the Sunday Mirror published
- a series of photos, ostensibly taken through a hidden camera,
- of the svelte princess working out at London's LA Fitness Club.
- Though Diana lividly decried this invasion of her privacy, there
- were those who thought they saw a plant. The pictures were supposedly
- snapped sometime last summer; yet they mysteriously appeared
- on the front pages the very week that Charles was making a high-profile
- trip through Arab states. Diana appears utterly poised, even
- posed. Could she actually stoop to stealing the limelight that
- has always been hers for the asking?
- </p>
- <p> Likewise last week's surprise speech was leaked in advance,
- guaranteeing maximum coverage. "It was quite cold and calculated,"
- says Hoey, who saw the declaration of independence as just the
- latest bit of media manipulation. "If she really wanted to reduce
- her public commitments, she could have done so without the big
- announcement."
- </p>
- <p> Under present law Charles and Diana would have to remain separated
- for another year before they could divorce--but the government
- could probably massage the laws if it chose. Gossip meister
- Nigel Dempster reported last month that Prince Charles had promised
- to marry his paramour, Camilla Parker-Bowles--which would
- depend not only on the Prince's being free but also on Camilla's
- divorcing her Catholic husband. At the same time, Dempster also
- suggested that Diana was still hoping for a reconciliation with
- the man who, in one secretly recorded exchange, expressed his
- wish to be reincarnated as his lover's tampon.
- </p>
- <p> If the Waleses run true to form, they will linger in limbo a
- while longer, the safest refuge from any new entanglements.
- In the longer run, it seems far less likely that Diana will
- kiss and make up with her husband than that she will soon be
- back in the arms of the press corps that can't live without
- her.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-