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Andrew Morton - Diana in Pursuit of Love

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Andrew Morton Diana in Pursuit of Love
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Diana in Pursuit of Love includes previously unpublished details from the Diana-Morton tapes, it is based on wide-ranging research, and new and exclusive interviews. The definitive book on Diana, Pricess of Waless last years, by the biographer she herself chose. When Andrew Mortons world-famous biography, Diana: Her True Story was first published, it caused a media frenzy, severely jolted the royal family and the Palace hierarchy, and shook the British Establishment to its foundations. Later revealed as having been written with the Princesss full co-operation, this world bestseller is now widely regarded as her official biography. Yet, it was not the full story, nor could it have been, given the circumstances at the time. This is even more apparent in the light of the events that have occurred since her death, which have been played out under the harsh gaze of the media, once again catapulting Dianas name back into the spotlight. Figures such as her sometime lover James Hewitt, her butler Paul Burrell and Prince Charless valet Michael Fawcett have emerged, while intriguing comments that Diana made to Morton in taped conversations, and which have never been published, become extremely important in view of subsequent events. Friends, advisers and colleagues, interviewed now, more than six years after her death, feel a far greater freedom in speaking of her than once they did. In what is bound to be seen as the definitive study of the Princess in the most crucial period of her short life, Diana: In Pursuit of Love provides the last word on one of the best-loved figures of our era.

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DIANA
In Pursuit of Love

BY THE SAME AUTHOR :

Diana: Her True Story

Diana: Her New Life

Diana: Her True Story In Her Own Words

Moi: The Making of an African Statesman

Monicas Story

Posh & Becks

Madonna

Nine For Nine: The Pennsylvania Mine Rescue Miracle

First published in Great Britain in 2004 by Michael OMara Books Limited 9 Lion - photo 1

First published in Great Britain in 2004 by
Michael OMara Books Limited
9 Lion Yard
Tremadoc Road
London SW4 7NQ

This electronic edition published in 2013

Copyright 2004 by Andrew Morton

Every reasonable effort has been made to acknowledge all copyright holders. Any errors or omissions that may have occurred are inadvertent, and anyone with any copyright queries is invited to write to the publishers, so that a full acknowledgement may be included in subsequent editions of this work.

All rights reserved. You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

The right of Andrew Morton to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN: 978-1-78243-105-3 in ePub format
ISBN: 978-1-78243-106-0 in Mobipocket format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-084-6 in hardback print format

Designed and typeset by Martin Bristow

Jacket photograph: PA Photos

Jacket design: www.glensaville.com

www.mombooks.com

For Mike

A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Picture 2

O VER THE YEARS I have come to know some of those in whom Diana, Princess of Wales confided, and it will be apparent in my narrative that I have had numerous off-the-record conversations with people close to major events in her life. I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude to them for their insights and advice.

In the eighteen months it has taken to research and write this book I have enjoyed numerous convivial conversations with many others whose lives were also touched in some way by the late Princess. My thanks go to: Dickie Arbiter, LVO ; Steven Bartlett; Carolan Brown; Dr James Colthurst; Paul Cooper; Mohamed Fayed; Debbie Frank; Philip Garvin, CEO Response International; Geordie Greig; Richard Greene; David Griffin; Robert Heindel; Soheir Khashoggi; Robert Lacey; Brian Lask; Ken Lennox; Keith Leverton; Thierry Meresse; Betty Palko; Vivienne Parry; Jean-Marie Pontaut; David Puttnam; Jenni Rivett; Ian Sparks; Raine, Countess Spencer; Chester Stern; Oonagh Shanley-Toffolo; Penny Thornton; Stephen Twigg; Matthias Wiessler; Ken Wharfe, and Hassan Yassin.

My thanks too to my researcher, Lily Williams, for her valiant efforts under continuous pressure. As ever I owe an immense debt to my editors Dominique Enright and Toby Buchan, as well as to the rest of the editorial team at Michael OMara Books for their fortitude, steadiness and support, in particular Helen Cumberbatch, Kate Gribble, Judith Palmer and Chris Maynard. My thanks too to Martin Bristow for designing the text, to Glen Saville for his jacket design, and to Andy Armitage for the index. Finally, from the walk along the beach to the trip down memory lane, Michael OMara has been, as he has always been, a great supporter and witness.

I NTRODUCTION

Picture 3

Love Factually

O NE S ATURDAY in March 2004 I was in my study adding the finishing touches to Chapter Eleven of this book when the front-door bell rang. It was a reporter from the tabloid Sunday People newspaper. She had been sent to get a quote from me about a story they were about to print. It concerned the contents of this book. They had learned, from the usual impeccable sources, that I was going to reveal in the book the identity of three of Dianas secret lovers. The actor Terence Stamp, a rich captain of industry and a British movie heart-throb, who was in his fifties, were on my list. I flatly denied the story and went back to work.

The next day I bought the Sunday People newspaper and discovered that the story occupied the front page and two inside pages with the headlines, Diana Sex Bombshell and Named: Dianas Three Secret Lovers (only one so-called lover was named). It went on to detail how the besotted Princess had launched an astonishing stalking campaign to woo the three secret lovers, lovelorn Diana bombarding the men with intimate letters. The authority for this story was my as yet unpublished explosive new book. The article went on to suggest how the wealthy but unnamed captain of industry had consummated his affair with the Princess at the home of a mutual friend. The newspapers source was quoted as saying, Some authors could be accused of picking names out of a hat but Morton has pored over thousands of documents and interviewed hundreds of very well-placed people. All very flattering.

By Monday the story, which went round the world, was given a further twist in the Daily Mail when they described the terrible anguish suffered by William and Harry over this new information. There seems to be no end to it, noted a concerned royal source. Then it was the turn of the columnists to weigh in with their five-cents worth. In the Daily Express Vanessa Feltz was delighted that the Princess had found tender, considerate romance with Terence Stamp, who, she was sure, would have treated her with the utmost delicacy. Not to be outdone, Dianas former butler Paul Burrell whose own book Dianas sons called a cold and overt betrayal joined the commentary. I think its disgusting, to be honest, was Burrells considered view of my unpublished book. What goes on between two people behind closed doors should be private. Ive always respected peoples private lives and I have never talked about Dianas love life. What he is doing is terrible.

To round off the coverage, the Sunday Times published a full-page profile of Stamp, who first made his name in the Swinging Sixties and has followed a distinguished career ever since, not only in the movies but as the author of a novel and an autobiography.

In consequence of all this media activity, within a matter of days, a large number of people, in Britain and beyond, had some sort of idea that Diana, obsessed and lovelorn, had pursued and had had affairs with Terence Stamp and several other unnamed men.

There was only one problem with the story. It was utterly untrue.

The bizarre episode reminded me of why I returned to the subject of Diana, Princess of Wales in the first place, some twelve years after my first biography, Diana: Her True Story, written with her consent and cooperation, was published in 1992. This latest work has its origins during a walk along St Petersburg beach in Florida with my publisher Michael OMara one morning in November 2002, when I was promoting a book called Nine For Nine about the rescue of a group of Pennsylvania miners who had been trapped below ground for three days.

At the time, the trial on charges of theft of Paul Burrell was taking place at the Old Bailey in London. During TV and radio interviews in America I would be asked about the miners but also about the significance of the evidence in the trial. As Mike and I discussed the trial and Diana during our morning stroll it seemed that the woman we had come to know during our collaboration with her during the early 1990s was rapidly disappearing from view, her personality diminishing with every passing year. Listening to the commentary on her life based on evidence from the trial, it was as though the jigsaw puzzle of her personality had been scattered so much had been forgotten but also exaggerated or distorted. The letters which Prince Philip sent to the Princess following the publication of my 1992 biography, for instance, were discussed during the trial and given a quite disproportionate significance. In any case, the letters had been comprehensively discussed a decade before by myself and others.

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