A new documentary based on Princess Diana’s audio recordings is being made 26 years after her death.
On Friday, it was announced that “Diana: The Rest of Her Story,” will feature never-before-heard tapes of the late Princess of Wales detailing her mental health struggles, her troubled marriage and her rocky relationship with her stepmother, Raine Spencer. The film is a follow-up to 2017’s “Diana: In Her Own Words.”
In a clip released by “Good Morning America,” Diana is heard reflecting on how the birth of her son Prince Harry impacted her then-husband, Prince Charles — now King Charles III.
Christopher Andersen, author of “The King” and “The Day Diana Died,” told Fox News Digital the tapes “are a haunting reminder” of Diana’s private anguish and her urgency to have her voice heard.
“Despite her global fame — she could arguably be called the most famous and celebrated woman of her time — Diana was in tremendous emotional pain,” Andersen explained. “She was up against a thousand-year-old institution that was determined to thwart her every move, and the distress she felt can really be heard in her voice. And what a beautiful, elegant, hypnotic voice it is.
“I think it’s important that, when we look at Charles and [his wife] Camilla on the throne, we are reminded of the twists and turns history took to put them there,” said Andersen. “If it weren’t for Diana and the life she lived, we would not be half as interested in the royal family.”
Andersen said that he’s “heard many hours” of these tapes over the years, and whenever new portions are released to the public, they offer “stunning revelations.”
The tapes were recorded for Andrew Morton, who wrote the 1992 bombshell book, “Diana: Her True Story.” The British journalist used mutual friend James Colthurst as a go-between to obtain the tapes for his book with Diana’s consent. Morton was depicted in Netflix’s “The Crown.”
In another snippet, Diana is heard saying that Charles was “disappointed” when he found out that Harry was not a girl.
“My husband won’t even talk to mummy, barely,” said Diana. “Because of Harry’s christening, Charles went up to mummy and said, ‘You know, we were so disappointed. We thought it would be a girl.’”
“And mummy snapped his head off,” Diana continued. “And she said, ‘You should realize how lucky you are to have a child that’s normal.’ Ever since that day, the shutters have come down. That’s what he does when he gets somebody answering back at him.”
Andersen said that during Diana’s second pregnancy, tensions had eased between the couple, likely because Charles thought he was getting a daughter. The two were already parents to Prince William, now the heir to the throne.
“Their marriage was famously stormy from the start,” Andersen explained. “Diana acknowledged that it was a wonder that she became pregnant at all given her marital battles with Charles. ‘Harry appeared as if by a miracle,’ Diana later said. She admitted that she even began to convince herself that Charles did in fact love her. ‘We were blissfully happy,’ she said of that brief time in the royal marriage. ‘Charles was overjoyed about the new baby, very tender and caring. I didn’t want it to end.’
“The reason for Charles’ new attitude was simple — he wanted a girl to round out the family,” Andersen shared. “He was so convinced Diana was pregnant with a girl that he refused to look at any sonograms. Diana did look, however. ‘I knew it was a boy,’ she later said. ‘And I didn’t tell him.’ Diana would recall that time in their marriage, ‘We were very, very close to each other the six weeks before Harry was born. The closest we’ve ever, ever been and ever will be.’”
According to Andersen, the would-be king’s reaction to Harry’s birth was “devastating” for Diana.
“Oh, God,’ Charles blurted out disdainfully, much to the astonishment of doctors and nurses in the room,” said Andersen. “’It’s a boy. And he even has red hair!’ At that moment, said Diana, ‘It just went bang, our marriage. The whole thing went down the drain. Something inside me closed off.’”
Diana had plenty of reasons to be shaken by her husband’s shocking reaction.
“Diana hated the whole gender preference thing,” Andersen explained. “After having two daughters, Diana’s parents were so convinced she would be a boy that they didn’t even bother picking out a girl’s name in advance. It was a full week before they named her Diana Frances.”
The couple’s divorce was finalized in 1996. Diana died in 1997 from injuries she sustained in a Paris car crash. She was 36.
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