Memories of a Princess

Diana, Princess of Wales

In this tribute, we ask well-known personalities to share their memories on hearing the news of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales.

Diana remembered — check out our gallery of the People's Princess.

Where were you when the People's Princess passed away? Share your memories with us below.

Deborah Thomas

Like the assassination of US President John F Kennedy, the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, was so sudden and shocking that most people remember exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news on August 31, 1997. I was in bed watching the Sunday Program when they stopped, mid-report, to announce that she'd been in an accident. Initial reports received by The Weekly indicated that the princess had been involved in a minor traffic accident and that she had a broken leg but was expected to be alright. This rapidly changed to become a catastrophic event: the death of Diana along with her boyfriend, Dodi Al Fayad, in Paris's Pont D'Alma tunnel.

Reactions of readers ranged from disbelief and dismay to an outpouring of grief. Within a day, some were seeking revenge on the media, which was cast as the villain of the piece — particularly, since it was widely perceived that the paparazzi and tabloid newspapers' pursuit of Diana had in some way caused her death. At the time her car crashed into a pillar in the tunnel, Diana was being pursued by paparazzi riding motorcycles. It was later found that her driver, Henri Paul of the Paris Ritz Hotel, had a criminal level of alcohol in his system at the time of the crash. He was also killed. Only Diana's bodyguard — the only one in the car wearing a seatbelt — survived.

Lisa Wilkinson

"It was a Sunday and I was a fortnight away from giving birth to my little girl. The whole family had gone for a late-morning walk down at the beach and when we got back in the car, it was just in time to catch some breaking news on the radio that Princess Diana had been in a car accident in Paris with her new boyfriend. There was no indication that it was serious and so when we got back home I decided to have a sleep. But just after 3pm, my husband Pete woke me up and I can still hear him saying the words: "Diana has died." I thought I must be dreaming. It couldn't have been real — not Diana. She was such a presence in our lives on a daily basis. It was almost impossible to imagine a world without her. But when we switched on the TV and saw that mangled Mercedes in that Paris tunnel, I remember thinking that we had come to the end of an era. I was glued to the TV for the next six days, watching that growing field of flowers mount outside Kensington Palace, hearing Londoners pour out their sadness, that breathtaking eulogy delivered by her brother Charles and then that most heartbreaking of all sights, Wills and Harry walking behind the gun carriage bearing their mother's body, atop it the envelope saying "Mummy" tucked into that small bouquet of white roses. It was two weeks in September and a moment in history I'll never forget."

Liz Hayes

"I was in Sydney and I remember I was driving when I heard the news. I think I was quite stunned because the last news I'd heard had suggested she was seriously injured but okay. And I do remember thinking, how the hell do you run a big black Mercedes into a pole in a tunnel like that? Well, if you're a drunk driver and speeding, it's rather easy it seems."

Richard Wilkins

"I was in Melbourne that day and Eddie McGuire and I were hosting the opening of Planet Hollywood at Crown Casino. It was a very bizarre experience, because here we were putting on a show for the paparazzi and at that time it seemed that they had had a hand in her death. We ended up holding a much scaled-down version of what we had originally planned. I remember every time I heard a news commentator say that she had died, it was like a kick in the guts."

Kerri-Anne Kennerley

"I was in New Zealand in a hotel room preparing to fly back home with CNN when it was broadcast that Diana had been in an accident. I immediately ran to hear more and every few minutes the news kept getting a little more clear as to how serious the accident was. Flight attendants were talking about it in the air and when I arrived in Sydney and at the duty-free counter, the cashier was in tears as she told me Diana was dead. A moment of impact and vivid memory. I thought what a terrible loss when a single person who had such international power to help so many causes and people with her very presence or a speech or endorsement is gone."

Karl Stefanovic

"I was in New Zealand and I was watching the story unfold on CNN. I was gutted when the tagline on the story went from Diana injured to Diana dead."

Mia Freedman

"I was watching TV and heard the news about the crash and was glued to the couch all morning. When it became clear that Diana had died, it was just shock. It somehow felt strange that life went on when something so monumental had happened. Watching the funeral was worse. My best friend came over and we watched it together and I remember trying not to cry too hard because I was pregnant and I worried it would disturb the baby ... I recall the men all sort of cleared off somewhere and left the women to watch and cry."

Maggie Tabberer

"I turned on the television to catch the early news. It was the briefest of items but said Diana had been in a road accident. I called my best friend Barb in Sydney and then I imagine like the rest of the world sat glued to the television waiting as the awful reality became clear. I remember thinking, "Oh those poor boys, the princes." And then poor sad Diana, she had so much but really so little and in her search for that missing happiness had put herself in this situation. For such a beautiful woman to die in such a horrendous way. Well it was not how Diana should have left this life! I went and sat on the veranda and shed some tears."

Catriona Rowntree

"I remember waking up in my hotel room in Vienna, flipping on the morning news, as you do, and hearing that Princess Diana had been in a car accident and may have broken her arm. Compelled, I watched the reports unfold, surely nothing could harm our Princess. Over the next hour I was dumbstruck, like the rest of the of the world, over how the story ended. Through streaming tears the anchor, almost in disbelief at her own words, reported that indeed the Princess had passed away on the operating table. Shock, pain, utter sadness, concern for her boys and a strange yearning that this was all untrue, I think we all felt those emotions, didn't we, the world over. I admired her then, I miss her very much now."

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User comments
I was on a weekend away with some girlfriends, and we had gone out for a walk. Upon our return we switched on the tv about mid afternoon and much to our disbelief the news of the princess' death was across our screen. I felt I was in a bad dream and this could not be happening. We were so numb. She had such an enormous impact on the lives of millions. We just couldn't imagine what it would be like without her. Such a tragedy to leave this lifetime in this way.
My husband and I had been up to Brisbane and were on the highway heading home when the news came on the radio that Diana had been killed in a car accident. I was due to fly out to England the next day with a friend to stay with my Aunty in Gloucestershire. We arrived in England and I can remember thats what everyone was talking about, we watched the funeral on the saturday at my Aunty and Uncles home and left on the wednesday to go up to London to stay with my cousin. We visited Kensington Palace to see all the tributes left for Diana, I have never seen so many flowers in one place before , there was flowers, teddybears , handwriten notes , stuffed toys covering a huge area. The people walking around there were all friendly with the overall mood being one of sadness. We later visited Harrods to find that the shop front and pavement was covered in tributes to Diana and Dodie. William and Harry, England and the world lost a genuine loving person when Diana was taken from them.
We were all at Sunday Mass in South Africa and the reader said,"let us pray for the recently departed, the late Princess of Wales..." and the whole church were looking around at each other like we were all mad and had heard wrong. We still didnt believe it until we turned on the TV. My mother came over and we all spent the day in front of TV crying and mourning, this crying and mourning continued for weeks after. I wronte a poem for her and sent it to her (and our) beloved boys, she will always be remembered and even our great grandchildren will know of her. She was one of the worlds best hero's and ambassador's. She was an angel on earth. I felt it so personally when she died as I loved her so much, I then realised that I was not alone and that millions of people loved her as much as I did. Her memory will live on forever and may her soul rest in peace, the peace she ought to have had on earth. I am shocked that the paparazzi are not banned after causing her innocent death
It was a Sunday and we were preparing lunch when my husband tuned the radio on, they said that Dians was in a car accident , but in a critical condition. When our daughter came home we turned on the TV, to find that she had died.I remember them playing God save the Queen. Our daughter was around 16 at the time, she was deperatley affected as she got to meet Diana whilst in Alice Spring and presented her with a picture which was chosen from her pre school as the best. That was in1992 I think.. I remember watching the funeral ans spent the whole time in tears.
I will always remember Princess Diana.
We were in England as we used to live there and I received a phone call from my mother at 5am that night saying put the TV on Diana is dead, they are all dead, we were in total shock , we never moved from the TV all day, pinching ourselves that this was a dream and there was no way it could be true. Outside it was eerie, spooky nobody played in the street, no cars were on the roads it was as if the world had stopped. Many tears were shed for our beautiful Princess Diana, I have been a fan of hers since she first met Prince Charles, we went to the funeral 7 days later and slept on the streets of the Mall in London, we felt we had to be there, you could hear a pin drop as the corsage went past us we wouldn't have missed it for the world. Two weeks later we visited Althrop Northamptonshire where she is buried on the family estate to pay our final respects it was so sad no words can ever express the loss the world has taken, we miss her so much. God Bless you Diana in our hearts forever..
I was staying with friends in rural South Australia that weekend and I remember staring in disbelief when I tuned into the evening news to hear Diana had died. It took a long time to sink in. I felt I had grown up with her as she was only a few years older than me.
i was on my way to church listening to the car radio, when i got home i rang my sister in england, she had to get out of bed as it was early in the a.m. in england .she was so stunned she did not at first believe me. what a waste of a beautiful and compassionate women. we will always miss her. kaye daniels
I heard the news on the radio and immediately raced into the lounge room to turn on the TV. I had spent time earlier in the month watching the Thredbo disaster unfold, and so knew there would be something on the breaking news about Diana. I felt such relief when they said she was injured but OK, and expected to hear continuing updates about her recovery. Unfortunately that never happened and when they said she had died I burst into tears. I can remember a friend of mine saying she cried when John Lennon was killed and I thought, she didn't even know him, how could she be so upset. I found out how when Diana died! She had such a huge influence on people around the world and to lose her like we did was just so tragic.
I was at home with a massive tooth ache and my eldest daughter was home

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