The late British Royal, Princess Diana, lived a life in the public eye, with every move photographed and scrutinised. Hers was a life that had doses of love, loss, fairytale and tragedy.
But two decades after the tragic car crash that took her life, there are still compelling questions about how she lived and how she died.
CNN explores the majesty, misery and mystery of Diana’s life and shocking death in a new two-hour special, Diana: Chasing a Fairytale, according to a press release. Reported by CNN's award-winning senior international correspondent Clarissa Ward, the special report will air on August 27 at 9pm ET/PT on CNN and CNN International, and August 31 at 9pm ET on HLN.
From London to the French Riviera and Paris to the US, Ward explores little known moments on Diana’s lonely journey to the palace and reveals intimate details about the last days of the life of a woman whose vibrant legacy lives on.
Diana: Chasing a Fairytale features interviews with many of Diana’s closest friends and people around her that fateful night in Paris – some who have never spoken before – including Xavier Gourmelon, fireman and first responder to Diana’s car crash; Sir Scott Baker, coroner who led the British inquest into Diana and Dodi Al Fayed’s deaths; Patrick Jephson, Diana’s former personal secretary; Dr. James Colthurst, childhood friend of Diana’s; Paul Burrell, Diana’s former butler and close confidant; Roberto Devorik, fashion designer and close friend of Diana’s; Pierre Suu, photographer who was outside the Ritz hotel and took some of the last pictures of Diana and Dodi before they died; Ken Wharfe, Diana’s longtime bodyguard; Lord John Stevens, former Metropolitan Police Commissioner who led Scotland Yard’s three-year investigation into how Diana and Dodi died; and many more.
“The truth is that the Paris paparazzi didn’t kill Diana. Incompetent travel arrangements killed Diana. And the paparazzi only became an actual nuisance or a threat to Diana after she had chosen to get rid of her bodyguards,” said Jephson. “If Charles Spencer or anybody else wanted to see the cause of Diana’s unhappiness or ultimately the circumstances in which she died, they should look at the royal organisation which had taken responsibility for her at a very, very young age.”
Diana: Chasing a Fairytale will replay on CNN International on August 31 at 8am and 2pm ET, and on both CNN and CNN International on September 1 at 9pm ET.
It will also stream live for subscribers on August 27 via CNNgo (at CNN.com/go and via CNNgo apps for Apple TV, Roku, Amazon Fire, Samsung Smart TV and Android TV) and on the CNN mobile apps for iOS and Android. It will also be available the day after the premiere on demand via cable/satellite systems, CNNgo platforms and CNN mobile apps.