Film Synopsis
The death of Diana, Princess of Wales, on 31st August 1997 was an event that
stunned the world. It seemed inconceivable that the life of this sparkling
36-year-old could be snuffed out so suddenly, so dramatically, in something
as banal as a car accident. In the days that followed, there came a
national outpouring of grief, the like of which Great Britain had scarcely
known before. Tony Blair, the Labour Prime Minister who won a landslide
victory in the previous general election, caught the mood of the nation when
he dubbed Diana the 'People's Princess'. Amidst all these public
protestations of grief, the British royal family remain conspicuous by their
absence. For the Queen and her son Prince Charles, the heir to the
throne, Diana was an embarrassment, a loose cannon that threatened the continuation
of the monarchy.
A stickler for etiquette and decorum, the Queen cannot bring herself to give
in to the wave hysteria that is sweeping the country, so she keeps her silence.
In doing so, she risks alienating herself and her family further from her
subjects, many of whom come to regard her reticence as outright contempt.
Fearing for the future of the monarchy, Blair and his aides enter into a
private dialogue with the royal family in which advice is given for the Queen
to make a public acknowledgment of Diana's death. The Queen takes heed
of the Prime Minister's advice by offering a special tribute to the princess
in a live television broadcast. When they subsequently meet, it is
Blair who receives some words of warning from his sovereign. The Prime
Minister is riding high in the opinion polls now, but he should be prepared
for the day when his popularity goes into freefall. The Queen's advice
falls on deaf ears...
© James Travers
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