|
|
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |
|
JANUARY 22, 1996 SPECIAL REPORT: PRINCESS DIANA, 1961-1997 Choosing Sides With the Queen calling for divorce, Charles and Diana may soon be squaring off. For them, breaking up is more than a legal game; it's a brutal team sport. And you can't know the players without a scorecard
Diana's Team Anthony Julius
While Charles is using the 234-year-old blue-blood firm of
Farrer and Co. to handle his divorce, Diana has turned to
the left-leaning lawyers at Mishcon de Reya, who have
represented author Jeffrey Archer and who charge upwards
of $500 an hour. Heading up Di's team is Julius, 39, the
firm's scholarly head of litigation. Described by the Daily
Telegraph as "charming and flinty with a quiet manner," he
wonDiana's trust in 1993 after securing an injunction to
stop the Daily Mirror's publication of unauthorized photos of
her at the gym.
Therapist and author of Fat Is a Feminist Issue, Orbach,
49, treated Diana for bulimia in November 1994 and has
since become one of her most trusted confidantes. The
princess calls Orbach her savior and in recent weeks has
rushed to her North London home whenever trouble brewed.
It was there that she spent Boxing Day (after a lonely
Christmas without Wills and Harry, who celebrated with
their father), and there that she headed immediately after
her return from a holiday trip to Barbuda. It was also at
Orbach's thatDiana gave the most visible sign yet of the
strain she has been under. After an evening visit to the
therapist on Jan. 8, the princess burst into tears as she
passed photographers. "Clearly troubled by the decisions
she has to make over her divorce, she cried helplessly for a
full minute before getting in her car and driving off,"
reported the Daily Mirror. Added one photographer: "We
could all hear her sobbing."
"Nothing happens without his knowledge and approval," one
insider says of Jephson, 39, Diana's reported
$55,000-a-year private secretary. The princess has leaned
on Jephson, a former lieutenant commander in the Royal
Navy and the married father of an infant daughter, during
the darker moments of her separation. The day after
Charles appeared publicly for the first time with Camilla
Parker Bowles last fall, Jephson was the one Di chose to
lunch with.
Still grappling with royal marriage problems of her own,
Sarah Ferguson, 36, understands all too well what Diana is
going through. And though the two have had an on-and-off
friendship in recent years, Di's impending divorce has drawn
them closer than ever. The princess even consulted Fergie
before doing her now-infamous Panorama interview on the
BBC in November. At the duchess's Wentworth, Surrey,
home, "the two women, outlawed from the royal family,
laughed and giggled as they discussed Diana's plot to tell
all," said the Daily Mirror. Indeed, notes Di biographer Lady
Colin Campbell, "they use each other as sounding boards to
chat over their respective woes."
A property developer and former polo pal of Charles's, Peter Palumbo had a falling-out with the prince in 1984 after Charles publicly ridiculed a Palumbo-proposed skyscraper as "a great glass stump." Palumbo, 60, introduced the princess to her team of lawyers. Says one royal watcher: "Their friendship is based on their mutual dislike of Prince Charles."
Since his appointment as Charles's private secretary in
1991, Aylard, 43, has made it his mission to make the the
prince more accessible to themedia, encouraging Charles's
decision to participate in the controversial 1994 TV bio
during which he confessed to adultery. Such royal glasnost
raised eyebrows in some quarters, but Charles has
steadfastly defended Aylard. As the only senior member of
the prince's staff who has been through a divorce, Aylard
may repay that trust with valued perspective in the months
ahead. Says a friend: "They have a deep respect, affection
and friendship between them."
Friend, lover and longtime confidante, Camilla, 48, has been
there for Charles through good times and bad--even at the
cost of her own marriage. That kind of loyalty may have
fueled the prince's fury last month when staffers released a
statement implying he would not remarry. "Charles wants to
become King, but he also wants to marry Camilla," says a
royal insider. Whether public sentiment allows such a
wedding or not, Camilla likely always will be in Charles's
corner. Said an old friend: "She will do whatever the Prince
of Wales asks of her."
The well-known TV journalist chosen by Charles as his
official biographer, Dimbleby, 52, and the prince have
become close friends in recent months. The two share a
passion for organic farming and protecting rural England,
and Dimbleby's dismissive treatment of Diana in his book
The Prince of Wales: A Biography put him squarely in the
prince's camp. "I think [Charles] is a man of distinction,"
Dimbleby said this summer. "He does have a spiritual
dimension and a sense of public duty which far exceeds
that of most people."
The daughter of Charles's beloved great-uncle, Earl
Mountbatten of Burma (who was killed by an IRA bomb in
1979), PatriciaMountbatten, 71, is said to "absolutely
worship" her godson the prince. Throughout his separation,
she has acted as a liaison between the Queen and her
oldest son. Says one palace insider: "She is totally trusted
and loved by both the Queen and Prince Charles, but at the
same time is completely in Charles's camp."
Known as "Fatty" to his friends, Soames, 47, has been a chum of Charles's since boyhood and has been happy to disparage Diana (a friend of his ex-wife, Catherine) in the media. After the princess claimed on TV that her husband's friends had portrayed her as "unstable" and "sick," Soames--a grandson of Sir Winston Churchill and currently minister of state for the armed forces--appeared on newscasts to confirm the accusation, claiming that she seemed to be in "advanced stages of paranoia." Though Soames's remarks provoked a public outcry and a rebuke from Prime Minister John Major in the House of Commons, Charles took his friend's behavior in stride. Days later, the two were photographed walking together at Sandringham.
|
|
-PEOPLE | ||||||
|