• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Prince William says Diana bothered by fat comment

NEW YORK
Mon Jun 18, 2007 8:52am EDT
Diana, Princess of Wales gets in her car and leaves Christie's auction house in New York, in this file photo from June 23 1997. Of all the media scrutiny given to Princess Diana, perhaps the most outrageous was tabloid commentary that she was too fat, her son Prince William said in a television interview aired on Monday. REUTERS/File

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Of all the media scrutiny given to Britain's Princess Diana, perhaps the most outrageous was tabloid commentary that she was too fat, her son Prince William said in a television interview aired on Monday.

Entertainment  |  People

"Someone said she had cellulite or something like that. As a woman in the public eye, she tried so hard and was so glamorous, always in the gym," William told NBC's Matt Lauer.

"For any woman, I imagine, it's just outrageous that these people sit behind their desks and comment on it. There were many times we just sort of had to cheer her up and tell her she was the best thing ever," William said.

The interview with William, 24, and his brother, Prince Harry, 22, was conducted last month in London.

Portions of the interview were aired on NBC's "Today" show on Monday morning and will be shown again on "Dateline NBC" on Monday night. Partial transcripts were released previously.

Princess Diana died on August 31, 1997, after a high-speed car crash in a Paris tunnel along with her boyfriend, Dodi Al-Fayed, and their driver.

The princes are planning a concert in London's Wembley Stadium in their mother's honor on July 1, which would have been her 46th birthday. The concert will include performances by artists expected to include Elton John, Duran Duran, Rod Stewart and Tom Jones.

Previously released transcripts showed both princes said in the interview that in the decade since their mother's death, time had passed very slowly.

William said that not a day goes by that he doesn't think about her and her death, and Harry said he still wonders about what happened the night of the crash.



More from Reuters

 Demonstrator holds a signboard with a slogan "Bla bla bla ACT NOW" during a rally outside the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen December 12, 2009. REUTERS/Christian Charisius

"Polluters are given rights to continue their dirty habits"

A climate change scientist blasts proposals for a cap and trade system, arguing it allows dirty industries to continue polluting, instead of rewarding innovation.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is pictured at his Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on his nomination to continue as Chairman of the Board of Governors, on Capitol Hill in Washington, December 3, 2009. REUTERS/Jason Reed

    No great expectations

    Investors are getting antsy about when the Fed will tighten its purse strings, now that the economy appears to be coming back to life.   Full Article 

    Indian woman mourns death of her relative killed in tsunami in Cuddalore. When an earthquake of magnitude 9.15 struck off Indonesia's Aceh province on December, 26, 2004, it triggered a huge tsuanmi that raced across the Indian Ocean and hit Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India. The worst natural disaster of the decade left 230,000 people dead or missing. Taken on December 28, 2004 by Arko Datta

    Pictures that defined a decade

    A woman's grief amid the tsunami devastation and one woman's fight against police in the Amazon are among the indelible Reuters images of the last 10 years.  Slideshow