logo
Princess Diana's Reaction to Designer Gianni Versace's Murder Was Heartbreaking—and Chilling

Princess Diana's Reaction to Designer Gianni Versace's Murder Was Heartbreaking—and Chilling

Yahoo3 days ago
The former Princess of Wales had no idea at his July 22, 1997 funeral that she, too, would be mourned that same summer.The Gist
On July 22, 1997—28 years ago this week—Princess Diana flew to Milan, Italy to attend the funeral of designer Gianni Versace along with around 2,000 other mourners.
In a poignant and heartbreaking image, Diana can be seen comforting friend Elton John at Versace's funeral, no one knowing that within six weeks, he'd be performing 'Candle in the Wind' at her own funeral after she was killed in a car accident on August 31 at just 36 years old.
Diana wore a black Versace dress to the designer's funeral, held one week after he was tragically killed on the front steps of his Miami Beach home.It is a sobering image—a mourning Princess Diana comforting a weeping Elton John at the funeral of their mutual friend Gianni Versace on July 22, 1997, no one, of course, knowing that just six weeks later, Diana too would be dead following an August 31 car crash in Paris.
The former Princess of Wales naturally wore Versace to the designer's funeral in Milan, attended by not just Diana and John but Naomi Campbell, Karl Lagerfeld, and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, who herself would meet a tragic, untimely end in a plane crash just two years from the time of the funeral. Versace was murdered outside of his Miami Beach mansion on July 15, and in the immediate aftermath, 'Diana was in tears and looked very distressed,' her former bodyguard Lee Sansum wrote in his 2022 book Protecting Diana about her reaction when told of Versace's death. The Princess of Wales found out about her friend's assassination while aboard the Jonikal yacht while having breakfast, and after learning of his fate asked Sansum, 'Do you think they'll do that to me?'
It was a question 'that always stayed with me,' Sansum wrote, adding that Diana 'was shaking' at the news.
Diana had developed an affinity for Versace's designs towards the end of her life, and she and the designer would dine with John when they all found themselves in London. Diana was first introduced to Versace by Anna Harvey, an editor at British Vogue who was Diana's fashion mentor throughout her life as a royal. After seeing supermodel Campbell in a Versace creation, 'Over the next several years, Gianni gradually became one of her favorite designers, although she often made him remove the gaudy medusas and overwrought details he piled on his clothes,' Deborah Ball wrote in her book House of Versace. 'He gave her first pick of his couture collection and designed pieces exclusively for her that were classic but had a pinch of glamour.'
Diana was on the cover of the July 1997 issue of Vanity Fair, and inside the magazine's pages, Versace said of the Princess of Wales, 'I had a fitting with her last week for new suits and clothing for spring, and she is so serene. It is a moment in her life, I think, when she's found herself—the way she wants to live.' Neither Diana nor Versace would see spring 1998.
'Gianna loved his London connections,' Sakai Lubnow, co-curator of the Gianni Versace Retrospective at The Arches in London Bridge, told Vogue. 'And, I mean, there was no higher compliment in fashion than Princess Diana wearing your clothes.'
Lubnow said that Diana and Versace originally met in 1985 in Milan, 'But it wasn't until she was freed from royal protocol [after her separation from Prince Charles in 1992 and eventual divorce in 1996] that Gianni could begin shaping her image in earnest.'
Harvey, writing in an October 1997 commemorative British Vogue issue dedicated to Diana, said that the looks Versace designed for her were some of 'her most successful looks to date.'
To his funeral nearly 28 years ago to the day, Diana wore a black Versace fall 1997 shift dress, pearls, and the so-called Diana handbag Versace made, a lesser-known counterbalance to the Lady Dior, also named in her honor.
'It's interesting,' Lubnow said. 'That bag was never called the Diana bag by Gianni. The same with the so-called Bondage collection; Gianni called it Miss S&M. But these names come from collectors, fans, people who wear and love the pieces. That's where the connection sticks.'
Following Diana's appearance at the Milan Cathedral on July 22, she traveled to Bosnia, where she continued to bring attention to her fight against landmines—a cause her son Prince Harry has supported as recently as this week in Angola—in a private visit on August 10. By the end of the summer, Diana and Dodi Al Fayed were on a cruise of the Mediterranean on his yacht; they traveled from the South of France to Sardinia before heading to Paris on August 30. Just after midnight, the two—along with chauffeur Henri Paul—were killed after a crash in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel; Diana was just 36. Suddenly, Diana went from being the mourner at Versace's funeral to the mourned at her own September 6 funeral at Westminster Abbey—two lives cut far too short, forever united through fashion and the unbelievably tragic circumstances of their deaths 28 summers ago.
Read the original article on InStyle
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Princess Diana's Reaction to Designer Gianni Versace's Murder Was Heartbreaking—and Chilling
Princess Diana's Reaction to Designer Gianni Versace's Murder Was Heartbreaking—and Chilling

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Princess Diana's Reaction to Designer Gianni Versace's Murder Was Heartbreaking—and Chilling

The former Princess of Wales had no idea at his July 22, 1997 funeral that she, too, would be mourned that same Gist On July 22, 1997—28 years ago this week—Princess Diana flew to Milan, Italy to attend the funeral of designer Gianni Versace along with around 2,000 other mourners. In a poignant and heartbreaking image, Diana can be seen comforting friend Elton John at Versace's funeral, no one knowing that within six weeks, he'd be performing 'Candle in the Wind' at her own funeral after she was killed in a car accident on August 31 at just 36 years old. Diana wore a black Versace dress to the designer's funeral, held one week after he was tragically killed on the front steps of his Miami Beach is a sobering image—a mourning Princess Diana comforting a weeping Elton John at the funeral of their mutual friend Gianni Versace on July 22, 1997, no one, of course, knowing that just six weeks later, Diana too would be dead following an August 31 car crash in Paris. The former Princess of Wales naturally wore Versace to the designer's funeral in Milan, attended by not just Diana and John but Naomi Campbell, Karl Lagerfeld, and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, who herself would meet a tragic, untimely end in a plane crash just two years from the time of the funeral. Versace was murdered outside of his Miami Beach mansion on July 15, and in the immediate aftermath, 'Diana was in tears and looked very distressed,' her former bodyguard Lee Sansum wrote in his 2022 book Protecting Diana about her reaction when told of Versace's death. The Princess of Wales found out about her friend's assassination while aboard the Jonikal yacht while having breakfast, and after learning of his fate asked Sansum, 'Do you think they'll do that to me?' It was a question 'that always stayed with me,' Sansum wrote, adding that Diana 'was shaking' at the news. Diana had developed an affinity for Versace's designs towards the end of her life, and she and the designer would dine with John when they all found themselves in London. Diana was first introduced to Versace by Anna Harvey, an editor at British Vogue who was Diana's fashion mentor throughout her life as a royal. After seeing supermodel Campbell in a Versace creation, 'Over the next several years, Gianni gradually became one of her favorite designers, although she often made him remove the gaudy medusas and overwrought details he piled on his clothes,' Deborah Ball wrote in her book House of Versace. 'He gave her first pick of his couture collection and designed pieces exclusively for her that were classic but had a pinch of glamour.' Diana was on the cover of the July 1997 issue of Vanity Fair, and inside the magazine's pages, Versace said of the Princess of Wales, 'I had a fitting with her last week for new suits and clothing for spring, and she is so serene. It is a moment in her life, I think, when she's found herself—the way she wants to live.' Neither Diana nor Versace would see spring 1998. 'Gianna loved his London connections,' Sakai Lubnow, co-curator of the Gianni Versace Retrospective at The Arches in London Bridge, told Vogue. 'And, I mean, there was no higher compliment in fashion than Princess Diana wearing your clothes.' Lubnow said that Diana and Versace originally met in 1985 in Milan, 'But it wasn't until she was freed from royal protocol [after her separation from Prince Charles in 1992 and eventual divorce in 1996] that Gianni could begin shaping her image in earnest.' Harvey, writing in an October 1997 commemorative British Vogue issue dedicated to Diana, said that the looks Versace designed for her were some of 'her most successful looks to date.' To his funeral nearly 28 years ago to the day, Diana wore a black Versace fall 1997 shift dress, pearls, and the so-called Diana handbag Versace made, a lesser-known counterbalance to the Lady Dior, also named in her honor. 'It's interesting,' Lubnow said. 'That bag was never called the Diana bag by Gianni. The same with the so-called Bondage collection; Gianni called it Miss S&M. But these names come from collectors, fans, people who wear and love the pieces. That's where the connection sticks.' Following Diana's appearance at the Milan Cathedral on July 22, she traveled to Bosnia, where she continued to bring attention to her fight against landmines—a cause her son Prince Harry has supported as recently as this week in Angola—in a private visit on August 10. By the end of the summer, Diana and Dodi Al Fayed were on a cruise of the Mediterranean on his yacht; they traveled from the South of France to Sardinia before heading to Paris on August 30. Just after midnight, the two—along with chauffeur Henri Paul—were killed after a crash in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel; Diana was just 36. Suddenly, Diana went from being the mourner at Versace's funeral to the mourned at her own September 6 funeral at Westminster Abbey—two lives cut far too short, forever united through fashion and the unbelievably tragic circumstances of their deaths 28 summers ago. Read the original article on InStyle

Indiana Jones whip snaps up $525,000 at auction after ‘Citizen Kane' sled goes for $14.75 million
Indiana Jones whip snaps up $525,000 at auction after ‘Citizen Kane' sled goes for $14.75 million

New York Post

time3 days ago

  • New York Post

Indiana Jones whip snaps up $525,000 at auction after ‘Citizen Kane' sled goes for $14.75 million

A whip wielded by Harrison Ford in 'Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade' that once belonged to Princess Diana has sold at auction for $525,000. Thursday's sale came a day after the Rosebud sled from 'Citizen Kane' went for a staggering $14.75 million, making it one of the priciest props in movie history. They were part of the Summer Entertainment Auction being held all week by Heritage Auctions. 4 A whip used by Harrison Ford in 'Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade' sold at auction for $525,000. Heritage Auctions / SWNS Heritage says the overall take has made it the second-highest grossing entertainment auction of all time, and there's still a day to go. Yet to be up for bids are Macaulay Culkin's knit snow cap from 'Home Alone,' a Kurt Russell revolver from 'Wyatt Earp,' a pair of 'Hattori Hanzo' prop swords from 'Kill Bill Vol. 1″ and a first edition set of Harry Potter novels signed by J.K. Rowling. The whip sold Thursday was used during the Holy Grail trials that Ford's character goes through at the climax of 1989's 'Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.' Ford gave it to then-Prince Charles at the film's U.K. premiere. It was given as a gift to Princess Diana, who gave it to the current owner, who was not identified. The buyer also was not identified. 4 The whip in the movie once belonged to Princess Diana. Alamy Stock Photo 'The bullwhip is the iconic symbol of an iconic character of cinema history, Indiana Jones, and has been a highlight of this auction,' Joe Maddalena, Heritage's executive vice president, said in a statement to The Associated Press. The $525,000 price includes the 'buyers premium' attached to all auction items for the house that sells it. Heritage said the nearly $15 million bid for the Rosebud sled puts it second only to the $32.5 million that Judy Garland's ruby slippers from 'The Wizard of Oz' fetched in December. Neither of those buyers were identified either. The sled was sold by longtime owner Joe Dante, director of films including 'Gremlins.' 'Rosebud' is the last word spoken by the title character in director Orson Welles' 1941 film 'Citizen Kane,' and the hunt for its meaning provides the film's plot. Many critics have regarded it as the best film ever made. Long thought lost, the sled is one of three of the prop known to have survived. 4 The Rosebud sled from 'Citizen Kane' sold for $14.75 million. AP 4 Many critics claimed 'Citizen Kane' was the best film ever made. Everett Collection / Everett Collection Dante stumbled on it when he was filming on the former RKO Pictures lot in 1984. He wasn't a collector, but knew the value of the sled and quietly preserved it for decades, putting it as an Easter egg into four of his own films. Dante's friend and mentor Steven Spielberg paid $60,500 for another of the sleds in 1982, and anonymous buyer paid $233,000 for the third in 1996.

Indiana Jones whip snaps up $525,000 at auction after 'Citizen Kane' sled goes for $14.75 million

time3 days ago

Indiana Jones whip snaps up $525,000 at auction after 'Citizen Kane' sled goes for $14.75 million

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- A whip wielded by Harrison Ford in 'Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade' that once belonged to Princess Diana has sold at auction for $525,000. Thursday's sale came a day after the Rosebud sled from 'Citizen Kane' went for a staggering $14.75 million, making it one of the priciest props in movie history. They were part of the Summer Entertainment Auction being held all week by Heritage Auctions. Heritage says the overall take has made it the second-highest grossing entertainment auction of all time, and there's still a day to go. Yet to be up for bids are Macaulay Culkin's knit snow cap from 'Home Alone,' a Kurt Russell revolver from 'Wyatt Earp,' a pair of 'Hattori Hanzo' prop swords from 'Kill Bill Vol. 1" and a first edition set of Harry Potter novels signed by J.K. Rowling. The whip sold Thursday was used during the Holy Grail trials that Ford's character goes through at the climax of 1989's 'Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.' Ford gave it to then-Prince Charles at the film's U.K. premiere. It was given as a gift to Princess Diana, who gave it to the current owner, who was not identified. The buyer also was not identified. 'The bullwhip is the iconic symbol of an iconic character of cinema history, Indiana Jones, and has been a highlight of this auction," Joe Maddalena, Heritage's executive vice president, said in a statement to The Associated Press. The $525,000 price includes the 'buyers premium' attached to all auction items for the house that sells it. Heritage said the nearly $15 million bid for the Rosebud sled puts it second only to the $32.5 million that Judy Garland's ruby slippers from 'The Wizard of Oz' fetched in December. Neither of those buyers were identified either. The sled was sold by longtime owner Joe Dante, director of films including 'Gremlins.' 'Rosebud' is the last word spoken by the title character in director Orson Welles' 1941 film 'Citizen Kane,' and the hunt for its meaning provides the film's plot. Many critics have regarded it as the best film ever made. Long thought lost, the sled is one of three of the prop known to have survived. Dante stumbled on it when he was filming on the former RKO Pictures lot in 1984. He wasn't a collector, but knew the value of the sled and quietly preserved it for decades, putting it as an Easter egg into four of his own films. Dante's friend and mentor Steven Spielberg paid $60,500 for another of the sleds in 1982, and anonymous buyer paid $233,000 for the third in 1996.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store