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Spencer: How Diana became the popular culture princess

The Conversation
Diana, Princess of Wales, wears an outfit in the colors of Canada during a state visit to Edmonton, Alberta, with her husband.
The new movie Spencer has reignited public fascination with Diana (Picture: Bettmann Archive)

Despite being dead since 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales, is once again the focus of much attention.

This time it’s not due to the anniversary of her death or the apparent breakdown in her sons’ relationship. Instead, the much-anticipated film, Spencer starring Kristen Stewart is being released.

Focusing on December 1991 at the Queen’s Sandringham Estate, Spencer is an imagining of Diana’s decision to end her marriage to Prince Charles and leave the royal family.

Following its world premiere, Stewart’s performance as Diana has already been heralded as Oscar-worthy. The reception of the film even achieved a three-minute standing ovation.

In her lifetime, Diana lived out many roles in the public eye. She became a princess after a fairytale-like wedding, a mother, a victim of bulimia, a target of the tabloid press, a fashion icon, a captivator of public hearts and ultimately a divorcee who died at the age of 36 under tragic circumstances.

Diana has also been venerated as an internationally recognised symbol for love, compassion and charity and an advocate for the disadvantaged and stigmatised. Diana understood the power of holding a role in the public eye and used this to change attitudes and address societal issues.

As a high-profile public figure, Diana displayed a rare vulnerability and humanity that differed from the royal family she had married into. Subsequently, she achieved a beloved status that has extended beyond death.

Indeed, Diana is no longer limited to photographs and interviews in her lifetime. She is resurrected in Netflix’s The Crown and now in her own feature film, Spencer.

Diana is experiencing a successful posthumous career — with her image and life labouring after her death — without her consent. And in this way, Diana is being introduced as a consumable popular culture hero to the generation born after her demise.

BGUK_2199115 - Los Angeles, CA - Kristen Stewart breaks down in tears as Princess Diana in first Spencer movie trailer. The Twilight actress channels Princess Diana with aplomb in the first trailer for Spencer, an upcoming biographical drama about the beloved royal. The movie, directed by Jackie filmmaker Pablo Larrain, is set in 1991 and takes place over the Christmas holiday as Diana - born Diana Frances Spencer - grapples with the decision to end her marriage to Prince Charles. English actor Jack Farthing is starring alongside Stewart as the heir apparent to the British throne. First-look photos of Stewart as Diana have set the internet ablaze but film fans had been eagerly waiting to hear the American actor???s take on Diana???s British accent. Yet it appears the companies behind Spencer, Neon and Topic Studios, want to keep people guessing since Stewart only utters two words in the minute-long trailer. ???They know everything,??? Sally Hawkins, who plays an undisclosed role that appears to be a confidant to the Princess of Wales, tells Diana. She simply responds: ???They don???t.??? Despite the minimal dialogue, the teaser offers a captivating glimpse into the extravagant life at the Queen???s Sandringham Estate, one that includes lavish meals and stunning attire. In the footage, Stewart, dressed to the nines at all times, becomes increasingly emotional as she grapples with rumors of affairs and evades ruthless paparazzi. Spencer isn???t entirely true-to-fact, but rather serves as an imagining of what might have happened during that fateful holiday period. The cast also includes Olga Hellsing as Sarah, Duchess of York; Amy Manson as Anne Boleyn and Niklas Kohrt as Prince Andrew. Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight wrote the screenplay for Spencer, which is scheduled to release in theaters on November 5, 2021. *BACKGRID DOES NOT CLAIM ANY COPYRIGHT OR LICENSE IN THE ATTACHED MATERIAL. ANY DOWNLOADING FEES CHARGED BY BACKGRID ARE FOR BACKGRID'S SERVICES ONLY, AND DO NOT, NOR ARE THEY INTENDED TO, CONVEY TO THE USER ANY COPYRIGHT OR LICENSE IN THE MATERIAL. BY PUBLISHING THIS MATERIAL , THE USER EXPRESSLY AGREES TO INDEMNIFY AND TO HOLD BACKGRID HARMLESS FROM ANY CLAIMS, DEMANDS, OR CAUSES OF ACTION ARISING OUT OF OR CONNECTED IN ANY WAY WITH USER'S PUBLICATION OF THE MATERIAL* Pictured: Kristen Stewart BACKGRID UK 26 AUGUST 2021 BYLINE MUST READ: Neon / BACKGRID UK: +44 208 344 2007 / uksales@backgrid.com USA: +1 310 798 9111 / usasales@backgrid.com *UK Clients - Pictures Containing Children Please Pixelate Face Prior To Publication*
Kristen Stewart plays Diana in Spencer (Picture: Neon / BACKGRID)

International gossiping

Diana was the focus of much gossip in her lifetime. Even after her death, the tabloid gossip and fascination with the princess did not really wain. This fascination has again been reignited on a mass global scale at the prospect of the release of Spencer.

Research shows that gossip or frivolous talk can help to create and maintain social bonds as it allows us to form groups. It can also allow people to develop new ways of thinking about themselves and others.

File photo dated 20/11/1995 of Diana, Princess of Wales during her Panorama interview with Martin Bashir for the BBC. Twenty four years have passed since Diana, Princess of Wales died in a Paris car crash. The princess - the Duke of Cambridge and the Duke of Sussex's late mother - was just 36 was she was killed on August 31 1997. Issue date: Tuesday August 31, 2021. PA Photo. See PA story ROYAL Diana. Photo credit should read: BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Diana was the subject of gossip during and after her lifetime (Picture: PA)

However, objects of gossip, such as Diana, do not experience a strengthening of bonds with others. Instead, they become alienated or a target and victimised by talk conducted about them. In this way, popular culture portrayals of Diana allow for a new wave of gossip to be unleashed as the public watch, consume and contemplate.

Through gossip on a mass international level, Diana becomes evermore objectified and abstract. She is an ‘other’, a symbol to be used and talked about. Her personal life is aired for all to see. And now her private thoughts and feelings have received the Hollywood touch — she is fictionalised and speculated about as a reimagined consumable movie character.

Fixated on a symbol

Princess Diana as a popular culture hero and source of gossip has value in shedding light on societal appetites in the 21st century.

She reveals how much has changed and also how little has changed in how social bonds are formed through gossip. Talking about the rich and famous still binds people together, but it has now expanded into the international realm of social media.

Diana is forever frozen in time as a beautiful divorcee and mother of a future king. She manages to attract public interest and is a springboard for debates about societal challenges. Whether the challenge is press freedom, the role of the royal family, or public grieving. Diana is a catalyst for public debate.

Diana reveals that society is still fixated on symbols that can be at once venerated and vulnerable. She highlights societal divisions while also bringing about unity and togetherness. And Diana’s reinvention in Spencer cultivates a space for the international community to gossip once again about the ‘people’s princess’ whose fairy tale turned sour.

By Ruth Penfold-Mounce, senior lecturer in criminology, University of York

Click here to read the original article on The Conversation

MORE : Kristen Stewart insists her Princess Diana film Spencer comes from ‘considerate place’

MORE : The Crown ‘to show Martin Bashir’s interview with Princess Diana’ despite Prince William saying it should ‘never be aired again’

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