Princess Diana almost burned down Kensington Palace years ago. But the late royal was able to make light of the serious situation.
During his interview on “The Morning Show,” former royal chef Darren McGrady said that the Princess of Wales was not a very good cook. On one occasion, she invited one of her friends over, and she cooked for her pal.
Princess Diana boiled pasta and tomato sauce while chatting with her friend. Without realizing it, the pasta boiled over, and the smoke activated the pilot light. When Princess Diana realized what had happened, she immediately called the palace fire brigade.
Days later, she told McGrady that she almost burned the Palace down but she was able to cross paths with 12 hunky firemen because of the incident. McGrady was taken aback by Princess Diana’s statements at that time.
Meanwhile, this wasn’t the only scary incident that involved Princess Diana while she was still living in the Palace. While the late royal was pregnant with Prince William, she threw herself down the stairs to get Prince Charles’ attention.
In the book “Diana: Her True Story,” royal author Andrew Morton detailed the incident. Decades ago, Princess Diana couldn’t get her husband to listen to her, and she was feeling desperate.
Unfortunately for the mom of two, Prince Charles still didn’t pay attention to her after she threw herself down the stairs. It was Queen Elizabeth who saw her, and she was horrified.
In the book “Diana, A Princess And Her Troubled Marriage,” royal author Nicholas Davies claimed that Prince William and Prince Harry’s mom overdosed on pills. But at that time, a spokesperson for Buckingham Palace indirectly denied the allegations.
“We are not prepared to say how he is reacting or how she is reacting,” the spokesperson said. “It is not for us to keep a circulation war going with comments one way or another, because that is what it is all about,” the spokesperson added.
But Morton also said in his book that Princess Diana’s alleged suicide attempts were not really meant for her to take her own life. Rather, they were cries for help.
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