Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Lady Diana in Paris


Why the Flame of Liberty became a shrine to Lady Diana.


16th Arrondissement of Paris, Monuments of Paris, 


1. Diana’s fatal accident 

2. The Flame of Liberty at Place de l’Alma

3. The Flame of Liberty became a shrine to Lady Diana

4. How to get to Place de l'Alma

1997, 27 years ago, Diana, Princess of Wales died as a result of a fatal car crash in a Paris tunnel. The monument standing above the road tunnel where the princess’ car hit a pillar became a de facto shrine to Lady Diana. The Flame of Liberty, as it is known, was offered to the city of Paris in 1989 by the International Herald Tribune from worldwide donations. In this article I talk a bit more about the sculpture and its indirect link to Diana.


Diana’s fatal accident in the Place de l’Alma underpass


Lady Diana’s Mercedes car left the rear entrance of the Ritz hotel (Place Vendôme) at around 12:20am on the 31st August 1997 heading to rue Arsène Houssaye. The car crossed the Place de la Concorde, drove along Cours la Reine and Cours Albert 1er into the tunnel that goes under Place de l’Alma (16th arrt) where it hit a pillar at approximately 12:23am.


Diana was transferred to the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital (13th arrt) just after 2am and died two hours later despite many resuscitation attempts. The funeral of Diana took place at Westminster Abbey, London on the 6th September.


The reaction to Diana’s death was overwhelming as millions of mourners came to Kensington Palace to lay flowers. My mother-in-law (also called Diana if you can believe it!) was one of them and travelled from Portsmouth to London to pay homage to Lady Diana. It was reported that the pile of flowers was 1.5 metres (5 ft) deep. My wife Rachel was actually in Paris when it happened and remembers the shock and disbelief of both French and English people. “It was very strange as a young fille au-pair to wake up and be told that Princess Diana had died nearby in the night. It was something un-thinkable that made everyone gasp when they heard the news. She was definitely someone that my Mum looked up to and who I personally had a lot of respect for. I always liked the way she made a stand for what she believed in and the fruit of her work with her two then young boys has become evident in the past few years. She was someone incredible.”


The Flame of Liberty at Place de l’Alma

Flame of Liberty Paris

The Flame of Liberty, Place de l’Alma in Paris © French Moments

Like many others, the first time I saw the monument at Place de l’Alma, I sincerely thought it was erected in memory of Lady Diana. It’s only later I discovered that the Flame of Liberty had been standing on the site since May 1989 and that the gilded sculpture is a symbol of friendship between France and America.


In fact, the golden light monument has nothing to do with the the Candle in the Wind, the beloved princess, nor has it with England. If you look more closely at the monument you will recognise the flame of the Statue of Liberty in New York. The flame is indeed a full-scale replica of the torch held by the statue that marks the entrance to the harbour of New York City. Liberty Enlightening the World (its real name) was sculpted in Paris by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, a native from Colmar, Alsace. The statue was donated to the United States and placed in Liberty Island where it was dedicated on the 28th October 1886.


Flame of Liberty Paris

The Flame of Liberty, Place de l’Alma in Paris © French Moments

Now, the Place de l’Alma’s flame is covered with gold leaf and sits on a grey and black marble pedestal. It is 3.5m tall (11.48 ft) and overlooks the exit of the underpass. 


Check the base of the flame to read the message written on the commemorative plaque:


« Flamme de la Liberté. Réplique exacte de la flamme de la statue de la Liberté offerte au peuple français par des donateurs du monde entier en symbole de l’amitié franco-américaine. À l’occasion du centenaire de l’International Herald Tribune. Paris 1887-1987. »


Flame of Liberty Paris

The commemorative plaque of the Flame of Liberty © French Moments

translated as:


“The Flame of Liberty. An exact replica of the Statue of Liberty’s flame offered to the people of France by donors throughout the world as a symbol of the Franco-American friendship. On the occasion of the centennial of the International Herald Tribune. Paris 1887-1987.”


The Flame of Liberty became a shrine to Lady Diana

Flame of Liberty Paris

The commemorative tokens at the foot of the Flame of Liberty © French Moments

Eight years after its dedication, the monument became an unofficial memorial for Diana as the car crashed in the underpass just under the square. The whole pedestal of the monument was covered with commemorative tokens, pictures, candles, flowers, kind words and love locks attached to the chain surrounding the torch. Elton John’s song also created a strong visual link with the song he wrote for Diana “Candle in the Wind“. People were naturally drawn to the monument as it was just above where the accident happened. 


Flame of Liberty Paris

The Flame of Liberty and the road leading to the tunnel, Paris © French Moments

How to get to Place de l’Alma

Alma Marceau Paris

The Métro station of Alma Marceau, Paris © French Moments

The Place de l’Alma métro station is reached by line 9. Across the pont de l’Alma is the RER C station Pont de l’Alma. 


● 7 August 1997: Following her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996, Diana is reported to be in a relationship with Dodi Fayed, son of Harrods boss Mohamed Al Fayed.


● 30 August 1997: Returning from their holiday on Dodi’s yacht in the Mediterranean, the couple land in Paris to rumors that they are soon to be married.

● 30 August 1997, 23:30 With their every move watched by photographers, the couple check out of the Ritz hotel in Paris for an apartment off the Champs Elysées.


31 August 1997, 00:25 Henri Paul, deputy head of security at the Ritz, drives them from the hotel pursued by photographers and press on motorbikes. Moments later his speeding car crashes, killing him and Dodi Al Fayed. Diana and bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones are both seriously injured and rushed to hospital.


31 August 1997, 04:00 Diana is declared dead; Rees-Jones survives.


31 August 1997, 04:01 News of Diana’s death is reported across the globe. In the UK, mourners gather before dawn outside her Kensington Palace home.

31 August, 05:09 A short statement issued by Buckingham Palace says “The Queen and the Prince of Wales are deeply shocked and distressed by the terrible news.”


31 August 1997, 11:00 Prime Minister Tony Blair leads the tributes to Diana, saying she was “the people’s princess…”

1 September1997:  In France, blood from Henri Paul showed he was nearly three times over the national legal drink-drive limit. A French judge later puts the blame on Paul for the crash, not the photographers and press who pursued Diana’s car.


1 September 1997: 19:00 Millions watch live television coverage from RAF Northolt as the plane carrying the Princess’ coffin lands.


6 September 1997 :The funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales is held at Westminster Abbey.


** Of her notable ensembles, Diana – who tragically passed away in 1997 at the age of 36 – wore a diamond choker necklace as a headband in Australia with then Prince Charles. The 1985 get-up had the royal in a satin one-shoulder cerulean dress by Elizabeth Emanuel with the emerald-and-diamond piece fastened around her forehead.

“I think she had sunburn on her neck so we said, ‘Let’s make a headband of it,” Richard Dalton, Diana’s famed hairstylist, remembered at the Styling Princess Diana panel on 21 May, celebrating People Magazine’s 50th anniversary.


Of her notable ensembles, Diana – who tragically passed away in 1997 at the age of 36 – wore a diamond choker necklace as a headband in Australia with then Prince Charles. The 1985 get-up had the royal in a satin one-shoulder cerulean dress by Elizabeth Emanuel with the emerald-and-diamond piece fastened around her forehead.


“I think she had sunburn on her neck so we said, ‘Let’s make a headband of it,” Richard Dalton, Diana’s famed hairstylist, remembered at the Styling Princess Diana panel on 21 May, celebrating People Magazine’s 50th anniversary.

“I asked Evelyn, her dresser, for six inches of knicker elastic, [the kind used by] grannies,” he continued.

**

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