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TIME - Man of the Year
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1993-04-08
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
Though the troubled marriage of the Princess of Wales and
Prince Charles has been the subject of intense scrutiny by the
world's media, the gaudy theater accompanying it often
complicates the task of discerning fact from fiction. In Britain
especially, dailies, television and books feed the public's
seemingly insatiable appetite for news of the secretive House
of Windsor with the barest scraps of private information.
Senior writer Martha Duffy found herself doing
extraordinary work to get at the truth for this week's cover
story on the royal family. "The first law of life is no one
wants to be quoted or have a quote attributed to them," she
says. "People are terrified about losing their connections."
Duffy's Law of Royal Coverage holds true even down to the
restaurants, dress shops and commercial establishments that
Diana frequents. "There's so much money to be made," Duffy says,
"it's not worth it to a restaurateur or a designer to talk."
Chiefly, she tapped the expertise of two groups that
observe their subjects from distinct vantage points.
Constitutional experts and royal historians, many of whom have
written books, provided historical context. But it was
photographers who had the most to tell, even if they didn't want
their names seen in print. "If I want gossip, I don't go to a
gossip columnist. I go to photographers," Martha says. "There're
a number of them making a living from shooting the royal family.
With their sharp and trained eyes, they know a great deal about
personal habits."
Above all, she relied on Buckingham Palace for entree. A
"royal rota pass" granted her temporary access to view the
prince and princess in action. Such observations only reinforced
Duffy's respect for Diana. "If someone tells me she's stupid,
I stop the conversation," she says. "Diana is not; she is as
savvy as she is incandescent." Palace aides helped fill out
Duffy's firsthand impressions so long as her inquiries skirted
personal matters.
Small wonder Martha considers this her most challenging
assignment since she pursued the reclusive writer J.D. Salinger
in 1961, her second year at TIME. "On one level, the royal
routine is truly an exotic life, one particularly English, which
I, like millions of others, am fascinated by," she says. "On
another level, it's like a soap opera in which you never find
out the conclusion." Her persistent yet delicate digging has
paid off with a story that puts the British monarchy into
compelling perspective at a crossroads in its history.
Elizabeth P. Valk