John F. Kennedy Jr. and Princess Diana shared a poignant, secret meeting in 1995 that revealed their mutual understanding of life under the media microscope. Newly resurfaced details from an oral biography show how Diana empathized with JFK Jr.’s struggles, and why his magazine ultimately chose not to cover her tragic death.
In the annals of 1990s celebrity, few figures captivate the public imagination like John F. Kennedy Jr. and Princess Diana. Both were global icons defined by extraordinary privilege and profound vulnerability, their lives endlessly dissected by a relentless tabloid culture. Now, a deeper look into their fleeting but meaningful connection, documented in the oral biography JFK Jr: An Intimate Oral Biography by Liz McNeil and RoseMarie Terezino, reveals not just a secret rendezvous, but a silent pact born from shared trauma.
The meeting itself was a masterpiece of discretion. On a weekday afternoon in December 1995, Diana was in New York City to receive the United Cerebral Palsy Humanitarian of the Year award. JFK Jr., then publisher of the political lifestyle magazine George, seized the moment. He wrote to her requesting a meeting, hoping to pitch her for a future cover. The logistics were handled by their respective assistants—Diana’s private secretary Patrick Jephson and JFK Jr.”s assistant RoseMarie Terenzio—who orchestrated a plan to avoid the paparazzi swarming the Carlyle Hotel. Diana would enter through the side door where photographers waited, while JFK Jr. slipped in through the front, unseen. As Jephson later noted, “Nobody wanted it to be public. It was never made public, so that made it quite fun, actually.” He added that Diana, recently separated from King Charles, wanted to keep it “discreet” because “it had all the makings of a great gossip story.”
The Meeting’s Purpose and Diana’s Graceful Decline
The agenda was clear from the start: JFK Jr. wanted Diana on the cover of George. He arrived with creative director Matt Berman, who brought mock-up covers and sketches, including one provocative concept showing Diana bombarded by paparazzi. Diana, according to Jephson’s recollection, gave a diplomatic but firm response: “Well, you know, this is all very nice, John. Thank you. But I hope you’ll forgive me if I don’t take up the opportunity this time, but would love to maybe for your fiftieth or your hundredth issue or something.” She wasn’t interested in immediate publicity, but left the door open for a symbolic future feature—a gesture that spoke to her understanding of magazine cycles and her own legendary status.
The meeting lasted and, by all accounts, was a genuine connection. Jephson observed that Diana felt the meeting “went well” and was “the right thing to do.” More profoundly, she saw beyond JFK Jr.’s public persona. “She didn’t see him as the rest of the world saw him. As this big, famous, handsome guy. She saw him, I think, as rather vulnerable,” Jephson shared. For his part, JFK Jr. told colleagues that Diana was taller than he expected and had a “great pair of legs”—a lighthearted detail that humanizes both figures in a moment of private admiration.
A Letter of Empathy: “The Worst Paparazzi Are Here in Europe”
The connection didn’t end with the meeting. According to Terenzio, JFK Jr. and Diana “stayed in touch.” This was confirmed in a letter Diana sent from Kensington Palace on February 3, 1997, a copy of which Terenzio still possesses. In it, Diana thanked him for his notes but again declined a George cover. The letter’s emotional core, however, was a shared recognition of their persecution. Diana addressed the intense media scrutiny both endured, writing with particular emphasis: “‘I hope’—and she underlined ‘hope’—’the media are leaving both you and Carolyn alone. I know how difficult it is, but believe it or not, the worst paparazzi are here in Europe!'”
This was not a casual remark but a confession of kinship. Diana, who would die in a Paris tunnel crash just six months later, was reaching out to a fellow target, offering solidarity from one hunted person to another. The letter underscores a critical truth: their fame was inextricably linked to a relentless, often dangerous, pursuit by photographers and press. JFK Jr. understood this intimately; his entire life had been lived under a microscope since birth.
Why JFK Jr. Refused to Cover Diana’s Death in George
When Diana and her boyfriend Dodi Fayed were killed in a car crash on August 31, 1997, the world demanded explanation and tribute. At George magazine, editors immediately proposed a major piece memorializing her life and legacy. But JFK Jr. was adamant. Executive editor Elizabeth “Biz” Mitchell recalled in the oral biography that he “didn’t want to touch it” and was “mad” that they even considered it.
His refusal stemmed from a complex web of emotion and pragmatism. Publicly, he argued that as a monthly magazine, George wasn’t in the breaking news business. Privately, however, he feared the coverage would become a referendum on his own life. As he saw it, any story about Diana’s death and the paparazzi would inevitably lead to questions about him and his wife, Carolyn Bessette: “Are you and Carolyn afraid?” Biographer Steven M. Gillon noted that JFK Jr. “had an emotional reaction” to her death and “hesitated,” even though he acknowledged “it was an important story to cover.” The compromise was a photo essay by creative director Matt Berman titled “The Lady Vanishes,” a subdued remembrance that avoided the editorial spotlight JFK Jr. so dreaded.
The FX Series: Drama versus Historical Reality
This historical moment has found new life in the FX series Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette. In episode 8, “Exit Strategy,” the dramatization depicts JFK Jr. and Bessette learning of Diana’s death with shock and fear, mirroring their real-life reaction. The series also touches on the contentious relationship between Bessette and Diana’s memory. In one scene, a character representing Bessette claims she was with Diana mere weeks before her death at Gianni Versace’s funeral in July 1997.
The historical record, however, is less definitive. Both women were among 2,000 attendees at Versace’s funeral in Milan and were photographed departing separately. Whether they actually interacted remains unknown. The series, while capturing the emotional truth of the era, takes calculated dramatic liberties—a reminder that in stories of icons, the line between documented history and compelling narrative often blurs.
Why This Secret Meeting Matters Today
The resonance of this secret meeting extends beyond gossip. It reveals two people who, despite fairy-tale imagery, were bound by a very real and shared anguish. Diana’s outreach to JFK Jr. was an act of empathy from one media casualty to another, a quiet acknowledgment that their burdens were similar. JFK Jr.’s subsequent decision to bury George‘s coverage of her death speaks volumes about his own trauma and the inescapable shadow of his family’s legacy. He could not separate Diana’s death from his own lived experience of predatory journalism, a fear tragically validated less than two years later when he and Bessette died in a plane crash on July 16, 1999.
For fans and historians, this story is more than a footnote. It humanizes two figures often reduced to style and tragedy, showing a moment of genuine, unscripted connection. It also serves as a stark case study in how the machinery of fame consumes even the most privileged. In an age of viral scrutiny and perpetual documentation, the idea of a private meeting between two of the world’s most famous people feels almost unimaginable. Their secret 1995 encounter, and the empathetic letter that followed, stands as a testament to a time—and a shared understanding—that has all but vanished.
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