Naomi takes on the challenge of Diana’s story

It takes a courageous actress to play one of the world’s most recognised women, but Naomi Watts does it with gusto in Diana. As the film opens, she tells Keely Bolger about her anxiety over taking on the role
Naomi Watts as Diana and Naveen Andrews as Hasnat KhanNaomi Watts as Diana and Naveen Andrews as Hasnat Khan
Naomi Watts as Diana and Naveen Andrews as Hasnat Khan

Before her untimely 
death on August 31, 1997, Princess Diana was the world’s most famous 
woman, and for that reason it was going to take a brave actress to portray her on screen.

Naomi Watts stepped up to the challenge but, understandably, it wasn’t 
a decision she took lightly.

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“I was very nervous about taking on the role,” says the 44-year-old actress, who is stylishly turned out in a white top with slinky black trousers and heels.

“It’s the biggest challenge 
of my career thus far. 
Taking possession of a character that everyone feels they know so well, and therefore belongs to them, was difficult and scary.

“There’s more information available on this woman than any person we’ve known in our lifetime.

“So that’s a huge, scary challenge, and I couldn’t say yes very easily.

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“But those reasons also became the intrigue, and the very fact that I was afraid of them made me turn around and take the role.”

Watts, who has twice 
been nominated for Best Actress at the Oscars, in 
2004 for 21 Grams and 2013 for The Impossible, understands that film fans 
will question her resemblance to the late “People’s Princess”, and journalists will pore 
over her performance in 
the film, which is based 
on the last two years of Diana’s life and her relationship with heart surgeon Dr Hasnat Khan, played by Lost actor Naveen Andrews.

But the one person the British-born actress craved approval from was her own mother.

“Diana’s voice was something we all remember very well,” she says.

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“There was a lot to get right, and even my mother said to me, ‘Oh God, I don’t know if you’ll be able to get that voice, Naomi!’

“Mum knew how tough that accent would be to get. What made it tougher was that Diana’s wasn’t just pure stiff upper lip, she had a very breathy modern sound to her voice. It wasn’t as posh as it could have been.”

Luckily, the actress got the thumbs-up she was hoping for after her mother watched a preview.

“Mum and her partner, who’s quite posh himself, were impressed with the accent after all,” she says, laughing.

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Not everyone has been 
so kind. While Watts mastered Diana’s dulcet tones and mannerisms, the film, 
which includes several 
key moments from Diana’s final years including her famous BBC Panorama interview with Martin 
Bashir, landmine charity campaign and holiday 
with Dodi Fayed shortly before the Paris car crash that killed them, has received decidedly mixed reviews 
from critics.

And, according to recent reports in the press, Watts is feeling the pressure. Although she doesn’t seem entirely at ease when we meet, she’s nevertheless friendly and personable, and jests with director Oliver Hirschbiegel, who’s being interviewed alongside her.

But there is a sense that 
she’s being careful with her words, admitting that she always suffers anxiety about how well her films are received.

“Taking on the role 
was scary, and then once we were filming, I was fully committed,” she explains.

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“But now we’re back 
to opening it up again, 
sharing the film, and 
there’s always that fear of how it will be received. I’m generally like that with every film.”

Watts recently joked 
that she’d leave the country 
to escape the spotlight 
when the movie is released, but the comment provoked more attention than she’d anticipated.

“Anything you say ends up being interesting when it’s about Diana, because we’re 
so endlessly fascinated by her,” she says.

“I think it’s testament 
to who she was, and what 
she achieved, and we’re struggling with why she’s not here.”

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If Watts, whose career 
began with TV work before she went on to land roles 
in films like King Kong, I 
Heart Huckabees and The Painted Veil, does fancy escaping the hubbub, there’s one place she could retreat to – the north-west coast of Wales.

The actress, who moved 
to Australia in her teens 
but now lives in the US with 
her actor husband Liev Schreiber and their two sons, Alexander and Samuel, spent a chunk of her childhood in Anglesey, where her grandparents lived.

Prince William, Diana’s eldest son, famously made a home for himself and his wife Kate on the island while he served as an RAF search and rescue pilot.

So has Watts been back there? “I haven’t quite found time to get back to Wales, 
but I have strong memories of my time in Anglesey,” she says.

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Locals would be impressed with the Hollywood’s star’s grasp of the language as she faultlessly demonstrates how she can still say the famous Welsh village with the longest name. “It has the most beautiful countryside,” she says.

“My grandfather, Hugh Roberts, was a great figure in my life because my father died when I was very young, so I remember Anglesey with great fondness.”

Royal performances in the movies

Richard III (1995) – Sir Ian McKellen took on the role of the scheming king in this film version of the classic Shakespeare play set in fascist England.

Elizabeth (1998) – Australian actress Cate Blanchett donned the Tudor monarch’s trademark white make-up in a film about her early years on the throne.

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The Queen (2006) – Helen Mirren, earned a Best Actress Oscar for her studied performance as Queen Elizabeth II in this hit film and later reprised the role for the West End stage.

The King’s Speech (2010) – Colin Firth picked up a swathe of awards, including an Oscar and a Bafta, for his standout role as King George VI in the moving story of how he befriends a speech therapist while trying to overcome his stammer.

Diana is released in cinemas today.

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