Princess Diana’s appearance at the English National Ballet’s production of Swan Lake on June 3, 1997, is widely remembered as one of her most iconic and glamorous “final” public engagements. As a devoted patron of the English National Ballet, she attended the gala performance at the Royal Albert Hall, just two months before her passing in August of that year.
This appearance captured the “independent Diana” of 1997—radiant, confident, and stepping away from the more conservative royal protocols of previous years. The performance itself was a groundbreaking “in-the-round” production of Swan Lake choreographed by Derek Deane, which utilized a massive stage and over 60 swans to fill the arena of the Royal Albert Hall.
Former Artistic Director, Derek Deane, remembered: “Princess Diana was a great friend to English National Ballet. As well as her love for dance she cared so much about the dancers and the life of the Company. She was a great support for me personally during the years that she was with us. Her visits were a joy and her devotion and the time that she gave were wonderful. I will never forget the radiant look on her face whilst she watched that first night of Swan Lake at the Royal Albert Hall in 1997, lost in adoration. 'The most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen', she said to me. I miss her even now.”





































