Bruce.
> The book's due to be published later this year, providing the cuckolded
> Lord Anthony Tryon doesn't try and stop it.
Would he have any legal grounds to do so?
>
Money and Station transcends those sorts of considerations.
Bruce.
Patricia,
What's the idea of signing off on your post as Bruce.
Kindly desist or I'll be forced to report you.
Bruce
How did she write a book from the grave?
RC
Anybody know the details of how her friendship with Charles deteriorated? I
read somewhere a while back that she made a huge scene trying to get into some
party or other event he was attending and security hauled her off in her
wheelchair.
Paige Andre-Hudson wrote in message
<20000729015102...@ng-fs1.aol.com>...
> Isnt Kanga the one that tried to throw herself out of a window? Also, I
> thought she died a couple of years ago.
> Mrs H
There are different schools of thought on that. In the room with her at
the time was a rather spiteful daughter who hasn't had a good word to say
about her mother. Kanga herself always denied deliberately jumping out of
that window.
Has anyone heard any more about the book? I always thought it was a shame
how Lady Tryon ended up. It must have been a hard and lonely road. ~L
>
>>
>
>
>
>
I found the message I first posted last year which may be useful to someone
here:
Copy follows-
> Some months ago, someone enquired here about "Kanga"
>
> I came across an article of an interview with her daughter and thought
you might like to see what I found.
> (Paraphrased biographic details from an article in "Hello" of July 4
1998)
>
>
> Born in Australia, Dale was the daughter of a wealthy Australian
publisher, and was once described by Prince Charles as "the only woman to
ever really understand me".
>
> She suffered from spina bifida, and later was ill with uterine cancer.
She became addicted to prescription drugs and drink following years of
illness and was persuaded by her daughter Zoė to enter Farm Place Clinic
for treatment. In may 1996, after three weeks there, she had a fall from
an upstairs window which left her paralysed. In the article, Zoė says she
believed that her mother jump from the window intentionally, although
kanga, in her confused state of denial later protested that she had been
pushed.
>
> She became unstable and was sectioned under the Mental Health Act after
making a number of nuisance calls to the police and then getting into a
struggle with the police when they came.
>
> As part of her recover from the injury, she travelled to India with Zoė,
and almost immediately contracted malaria, for which she was successfully
treated. However, she had a serious bedsore but refused to have injections
to treat it, insisting that only ointments were used, despite going into
the pool each day, against medical advice.
>
> She returned to England and quickly developed septicaemia, and died on 15
November 1998.
Gill