Princess Diana was beloved for her hospital visits, often bringing joy to the sick. But one visit in 1995, just two months before her revealing Panorama interview, sparked something more—a secret love affair.
During a visit to Royal Brompton Hospital, Diana met Dr. Hasnat Khan, a reserved heart surgeon of Pakistani descent whose looks were likened to Omar Sharif. Their connection was instant. Introduced through mutual friend Oonagh Shanley-Toffolo, Diana returned to the hospital frequently, drawn not just by compassion—but by love.
Though officially visiting to support sick children, Diana had personal motives. At 35, she found herself smiling again. Khan, 37, wasn’t a conventional royal match—he smoked, loved jazz and KFC—but Diana was smitten. She even called him “drop-dead gorgeous.”
Their romance unfolded in secret: code names, disguises, and late-night rendezvous. Diana once wore a wig to sneak into a jazz club; Khan once climbed into her car trunk to avoid paparazzi. Their bond grew stronger—so much that she introduced him to her sons and explored Islam, even visiting his family in Lahore.
Despite deep affection—Diana called him “Mr. Wonderful”—the relationship strained under media pressure. While Diana craved public acknowledgment, Khan feared for his privacy and career. They discussed relocating abroad, but plans fell through. By July 1997, their relationship ended.
A month later, Diana died in a car crash with Dodi Fayed. Khan, shocked to learn of her new relationship, was heartbroken. He attended her funeral quietly and has since remembered her with affection and sadness.
Khan later married and divorced, and now lives a quiet life as a surgeon and humanitarian. Though brief, his romance with Diana revealed a side of her few knew—one full of love, risk, and the longing to be seen as just Diana, not the princess.