Who is Fiona Shackleton, the ‘steel magnolia’ divorce lawyer who famously advised Prince Charles in his hard-ball battle with Diana (and once copped a jug full of water from an angry Heather Mills!)
She’s reportedly the highest-paid divorce lawyer in the UK, once nicknamed the ‘steel magnolia’ – a combination of feminine demeanour and unbreakable will.
With an impressive list of celebrity clients to her name, including Prince Charles, Paul McCartney, Stephen Hawking and Liam Gallagher, Baroness Fiona Shackleton, 67, has returned to the spotlight, reportedly advising Australian actress Isla Fisher in her separation from husband Sacha Baron Cohen.
Yet even today, it is her royal clients with whom she is most closely associated – most notably King Charles when he was negotiating his messy divorce from Diana in 1996.
Charles and Diana during a photo-call on the Balmoral Estate before their wedding in 1981
The process was understandably hard for both parties, but particularly for Diana, according to royal biographer Ingrid Seward.
In December 1992, Prime Minister John Major read a statement from Buckingham Palace in the House of Commons, stating that Charles and Diana would be separating.
‘This decision has been reached amicably and they will both continue to participate fully in the upbringing of their children,’ the statement said.
The palace claimed that no third party was involved, despite constant reports of marital scandals in the media.
By the beginning of 1996, however, things were getting nasty.
Baroness Fiona Shackleton is a divorce specialist. Her most notable clients were King Charles in 1996 and Prince Andrew in 1996
Charles and Fiona Shackleton appear in high spirits while attending an exhibition in London, 2000
Prince William and Prince Harry both continue to use Shackleton as their Personal Solicitor
Royal author Ingrid Seward says:
‘What Diana was really concerned about was losing her influence over her boys. So the whole thing was very, very delicate,’ the royal biographer said.
‘Diana blamed everything on Charles – and Charles kept blaming Fiona Shackleton, presumably on her advice.’
The couple came to an agreement in July 1996 and their divorce was publicly announced in August that year.
The same month, Queen Elizabeth II issued Letters Patent, declaring that any woman divorced from a prince would no longer hold the title ‘Royal Highness’.
Diana was subsequently styled ‘Diana, Princess of Wales’.
Fiona Shackleton negotiated a £17 million settlement for Diana and the Princess agreed to cover the legal costs of her divorce.
It was also agreed that Diana would see William and Harry every five weekends.
Her successful handling of the case earned Shackleton praise and Charles continued to utilise her services until 2005.
‘The terms of the divorce were severe,’ says Seward, whose new book, My Mother and I, based on the relationship between King Charles and his late mother, is published by Simon and Schuster.
‘If Diana wanted to leave the country on anything that could be described as official business, she had to get special permission.
‘Her movements were restricted and she wasn’t allowed to take an ordinary job to earn money.’
Shackleton also represented Prince Andrew during his divorce from Sarah, Duchess of York that same year.
Andrew paid out £3 million in a divorce settlement in May 1996.
Shackleton attended the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in 2018 with her husband, fellow Exeter alumnus, Ian Shackleton.
In 2010, the Queen made Shackleton a life peer, giving her the title, Baroness Shackleton of Belgravia.
She sits as a Conservative member in the House of Lords.