When it was time for Diana to attend school, at great expense and against
her father's wishes, she was sent to a small private school, Selwood House,
run by two prim spinster sisters, Miss Daisy and Miss Ruth. Considering
where Diana's interests lay, it was not surprising that, instead of concentrating
on maths - Di's weak point - she would sit writing the names of film stars
down the margin in her text book where she should have been adding up figures.
Her father raged over school reports, but Diana was always defended by
her mother, who said something one day that would be the understatement
of the decade: "what does it matter, just so long as she knows how
to count up the few pounds she'll earn at the end of the week". |

Peter Fluck |
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With the approach of D-Day, the allied
invasion of Europe 1944, thousands upon thousands of Americans were entering
Britain. Diana was ecstatic! she was going to meet real Americans......
The Flucks had a spare bedroom, and with not enough space at barracks and camps,
a Californian duly arrived. Diana bombarded him with questions about Hollywood,
which he tried to answer, but as his family had an orange farm some hundred
miles north of the film capital he was hardly in a position to tell her what
Lana Turner ate for breakfast, or who Tyrone Power was dating.
Diana was now twelve years old but already looked and acted far older than
her years, she had taken to wearing make-up, her hair was long and fairly
honey coloured - with a little help from some lightener- and as she walked
about town, cries of 'It's Veronica Lake!' rang out from the passing GI
trucks.
"The night I was invited to my first dance, at an American party,
was just about the most thrilling thing that had ever happened to me",
Diana had said some years later. Mary Fluck and Diana were returning home
from the cinema one evening, when they were met by droves of GIs who begged
them to go to a hotel where some big celebration was going on. Mary hesitated,
but as her husband was playing the piano somewhere, and likely to be very
late home, she finally gave in, much to Diana's delight. They rushed home
and Diana put on her most grown up dress - a red one handed down by a young
friend of her mother - and dressed her hair in as glamorous a style as
she could manage, donned a pair of real nylons, which a previous American
house guest had given her, plus a pair of semi-high-heeled shoes, and off
they went.
Cinderella's evening at the ball could never have been as wonderful as
Diana's that night. She danced and danced and quickly lost count of the
GIs with whom she met and danced. Her head was a whirl with sweet nothings
and compliments whispered in her ear, and although she only drank Coca-Cola,
it might as well have been champagne. Diana pretended to be much older
than she really was, casually giving her age as seventeen when asked, and
revelling in the fact that they believed her. That evening Diana felt she
had grown up, she was now an adult, and not yet at thirteen years old pleaded
with her mother to let her go again and again. Diana's mother did let her
go and in fact accompanied her every Sunday, often returning home with
a large bag filled with sugar, butter and anything else she could obtain.
So life went on in a happy, carefree whirl of dances, dates and parties.
There was nothing to worry about, except what would happen when the war
ended and all those exciting Americans went home. By late 1945, the war
in Europe was over and coming to a halt in the Pacific. There were VE celebrations,
more parties, more dances, and less and less time for her studies. But
her burning ambition was still there. To go to this enchanted land called
America, and of course become a famous film star.
Toward the end of their stay near Swindon, the Americans opened a large
college for servicemen whose studies had been interrupted by the war and
who wished to resume them. It was about this time that on holiday in Weston,
Diana entered her first beauty contest to find a pin-up girl for Soldier
magazine. Having given her age as seventeen and wearing a scarlet and white
swim suit to her delight and amazement, Diana came third. Now her father
had to be told...Diana's photograph would be appearing in the Swindon newspaper,
and it was with the publication of this photo that an art professor at
the American college called and asked Diana if she would pose for his art
classes...in a swim suit of course.
Very flattered, she accepted a fee of one guinea an hour, and as she posed
on the platform she at last thought she was getting somewhere, especially
with the professor comparing her to the powers and Conover models whom
she gazed at in the American film magazines given to her by her GI friends.
Before long she was asked to take part in theatre productions
there too, for she lost no time in making it known that she would like to be a
film actress. She first appeared in A Weekend in Paris and then Death
Takes a Holiday, in which she played the lead for one week and received rave reviews in
the campus paper. She also sang on the college radio station, which her
parents could pick up on their home radio. It was all very exciting, and
with so much going on she decided to leave school altogether, wheedling
her way round her father to let her attend an acting academy in London
once a week instead. He wasn't happy about Diana going on the stage. He
announced, "I've seen too much of what happens, and too often the
way to success is through a bedroom door", but realising he was wasting
his money sending Diana to ordinary school. He agreed on the understanding
that she study for a teachers diploma and return to Swindon to teach elocution.
Thrilled with yet another victory, she left her hated school and journeyed
to London each week for a private acting class with Miss Kathleen Cunningham
at the London Academy of Dramatic Art. Mary Fluck as usual accompanied
her daughter
Finally it happened. The Americans went home. Never before had Diana felt
so disconsolate or miserable. The bottom had dropped out of her world and
nothing could make her feel better. Swindon seemed duller and greyer than
ever, not even the local boys could compensate for what she had lost. She
had to get out of there; it was her new driving force, time was slipping
by. Diana was fourteen years old and she thought she had done nothing with
her life except physically grow up.
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