Harry and William have made sure their little ones know all about Diana. In March, for instance, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge revealed that, every year on Mother’s Day, their children—Prince George, 7, Princess Charlotte, 6, and Prince Louis, 3—make cards remembering “Granny” Diana for William. And in Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy, William said he’s “constantly” talking about her with the kids.
“I do regularly, putting George and Charlotte to bed, talk about her and just trying to remind them that there are two grandmothers. There were two grandmothers in their lives,” he said in the 2017 doc. “And so, it’s important that they know how she was and she existed.”
And in his Apple TV+ docuseries with Oprah Winfrey, titled The Me You Can’t See, Harry recalled how one of the first words said by his 2-year-old son Archie Harrison was “grandma.”
“I’ve got a photo up in his nursery, and it was one of the first words that he said—apart from ‘mama,’ ‘papa,’ it was then ‘grandma.’ Grandma Diana,” he said. “It’s the sweetest thing, but at the same time, it makes me really sad because she should be here.”