Audio By Carbonatix
Princess Diana's relationship with Dodi Fayed is one of the storylines Netflix has teased in a series of images ahead of the show's sixth season.
The forthcoming series will dramatise the events of the late 1990s including the last days of Princess Diana's life.
Australian actress Elizabeth Debicki said it was a "unique challenge as an actor" to portray her final weeks.
Season six will be split into two parts, with the first four episodes released on 16 November.
It will once again be written by Peter Morgan, who created the hugely popular series which began in 2016.
Debicki said: "I really just trusted in Peter's emotional blueprint that he created for us to follow. It's his interpretation and I think it made emotional sense to me, so I clung to that. Because, obviously, it's devastating and it's fraught and we can never know."

NETFLIX

NETFLIX
At the end of season five, viewers saw Tony Blair become prime minister and Prince Charles go to Hong Kong.
In the images from season six, Diana (Debicki) is seen in a car with Dodi (Khalid Abdalla). Both died on 31 August 1997, when their car crashed in a tunnel in Paris as they were being chased by paparazzi photographers on motorbikes.
Speaking at the Edinburgh TV Festival earlier this year, producers said they will handle the subject of Diana's death "sensitively".
Other images from season six show scenes on a yacht belonging to Dodi's father, business tycoon Mohamed Al Fayed, who is played by Salim Daw. Al Fayed died in September aged 94.
Prince Charles, as he was then, is once again played by Dominic West, while his sons William and Harry are played in the first half of the season by Rufus Kampa and Fflyn Edwards respectively.

NETFLIX

NETFLIX
Netflix's dramatisation depicts real-life events but features fictional conversations between characters.
The streamer has previously been criticised by some who feel it doesn't make clear enough to viewers that not everything portrayed in the show is historically accurate.
But Netflix has countered that The Crown has always been presented as a drama based on historical events.
It describes the royal series as "fictional dramatisation, imagining what could have happened behind closed doors".
Imelda Staunton will reprise her role as Queen Elizabeth II for the sixth season. The monarch has previously been played by Olivia Colman and Claire Foy.
Staunton said: "I've been living with her for a long time so, if anything, I felt more comfortable this time.
"I love her stillness and her ability to not be thrown by everything that must have constantly - throughout her whole life - gone on around her."

NETFLIX

NETFLIX
West said Charles has "got real sadness to him and real compassion" and that The Crown gives viewers the opportunity to "see these public figures in private".
Producers have said Prince William will be seen trying to integrate back into life at Eton following his mother's death.
Season six will also see the Queen celebrate her Golden Jubilee, and the courtship of William and Kate - now the Prince and Princess of Wales - at the University of St Andrews.
Latest Stories
-
US, Iran fail to reach peace agreement after marathon talks in Pakistan
2 minutes -
ECG kicks off Phase Two of transformer upgrades at Lashibi; brief outages expected
36 minutes -
Port crises loom as 11,000 drivers threaten four-day strike
1 hour -
A source of excellence across generations – Vice President Opoku-Agyemang lauds Mfantsipim
2 hours -
(Photos) Mfantsipim School launches historic 150th anniversary
3 hours -
Knights and Ladies of Marshall group backs Catholic Bishops’ stance on anti-LGBTQ+
4 hours -
Bright Simons writes: All the Filla in the Ibrahim Mahama/E&P – Gold Fields Saga
4 hours -
Monetise Idiocy In Ghana
4 hours -
The Ghanaian prophet and the mysterious death of his scottish wife Charmain Speirs
5 hours -
Nearly 400 sentenced in Nigeria for links to militant Islamists
5 hours -
Ghana’s recovery supported by gold strength despite global oil price pressures – Standard Bank Research
5 hours -
Methodist Church hails Mfantsipim@150; calls for “fresh consecration” to excellence
6 hours -
‘Excellence is our inheritance’ – Nana Sam Brew-Butler hails Mfantsipim’s 150-year reign in leadership
6 hours -
Kwaku Azar writes: A-G vs OSP
6 hours -
Mfantsipim–Adisadel rivalry built excellence, not division – Sam Jonah
6 hours