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Princess Tiaamii Crystal Esther Andre is no stranger to TV. She made her debut in the reality show Katie & Peter: The Baby Diaries which documented the first six weeks of her life. Her first two years were chronicled in subsequent reality shows, until her parents, the model and entrepreneur Katie Price and the singer Peter Andre, split up in 2009. Andre continued to make regular appearances on her parentsâ solo reality shows.
Now that she has come of age, 18-year-old Andre has her own four-part reality show, The Princess Diaries, on ITV2. As you would expect, it has already made headlines. While her father is a regular on the show, her mother is not. As I approach the cafe in Surrey where we are meeting, the Sun and the Mirror publish stories saying that Price is devastated not to have been invited to Andreâs 18th birthday party or to have been included in the show, adding that her daughter is âtoo scaredâ to tell the truth about the family rift. So, business as usual.
Andre is here today with her manager, Marie-Claire Giddings â another echo from the past. When Peter and Price were making reality shows together, their manager, Claire Powell, was omnipresent. After their bitter divorce, Powell continued to manage Peter. Neither she nor Peter talk to Price today. Giddings works for Powell.
I tell Andre that we have met before. She looks surprised. No wonder. Andre was eight months old at the time and I was interviewing her mother. There is a symmetry to their lives that astonishes Andre. Price, then known as Jordan, was queen of the Page 3 slot in the Sun by 18. âAs I started building my own career, Mum said itâs crazy that I was your age when I started doing these things. I was like: really! I was shocked.â About her doing topless modelling at such a young age? âNo, that she was so successful at that age.â
Andre says she probably wouldnât do topless modelling herself. âThatâs not as popular nowadays and it just doesnât appeal to me. But I have nothing against anyone who does it, obviously.â She orders a hot chocolate.
Price became a hugely successful brand. By the time we met in 2007, she had lines in makeup, books, bras â you name it â and was worth an estimated £30m, although she was subsequently declared bankrupt twice (in 2019 and 2024). Andre says in her show that few people are aware of her own ambitions to be a successful businesswoman.
I show her the headline from the 2007 piece I wrote about her mum: âWho wants to be a billionaire?â
âNo way! Thatâs crazy.â Would the same headline be appropriate for her? âWould I want to be a billionaire? Well, thatâs my aim!â
âYou just want to be successful,â Giddings corrects her.
âYeah, I just want to be successful and be able to provide for my future and my family when IÂ have one,â Andre says.
She sips her drink thoughtfully. Then she has a brainwave. âI want to take a picture of my hot chocolate,â she says. Will it be Instagrammed? She shakes her head. âNo, this will be Snapchatted.â Giddings laughs. âThis is literally my life,â she says apologetically. âSo donât feel insulted!â
Did Andre always want to star in her own reality show? âI always loved being in front of a camera.â She thinks back to when she was a toddler on TV. âIâd come in the room and â¦â She tilts her head to the side, in modelling mode. âI loved the entertainment. When I was asked to do my own, I was sceptical because of my age, but, yes, Iâve also always wanted to do it.â
As well as the obvious similarities, there are also huge differences between Andre and her mother. While Price is a funny, reckless, potty-mouthed force of nature, Andre is more like her father â polite, respectful, more reserved. I ask if she ever fancied being a doctor, like her fatherâs wife, her stepmother Emily MacDonagh, who is also prominent in the show. âNo, the doctor path was never for me.â She went to a private school in Surrey and left to study beauty at 16.
Were you swotty at school? âWhat does that mean?â Did you work hard? âOh, yes, in the subjects I liked, I was good. I left after GCSEs.â Did you pass them? âYes,â Giddings answers on her behalf. Andre says: âI passed three of them. Music, fashion and English language. I like creative writing. Iâm quite good at waffling.â
Perhaps Andre was destined for a life in reality TV. Yet she says she is self-conscious. In the show, she says she always thought her nose was too big and her lips too thin and that she âhatedâ the way she looked. Whereas surgery was the answer for her mother, makeup is Andreâs solution. âYou can change anything with makeup,â she says. âNow, I feel a lot more confident.â
What made her so self-conscious? âSocial media,â she says instantly. âWhen I was younger, I got comments about my appearance.â If this was Price, she would tell you every detail. But not Andre. She simply smiles and asserts herself. âI donât let the comments get in the way of anything.â
In The Princess Diaries, we see her showing her father some of the comments. When she tells him that one man has posted about her âfinally being legalâ, he is furious. But that is simply the generational difference, she says. âDad grew up with TV. Social media, TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat werenât around then. Those comments are everyday, normalised, so they donât really shock me.â
In Andreâs world, you live and die by social media. As an âinfluencerâ, you are nothing without it, however hurtful it can be. I tell her that, as an old git, I have never quite understood what it is to be an influencer; I ask if she can explain. âI guess itâs someone who influences people to do stuff. I influence younger people with what I post.â Does she influence what they wear and buy? âYeah. My content is very organic, though â very real. Make up stories, which is what I do.â
Giddings, a former tabloid journalist, rushes to the rescue. âMakeup! Not as in âmaking up storiesâ. I didnât want you to think sheâs sitting there busy making up stories.â
Does she get paid to promote stuff? âYes. I donât get paid for normal posts. I like to post for my audience out of choice, not because Iâm getting paid for it. But then there are branded posts or PR posts that I would get paid for.â
Giddings: âBut itâs only brands that sheâs using already.â
Andre: âI would never promote a brand that I donât like or donât have an interest in.â Are you making a good living out of it? âYeah.â Are you wealthy? âWell, you could say so!â How much do you earn in a year? âI canât tell you that, sorry.â
The most important brand is, of course, Andre herself. She prides herself on being natural (no fillers, no Botox), but stresses that itâs neither a political nor a permanent position. When she was training as a beautician, it was an area of interest. âI would have loved to have done that as a job,â she says. âI was going to go into aesthetics, doing other peopleâs fillers and stuff, âcos the way it works interests me. But personally I donât think I will get any, just because my audience is so young. I want to be an inspiration for them. You should love yourself for you and not have to change yourself.â
Has her mother, who has had numerous surgical augmentations and reductions, advised her on this? âYeah. Mum said: âDonât ever get anything done to yourself. Youâre so beautiful the way you are.â I found that interesting because I get told I look a lot like her at a young age. Sheâll say to me: âIn that picture, you look just like me when I was younger.ââ Does she think Price regrets all her surgery? âNo. There are pictures that Iâve seen of her before [surgery] and I was like: âYou look so beautiful then,â and sheâs like: âNo!â She doesnât see it. So I donât think she does regret it.ââ
In her show, Andre says she wishes her childhood had been happier, but she doesnât go into details. Today, I ask if she can explain a bit more. Instead, she chooses to explain a bit less, telling me that she has so many happy memories from childhood â holidays, riding horses, having fun with her siblings. You sense she wants to give just enough to satisfy reality TV, but not so much that she ransacks her privacy.
I ask again about the unhappiness. âOh!â she says. Giddings prompts her. âYou talk about South Africa in the show.â
âOh yeah, we got hijacked in South Africa when I was 10 and [her brother] Junior was 12. I was terrified. We were filming for a show with mum and her best friend.â It does sound terrifying. They were surrounded by six gunmen and her mother was sexually assaulted. âItâs one of the worst things Iâve experienced in my life. You donât think of anything else apart from trying to survive it. The police said it was a miracle that we all survived.â
It still affects her. âI get scared of the dark and driving at night-time, âcos thatâs when it happened. I get random flashbacks. If Iâm driving at night, Iâm like: âOh my God, just get me home.â I donât even look behind me.â
There are other sources of unhappiness that she prefers not to go into: her parents splitting up; Priceâs separation from her third husband, Kieran Hayler, the father of two of Andreâs siblings. She had been close to Hayler, but now they donât see each other. Many of Priceâs reality shows were set in the aptly named Mucky Mansion, a nine-bedroom property in Sussex formerly owned by Price. Did Andre like living there? âNo. It was a really scary house. A lot went on there. So I didnât really like it.â Again, she doesnât go into details. âI guess when you have bad experiences somewhere you donât like the place.â
A few years ago, Price experienced severe depression and became suicidal. In 2021, she had a terrible car crash while under the influence of alcohol and drugs. By this point, Andre and Junior had been living with their father full-time for three years. âThere was a period of time when me and Junior actually had to live with my dad,â she says, referring to a 2019 family court order made public this week by her father. (In response, a spokesperson for Price said she was âat peace with the situationâ.)
Andre says Price is in a much better place; she moves between their homes depending on how she feels. âDadâs house is a lot quieter, a lot more peaceful, a lot more organised. Whereas my mumâs house is much more just do what you want.â Does she prefer discipline or chaos? âI love being in the middle. I love the two different houses, because if I fancy a bit more chaotic and busy Iâll go to Mumâs and if I fancy more relaxed Iâll go to Dadâs.â
Has her father been a stabilising influence? She looks at Giddings anxiously. âThis is going to come across really bad, isnât it?â she asks. âLike, itâs talking about how Mumâs a mess and Dad is stable, dâyou know what I mean?â Itâs touching how protective she is of Price. She turns back to me. âRight now, Mum is completely different to how she was four years ago. If weâre talking about the past, yes, my dad was more stable and Mum is naturally more crazy than my dad.â
âNot crazy!â Giddings corrects. âOut there!â
âIf you saw her now, sheâs way different,â Andre says.
She talks about how close she is to all seven of her siblings, giving a special mention to Theo and Millie, the eldest of Peter and MacDonaghâs children, who are born entertainers, she says. Has she learned a lot from growing up with Harvey, Priceâs eldest child, who is severely disabled and a reality star in his own right? Her eyes light up. âYes, 100%. You learn patience. Ways of communicating. How to deal with his outbursts. How to calm him down. And as much as he is hard work, he is the funniest person I know.â I ask if he is still into trains. âHe loves trains. He loves frogs. He loves rainbows. And food.â
âWell, youâve got that in common,â Giddings says.
I mention the stories that have just been published online, saying Price is upset with Andre. The thing is, Andre says, there will generally be some truth in the tabloid tales, but it wonât be the truth. Take the reality show. While itâs true that Price wasnât filmed for it, we do hear mother and daughter chatting lovingly on the phone. âThereâs been a lot of articles about âPrincess doesnât want her mum in the showâ,â she says. Why was that decision made? âThere was actually no decision, really. But because Iâm living with Dad at the moment, he was in it more.â Well, that and the fact that her management team is also Andreâs management team. âIt was never true that I said I didnât want her in it,â she insists.
As for the idea of Peter Andre and Price being in it together, that never would have happened. âThey donât like each other,â she says, simply. Which takes us to Birthdaygate. Yes, itâs true that Price wasnât invited to the party Princess had with Peterâs family, but that was never on the cards. âIt would be quite strange for my mum and dad to be in it at the same time, just because thatâs never been the case in my life since they split up.ââ The reality is she would usually spend part of her birthday with each parent, she says. âThe problem is the media like to twist the knife,â she says.
Ah, but this time it isnât the media twisting the knife, Giddings says. âIt was your mum that put that story out there.â
âYeah,â Andre says, searching for a diplomatic response. âWhich is ⦠interesting.â
âThat was Kate that said all of that about her and her family not being invited,â Giddings continues.
Why donât you just ring your mum and ask her what she is playing at, I suggest. No, she says, itâs not worth it. âMum can be annoyed about something and then we send each other a message and weâre fine.â
Blimey, I say, itâs not easy having parents is it? âNo,â she says. âEspecially divorced parents.â
Andre hopes her reality show is the gateway to a successful business career. She says she understands the positives and the pitfalls. âNo matter what I do in my life, Iâll get compared to my mum. I guess itâs always going to be a headline.â And now itâs up to Andre to show the world whether that has been her fortune or misfortune.
The Princess Diaries is on ITVX now