Through her father, Devyani was born as a member of the Rana dynasty.[citation needed] Her mother, Usha Raje Scindia, is the daughter of Jivajirao Scindia, Maharaja of Gwalior.[1] She has one sibling, her older sister, Urvashi Khemka (née Urvashi Rajya Lakshmi).
Reports of Crown Prince Dipendra wanting to marry her
Dipendra was in the United Kingdom between 1987 and 1990, and his local guardian was Sir Jeremy Bagge, 7th Baronet,[3] whose son was also at Eton. Bagge's daughter was a friend of Devyani who was also studying in Britain.[4] Dipendra and Devyani met at the Bagges' Norfolk home, and Dipendra quickly fell in love with her and asked her to marry him. However, Dipendra's parents, and especially his mother Aishwarya Rajya Lakshmi Devi Shah (born Rana), opposed the marriage.[4][5]
According to an article in The New Yorker on 30 July 2001 and other published reports, the refusal of Dipendra's parents to consent to this marriage was the cause of the massacre of the royal family in Nepal.[6] However, a 2009 report based on an interview with his cousin Paras Shah suggested that there may have been other reasons as well,[7] with other theories alleging that Dipendra was unhappy with the country's shift from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy, and that too much power had been given away following the 1990 People's Movement.[6] A book, Maile Dekheko Darbar, by the former Secretary to King Birendra suggests that Dipendra may have had significant personality problems.[8]
Post-massacre
Devyani Rana fled from India immediately after the royal massacre to escape media attention. In 2004, Rana obtained a second master's degree from the London School of Economics. She was reported to have been working for the United Nations Development Programme in India in 2012.[9] In 2014, she became Government and Corporate Affairs Director for India and the Asian subcontinent at Caterpillar Inc., and in 2021 she moved to Coca-Cola India as Vice President, Public Affairs, Communications and Sustainability for India and Southwest Asia.[10]
Personal life
On 23 February 2007, Rana married Yuvaraj Aishvarya Singh, the son of HH Maharaja Bhuvaneshwar Prasad Singh and HH Maharani Veena Singh of the erstwhile state of Singrauli. Aishvarya is the grandson of former Indian Human Resources Minister Arjun Singh, a royal from the state of ChurhatThikana.[11] The wedding took place at the Scindia Villa, New Delhi.[12]
Keerthi Reddy portrayed Devyani in the 2002 Indian film Super Star, which was loosely based on the 2001 royal massacre.[14]
Indian actress Pracchi Mehta Shah portrayed the role of Devyani Rana in the third season of the documentary series Zero Hour. It showed a reconstruction of the massacre based on accounts of surviving eyewitnesses.[15]
^Amy Willesee & Mark Whittaker (2004). Love & Death in Kathmandu A Strange Tale of Royal Murder, 1st U.S. ed. New York : St. Martin's Press, 2004. ISBN1-84413-558-6 / 1-84413-558-6