REPORTER’S
NOTEBOOK
‘The Crown’ Could Have Damaged Charles. Becoming
King Has Helped.
The latest season of the Netflix drama depicts
Charles’s contentious divorce from Diana, but in Britain, several prominent
figures and the news media have rallied behind him.
Mark
Landler
By Mark
Landler
Mark
Landler is the London bureau chief of The New York Times.
Dec. 2,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/02/arts/television/the-crown-king-charles.html
LONDON —
Six months ago, the new season of “The Crown” was shaping up as another
public-relations headache for Prince Charles. The timeline of the popular
historical drama had reached the 1990s, which meant that it was going to
dissect the collapse of his marriage to Diana, Princess of Wales, an unwelcome
exhumation of the most painful, mortifying chapter of his adult life.
Some
advising the prince were pondering how to counter the narrative, according to
people with knowledge of the workings of Buckingham Palace, worried that it
could tarnish the reputation of a man who, in recent years, had come to be
known less for his peccadilloes than for his embrace of worthy causes such as
climate change.
Yet now, as
Season 5 of the Netflix series has unspooled, it is clear that “The Crown” has
dealt Charles at worst a glancing blow. In a few cases, it has even cast him in
a positive light — celebrating, for example, his philanthropy, in an episode
that ended with a charmingly awkward Charles (played by Dominic West) break
dancing at an event for his charity, the Prince’s Trust.
What
changed, of course, is that two months before the new season arrived, Prince
Charles became King Charles III.
His
ascension transformed the star-crossed heir into a dignified sovereign and
Britain’s head of state. London’s tabloid papers, which once dined out on every
morsel of Charles’s messy personal life, now have little appetite for
embarrassing the sitting monarch. On the contrary, most prefer to focus on how
gracefully the new king has succeeded his revered mother, Queen Elizabeth II.
King
Charles III standing vigil with the coffin of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II,
in London in September. He has been praised in the British news media for his
handling of the transfer of power.Credit...Pool photo by Dominic Lipinski
Then, too,
there is the show’s unapologetic mixing of fact and fiction, which drew
sporadic complaints when it dealt with events of the more distant past, but has
reached a kind of critical mass when it comes to depicting the well-worn saga
of Charles and Diana’s marriage.
Their story
was extravagantly covered at the time and is vividly remembered by millions of
people, especially in Britain. Some of those actually involved in the events
have voiced their outrage at the artistic license taken by the show’s creator,
Peter Morgan, calling the most recent season a “barrel-load of nonsense” and
“complete and utter rubbish.”
Those
critics — among them two former prime ministers, John Major and Tony Blair; a
famous actress, Judi Dench; and one of Charles’s biographers, Jonathan Dimbleby
(who called the show “nonsense on stilts”) — inoculated the king against some
of the damage he might otherwise have suffered. Rather than keeping the
spotlight on the tawdry events themselves, the critics shifted the focus to how
“The Crown” had embellished them.
“It is definitely
the case that this series of ‘The Crown’ has come in for greater backlash than
any previous series, particularly for its factual inaccuracies and the
treatment of the current monarch,” said Ed Owens, a historian who has written
about the interplay between the monarchy and the media.
For the
king, the chorus of outside detractors made it easier for him to ignore the
series, according to the people with ties to Buckingham Palace, who spoke on
condition of anonymity in line with royal protocol. That is how the royal
family handled the show’s previous four seasons. The king’s communications
secretary did not respond to a query about how the palace viewed the latest
season.
Whether the
palace had a role in orchestrating the critiques is harder to establish. There
are plenty of back-channel conversations — whether between palace officials and
prominent outsiders or between aides to the king and royal correspondents and
their editors.
The
season’s characters include the former prime ministers Tony Blair (Bertie
Carvel), left, and John Major (Jonny Lee Miller), both of whom have criticized
the show’s accuracy.Credit...Keith Bernstein/Netflix
“It will
doubtless have been clear to allies of the crown, including former prime
ministers, that there was some discontent and anxiety about the new season of
‘The Crown’ before it first aired,” Owens said.
But public
figures like Major also had an incentive to protect themselves. “The Crown”
depicts him and Charles holding a private meeting in which a frustrated prince
lobbies the prime minister for help in pushing the queen to abdicate because
she is superannuated and poses a threat to the monarchy’s survival. Such a
meeting would have raised constitutional issues, and Major says it never
happened.
“They’re
not doing the palace’s work for it,” said Dickie Arbiter, who served as a
spokesman for the queen from 1988 to 2000. “They are being besmirched and they
are defending themselves.”
But Arbiter
said that the palace should steer clear of litigating the facts itself. “You
start getting into ‘he said, she said,’” he noted. “You just give it oxygen.”
British viewers, he added, would recognize the factual discrepancies without a
warning.
“The only
difficulty is with the global audience, who will believe the royal family are
like that,” Arbiter added. “It’s your lot on the other side of the Atlantic
that believe every word of it.”
Just in
case there is any residual confusion at home, British papers, including the
Daily Telegraph and the London Evening Standard, have published detailed
fact-checking pieces. Some scenes, like the furtive tête-à-tête between Charles
and Major, have been comprehensively debunked.
Others,
like the underhanded tactics used by a BBC correspondent, Martin Bashir, to
persuade Diana to give him an interview, were judged to be mostly accurate, if
somewhat amped up for dramatic effect. Still others, like Charles’s attempt at
break dancing, did happen, if not when the series said they did.
Beyond the
specific facts, some people with ties to the palace argue that “The Crown” is
so obviously tilted against Charles that it is easy to dismiss. As evidence,
they cite the unequal treatment of two particularly cringe-worthy 1990s
scandals, named “Tampongate” and “Squidgygate” by the British news media.
The series,
they said, dwells on the prince’s extramarital affair with Camilla
Parker-Bowles, most luridly in an episode about an overheard phone call between
Charles and Camilla in which he tells her he wishes he could “live inside your
trousers,” perhaps by being reincarnated as a tampon.
But it
ignores a similar episode involving Diana, then still married, and her close
friend, James Gilbey, in which their intimate phone conversation was
surreptitiously picked up and published in The Sun newspaper. In it, Gilbey
called her by an instantly notorious nickname, Squidgy.
To some who
have worked in the palace, the season’s most glaring discrepancy involves not
Charles, but the queen. Morgan, who wrote the current season, doctored her
celebrated speech in November 1992, when she described that year as her “annus
horribilis.” Even in a speech suffused with regret, the queen made no mention
of the “errors of the past,” as Imelda Staunton does, in her portrayal of
Elizabeth.
Morgan, who
declined a request for an interview, has never denied taking license with the
facts in “The Crown.” Netflix describes the series as “fictionalized drama
inspired by true events,” though it has resisted calls to put a disclaimer on
each episode. Some critics have joked that if Morgan were serious about
accuracy, he would not have cast a handsome actor, like West, in the role of
Charles.
But it’s
not clear, even if the series were meticulously accurate, that the British news
media would be in the mood to re-air the dirty laundry of a man who is
Britain’s first new monarch since 1952. Charles has been widely praised for his
performance since taking the throne, including when trouble brewed at the
palace this past week.
That
trouble was set off by a royal aide when she repeatedly asked a Black woman
born in Britain, who had been invited to a reception at Buckingham Palace,
“Where are you from?” The reception guest, Ngozi Fulani, posted about the
encounter on Twitter, and within hours, the royal aide, Susan Hussey, who had
served as a lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth, resigned with “profound
apologies for the hurt caused.”
As it
happens, Hussey appears briefly as a character in “The Crown,” encouraging her
husband, Marmaduke, then the chairman of the BBC, to ask the broadcaster to
produce a laudatory program on the queen to cheer her up. (The BBC’s director
general at the time, John Birt, instead greenlighted the infamous Bashir
interview with Diana).
Royal
experts said that the palace’s swift reaction, and blunt condemnation, of
Fulani’s treatment showed that Charles was intent on demonstrating that he
would not tolerate any perception of racist behavior in the royal household. It
averted what could have been another cycle of punishing headlines for the
monarchy.
According
to Geordie Greig, a former editor of Tatler magazine and of The Daily Mail,
“The only conversations about the king are, ‘Isn’t he doing a great job?’”
Mark
Landler is the London bureau chief. In 27 years at The Times, he has been
bureau chief in Hong Kong and Frankfurt, White House correspondent, diplomatic
correspondent, European economic correspondent, and a business reporter in New
York. @MarkLandler
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