Monday 26 April 2021

The Tension Between The Queen Mother & Prince Philip / Philip, the media and the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II





Millions across Britain watched the coronation live on the BBC Television Service, and many purchased or rented television sets for the event. The coronation of the Queen was the first to be televised in full; the BBC's cameras had not been allowed inside Westminster Abbey for her father's coronation in 1937, and had covered only the procession outside. There had been considerable debate within the British Cabinet on the subject, with Prime Minister Winston Churchill against the idea; but, Elizabeth refused his advice on this matter and insisted the event take place before television cameras, as well as those filming with experimental 3D technology. The event was also filmed in colour, separately from the BBC's black and white television broadcast, where an average of 17 people watched each small TV.




How Prince Philip courted the media, from the Queen’s coronation to his infamous ‘gaffes’

The Duke of Edinburgh was a central player in a key period for the British monarchy



Rather than inviting condemnation, Philip’s ‘gaffes’ appeared to only increase his popularity. An eyeroll, a wry chuckle, a ‘here he goes again’ (Photo: Yui Mok – WPA Pool/Getty Images)


By Laura Clancy

April 9, 2021 2:43 pm

 https://www.newsbreak.com/amp/samsung-daily/n/0ZCb1XcS


“It will democratise it, make them feel as though they share in it, understand it”, says Matt Smith’s version of Prince Philip in The Crown, during a scene in which he persuades the Queen (as played by Claire Foy) to allow her coronation to be televised.

 

As a member of the Coronation Executive Committee, Philip did indeed play a key role in staging the coronation spectacle. We’ll never know if he actually said Matt Smith’s words, but multiple royal biographers have claimed he did insist that the coronation was televised, despite politicians and the palace having serious reservations that live coverage might, in the words of nineteenth-century political analyst Walter Bagehot, “let in daylight upon magic”.

 

It seems impossible, now, to imagine a time when televising the coronation was even up for debate, and indeed Harry and Meghan’s wedding demonstrated that the public now expects a multi-media spectacular. But airing the coronation ceremony turned out to be a formative moment in the vast technological developments within media industries since the 1950s, which have transformed the way we watch and interact with the royals.

 

According to some sources, Philip was also key to the development of the infamous documentary Royal Family in 1969, which looked like what we would now recognise as reality television. Viewers were ‘treated’ to scenes of the royals enjoying a barbecue, with the Queen chopping salad and Philip frying sausages.

 

The film has since been redacted by Buckingham Palace and almost all footage removed from public archives, allegedly because it was “too intimate”. But at the time it was revolutionary – it showcased new fly-on-the-wall film-making techniques, and three quarters of the British population tuned in.

 

While there is no evidence (and it is, let’s face it, unlikely) that Philip had anything to do with the creation of the official Royal Family Twitter or Instagram accounts, he certainly seems to have been a central player in a key period of reinvention of which these social media pages are part. In order to stay relevant to a new generation of potential royalists, the monarchy had to move with the times.

 

Of course, given some of Philip’s more – shall we say – conservative viewpoints, it seems incongruous to suggest he ‘moved with the times’. His infamous ‘gaffes’ – as they have somewhat obsequiously been called – account for most of the media reporting of him during his decades as the Queen’s consort. Many of these ‘gaffes’ recall an age past: the late 50s or 60s perhaps, when unchecked racism was paired with a post-war conviction of British power and prestige.

 

It is particularly significant to be talking about this in the age of Trump and Brexit, when these sentiments made a comeback. But rather than inviting condemnation, Philip’s ‘gaffes’ appeared to only increase his popularity. An eyeroll, a wry chuckle, a ‘here he goes again’.

 

But ‘gaffes’ makes it appear like these comments are accidental; as though Philip simply ‘couldn’t be controlled’. The monarchy is a global institution at the heart of the British establishment – if it wanted to stop Philip making offensive comments, it would have.

 

Philip’s comments allowed the monarchy to appear authentic, as though it’s not entirely staged and scripted. They made royal events – run to a strict schedule and prepared to the minutest detail – look natural, informal. The ‘gaffes’ were as much a key part of democratising the monarchy as televising the coronation was, or as ‘Kate and Wills’ going on Radio 1 to discuss their favourite Netflix show was. It’s all part of remaking a populist monarchy for the celebrity age.

 

Philip was a central player in a key period for the British monarchy. The 20th century saw it forced to adapt to new tools of media culture, and learn to use them for its advantage. Whether successful like the coronation, or less so like Royal Family or the even more controversial It’s a Royal Knockout (if you haven’t seen it, prepare yourself), mass media has permanently altered our relationship to the royals.

 

As the monarchy continues to develop in the modern world, only time will tell how these lessons for monarchical PR play out.

 

Laura Clancy is a media academic at Lancaster University


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