We adore love and even more so at Christmas, so we caught up with Mícheál O’Muircheartaigh to hear all about how he fell for his wife of 50 years Helena McDowell.
02.12.2020 - 07:39 / justjared.com
Helena Bonham Carter is weighing on the controversy surrounding The Crown.
Earlier this month, Princess Diana‘s brother, Earl Spencer, called out the program after seeing the depiction of his sister on the Netflix show.
British politician Oliver Dowden, who serves as the U.K.’s Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, also spoke out about the hit show, and urged Netflix to put a disclaimer before episodes of The Crown to tell viewers that the series is a fictionalization and they should
We adore love and even more so at Christmas, so we caught up with Mícheál O’Muircheartaigh to hear all about how he fell for his wife of 50 years Helena McDowell.
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The Crown” that states it is a work of fiction.The drama series faced calls from key British figures to make it as abundantly clear as possible to viewers that the events depicted in the show are fictional but based on actual historical events.
Gallery: The best TV shows of all time (Espresso) Prince Charming will be played by Rege-Jean Page, Guz Khan has been cast as Buttons, and Jimmy Akingbola will step into the role of Dandini. Filmmaker Richard Curtis, the co-founder of the Comic Relief charity, will executive produce the show, which Matt Lipsey will direct.
The Crown stars Olivia Colman and Helena Bonham Carter are to star in a socially distanced, virtual staging of pantomime classic Cinderella for BBC Two, with Richard Curtis executive producing.
Helena Bonham Carter is keen for The Crown to stress the show is”not a drama-doc” and events have been “dramatized”.U.K. Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden hit headlines over the weekend (November 28-29, 2020) with his revelation that he’s planning to write to Netflix to ask them to put a warning on the show, about Britain’s Royal Family, for viewers to make it clear that it’s dramatized.
The calls for Netflix to add a disclaimer to its hit royal seriesThe Crown don't appear to be dying down any time soon. Helena Bonham Carter —who plays Princess Margaret in seasons 3 and 4 —has now added her voice to the growing argument, saying that producers have a "moral responsibility" to tell viewers that it's a drama.
Helena Bonham Carter, who portrayed Princess Margaret for two seasons of The Crown, shared in a new interview that she believes the Netflix show should remind viewers that it is not a documentary.“It is dramatized. I do feel very strongly, because I think we have a moral responsibility to say, ‘Hang on, guys, this is not … it’s not a drama-doc, we’re making a drama,’” the actress, 54, said on “The Crown: The Official Podcast” on the Monday, November 30, episode.
Helena Bonham Carter, who plays Princess Margaret in The Crown, has weighed in on the debate surrounding the Netflix show’s dramatic interpretation of real-life events involving the British Royal Family.
on Netflix has upset some viewers, even those in leadership positions in the United Kingdom. The U.K.'s Culture Secretary, Oliver Dowden, spoke to the over the weekend about the dangers of not informing viewers of the fictional nature of the royal family drama. «It's a beautifully produced work of fiction, so as with other TV productions, Netflix should be very clear at the beginning it is just that,» he notes.
told The Mail on Sunday that he will write to the streaming giant amid mounting concerns that the royal family’s reputation is being soiled by fictionalized scenes on the show.“It’s a beautifully produced work of fiction, so as with other TV productions, Netflix should be very clear at the beginning it is just that,” the minister told the UK paper.“Without this, I fear a generation of viewers who did not live through these events may mistake fiction for fact,” he cautioned.Princess Diana’s
official Twitter account has turned off comments on a post about a charity after being flooded with vitriol.On Tuesday, the Clarence House Twitter account, which posts updates and photos about the Prince of Wales, 71, and the Duchess of Cornwall, 72, shared pictures of Camilla speaking to the staff and residents of a UK homeless charity.Unlike previous posts, the comments section has been shut down.
Prince Charles and Camilla’s official Twitter account recently turned off comments on a post about a charity after being flooded with vitriol. On Tuesday, the Clarence House Twitter account, which posts updates and photos about the Prince of Wales, 71, and the Duchess of Cornwall, 72, shared pictures of Camilla speaking to the staff and residents of a UK homeless charity.
The Crown as if they have taken a history lesson. Well, they haven’t.”Fair enough.