There has been much controversy over what’s fact and what’s fiction in the fourth season of “The Crown”, and a former royal insider is coming forward to explain what the new season got wrong in its depiction of Prince Charles and Princess Diana.
17.12.2020 - 22:18 / deadline.com
The Crown, whose latest season offers a provocative look at the meeting and matrimony of Prince Charles and Lady Diana in the 1980s, dominated Nielsen’s U.S. streaming chart for the week of November 16.
The show’s 40 available episodes racked up almost 3.4 billion minutes of viewing, the best Nielsen showing of any title since The Umbrella Academy last August. Two-thirds of that view time was devoted to Season 4, with viewing rocketing from a fifth-place showing in the previous week’s rankings,
There has been much controversy over what’s fact and what’s fiction in the fourth season of “The Crown”, and a former royal insider is coming forward to explain what the new season got wrong in its depiction of Prince Charles and Princess Diana.
The Crown took “artistic license” when exploring Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s relationship, former royal chef Darren McGrady exclusively told Us Weekly.The Royal Chef at Home author, 58, who was the personal chef to the royal family for 15 years, revealed that the first three seasons of the Netflix series were more accurate than the fourth.“My goodness, they really went for the artistic license,” he told Us in December while promoting his YouTube channel.
Meghan Markle spent her first Christmas with the British royal family in 2017, and broke the ice with a funny gag gift for Prince William.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markleliving in their Montecito, California, home, ET has learned that the royals will be conducting Zoom calls to check in with one another. «The family is planning Zoom calls and games online because they can’t all spend Christmas at Sandringham together like they normally do,» a source tells ET.
While it’s Prince Charles who’s up next in the line of royal succession, there are U.K. citizens who would prefer his son Prince William as king after Queen Elizabeth II’s reign ends. At least that’s according to a new poll released by YouGov, which found that the Duke of Cambridge’s popularity had grown in recent months.
making solo appearances amid the coronavirus pandemic, but it sounds like we could see more group gatherings as we head into 2021 thanks to the Queen's new "firm of eight." According to The Sun, Queen Elizabeth II has picked a select group of eight senior royals to make public appearances together in order to abide by her personal rule of "one must be seen to be believed."The group includes Prince William, Kate Middleton, Prince Charles, Duchess Camilla of Cornwall, Prince Edward, Countess
Prince William and Kate Middleton were reunited with the Queen in public for the first time since March on Tuesday night at Windsor Castle as they finished their Christmas tour of the UK.The Royal couple met with the monarch, 94, Prince Charles, 71, and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, 73, Prince Edward, 56, and Sophie Wessex, 55, and the Princess Royal, 70.
Prince William and Kate Middleton concluded their royal train tour by joining Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Edward, Sophie, Countess of Wessex, and Princess Anne in the quadrangle of Windsor Castle.The group -- who maintained six feet of separation throughout the event — was gathered to thank local volunteers and essential workers amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.The royal family enjoyed a performance by The Salvation Army UK band, before William and
Emerald Fennell just heard the rumor that Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, might watch The Crown!
The royal family have come together for their first full portrait of 2020. To close their royal train tour, which launched earlier this week, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrived at Windsor Castle to meet Prince Charles, Duchess Camilla, Countess Sophie and the Earl of Wessex, Princess Anne, and, of course, Queen Elizabeth II for a socially distanced holiday portrait.
That Princess Diana singing scene in season four of Netflix’s hit drama “The Crown” almost didn’t happen.
The Crown is slipping into very recent history and touching on some very sensitive subjects (read: Prince Charles and Princess Diana' entire relationship), there are increased calls for the show to add a disclaimer reminding audiences that it is, in fact, fiction. In response to disclaimer calls—including from U.K.
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.
turned off comments on a post about charity work after users replied with hateful jabs about the couple’s treatment of Diana.As for the future king, 39% viewers still have the same opinion of him as they did before, while 34% think better of him. Only Prince Andrew, whose alleged penchant for pedophilia was finally explored in Season 4, had consistently negative ratings.