Poging GOUD - Vrij
The Crown returns-A behind the scenes look
The Australian Women's Weekly
|December 2019
As Oscar-winner Olivia Colman leads a whole new cast in the third season of the TV hit, Juliet Rieden investigates its clever fictionalisation of a monarchy still reigning.

As the relatively newly minted Duke and Duchess of Sussex fight for their right to privacy, Harry’s grandmother may well be steeling herself for another 10 episodes of The Crown. It would be at best flattering and at worst downright annoying to see your family’s life under the dramatic microscope, your most intimate and private moments fictionalized in a manner that makes them appear as fact.
What the royals really think of the hit show, if indeed they watch it, is not known, but, suffice to say, the Palace hackles rose when the show’s creator, Peter Morgan, recently suggested in a UK newspaper interview that he met with royal representatives four times a year to discuss his drama’s content. The Queen’s communications secretary, Donal McCabe, promptly lodged a letter to the newspaper countering the claim: “The Royal Household has never agreed to vet or approve content, has not asked to know what topics will be included, and would never express a view as to the program’s accuracy.”
So the question remains. Is The Crown fact or fiction? And the answer is surely we will never really know. But that doesn’t make this series any the less enjoyable, intoxicating or valid.
Of course, royalty has always been a mine of material for films, plays, books and television, but more often than not this happens when the subjects are long gone. What makes The Crown so fascinating and daring is that most of its characters are still very much with us and, as the time frame edges closer to present day, they are also extremely well known to the viewer.
Dit verhaal komt uit de December 2019-editie van The Australian Women's Weekly.
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