Emma Corrin has revealed she was hospitalised after shooting a scene for Season 4 of The Crown.
The actress, who stars as young Princess Diana in the latest season of the Netflix show, told Glamour UK of the health scare. She explained how she is asthmatic and had been unwell with a cough prior to shooting a scene in a swimming pool on location in Spain.
READ MORE: How The Crown's Emma Corrin and Josh O'Connor unpacked the 'Charles and Diana' fairy tale
"I had to film a scene in a freezing-cold swimming pool, with the kids playing William and Harry," she said. "It was honestly the hardest scene to film because I was genuinely keeping myself alive treading water, and also keeping five-year-old 'Harry' alive, as we found out he couldn't swim!
"We were meant to be flying back that night to the UK, so we went past a hospital to get me antibiotics. The doctors gave me an oxygen test and said, 'We cannot let you go because your oxygen levels are so low,' so I was hospitalised."
Corrin kept a low profile at the hospital until nurses managed to piece together who she was.
"I remember the nurses figuring out what I was filming and saying, 'We know you're playing Princess Diana, would you like us to put a cardboard bag over your head so no one recognises who you are?' in broken English," she recalled.
The fourth season of the hit show landed on Netflix on November 15 and delves into Princess Diana's entrance and involvement in the royal family, including her engagement to Prince Charles, the couple's 1983 tour of Australia and Diana's eating disorder battle.
Corrin told 9Honey Celebrity that despite her initially thinking of it as a "difficult place to go," she believed it was crucial to honour the late Princess and her experience with bulimia.
"I very much wanted the scenes to be included. I also thought that for her storyline, to do it justice properly, you couldn't shy away from it," she said. "Everything she was going through very much tied in with her bulimia. It was symptomatic of it, and also it caused a lot of it.
"I think these things should be depicted on screen, 100 per cent. I don't think you should shy away from them, I don't think they should be alluded to, and I think they need to be shown in full."
If you, or someone you know, are struggling with an eating disorder, you can find help, support and resources through The Butterfly Foundation: 1800 33 4673
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMifmh0dHBzOi8vY2VsZWJyaXR5Lm5pbmUuY29tLmF1L2xhdGVzdC90aGUtY3Jvd24tZW1tYS1jb3JyaW4taG9zcGl0YWxpc2VkLWR1cmluZy1wcm9kdWN0aW9uLzM2MjY1MzcyLWM3NWMtNDdkZi1iYjMzLWE1NTY3NmU5MzQzZtIBRGh0dHBzOi8vYW1wLm5pbmUuY29tLmF1L2FydGljbGUvMzYyNjUzNzItYzc1Yy00N2RmLWJiMzMtYTU1Njc2ZTkzNDNm?oc=5
2020-11-16 01:16:00Z
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