Sex, war, adultery and terror attacks – the eagerly awaited new series of The Crown enters the ’80s and delivers its most explosive storylines yet.
With the Queen’s four children grown up, they start making their way in the world just as the country undergoes a revolution under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher.
But the biggest revelation in the drama, which starts on November 15, is the introduction of Princess Diana to the story of The Windsors, who’s played by newcomer Emma Corrin.
The Sun ’s Rod McPhee looks at the show’s ten most shocking moments – and whether they’re more fact or fiction. If you don’t want any plot spoilers turn away now.
DICKIE’S “DYING” WISH
The series starts in Ireland in 1979 where the IRA carry out a horrific bomb attack on Prince Charles’s beloved great-uncle, Lord Louis Mountbatten.
Minutes before his death he writes to his great-nephew, scolding him for his ongoing fling with Camilla and says he must marry “some sweet and innocent well-tempered gal, with no past and who knows the rules … one that people will love as a princess and in due course, as queen”.
It’s not clear if Mountbatten, known to the royals as “Dickie”, wrote the Prince this letter before his assassination, or if it actually provided the motivation to find another woman.
But he had always pleaded with Charles to forget Camilla and wed an aristocratic virgin – and Diana fit the bill perfectly.
RELATED: Tragic death that brought Charles and Diana together
PRINCESS DI’S BULIMIA
Three of the ten episodes begin with warnings about scenes featuring the princess suffering from bulimia, which starts when she’s left alone by Prince Charles (Josh O’Connor) just before their 1981 wedding.
A reaction to the most stressful moments of her rocky relationship with Charles, for the next nine years she is seen gorging on food then making herself sick.
They are truly upsetting, but a necessary reflection of how deprived of love the princess was as her husband continued his affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles.
Di spoke of the eating disorder in her famous Panorama interview: “It was a symptom of what was going on in my marriage. I was crying out for help. It’s like having a pair of arms around you, but it’s temporary.”
RELATED: How Diana and Charles really met
MAGGIE’S ROYAL CLASH
After being swept to power, the Queen (Olivia Colman) tries to get to know her first female Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher (Gillian Anderson) by inviting her to Balmoral Castle.
Once there, the eccentric Windsors sneer at the grocer’s daughter, but the experience makes Maggie realise she needs to overhaul British society “from top to bottom”.
In The Crown she tells husband Dennis: “I’m struggling to find any redeeming features in these people at all. They aren’t sophisticated or cultured or elegant or anything close to an ideal.”
Maggie really did experience a clash of cultures when she visited Balmoral, and her time with the Queen partly fuelled her disdain for privileged upper classes – including the posh “Wet” ministers in her own cabinet.
THE QUEEN’S VISITOR
A whole episode is dedicated to Michael Fagan, the man who Her Majesty woke to find in her bedroom in 1982 – and single-handedly created one of the greatest royal security breaches in history.
The then 32-year-old Londoner broke into Buckingham Palace, twice, by scaling the barbed-wire-topped, 14ft wall of the building and shimmying up a drainpipe.
His first attempt failed, but his second gained him an audience with the Queen, who was left unprotected as her police guard swapped shifts and alarms malfunctioned.
The Crown claims he wanted to warn her that Mrs Thatcher was ruining Britain, but Fagan later admitted she instantly called security and bolted for the door.
He said: “She went past me and ran out of the room – her little bare feet running across the floor.”
ANDY SHOWS HE’S RANDY
The Crown makes a dig at Prince Andrew’s recent link with billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein by referencing Koo Stark, the US actress he dated from 1981 to 1983.
During one scene, “Randy Andy” – who’s just done active service in the Falklands War in 1982 – tells his mother about the 17-year-old girl she plays in the racy movie, The Awakening of Emily.
He says: “She meets several twisted and perverted older predators who seduce the vulnerable, helpless, young Emily as we follow her induction into sensual pleasures.”
The Queen asks if it’s legal and he replies: “Who Cares?”
Later Her Majesty laments how lost her children seem. She tells the Duke of Edinburgh: “As for Andrew, I’m shocked. If he doesn’t change …”
Andrew, now 60, has since been mired in the scandal surrounding Epstein. American Virginia Giuffre claims Epstein, who died in a jail cell, trafficked her for sex with the Prince when she was 17 and he was 41. The Duke categorically denies he had any form of sexual contact or relationship with Giuffre.
THE ARCTIC HUG
At the end of a turbulent tour of Australia with Prince Charles, an increasingly desperate Diana goes to visit the Queen and pleads for help.
As Her Majesty brings the uncomfortable meeting to a close, the teary Princess throws her arms around her mother-in-law in a bid to show how desperate she is.
But the Queen simply freezes, sticking her arms out like a scarecrow and is left dumbfounded by an act of heartfelt affection which is alien to her.
Although it’s not clear if this ever happened, it’s believed Diana did make several cries for help to the Queen as her marriage crumbled in the late ’80s, but most went unheard.
RELATED: The Crown’s most controversial character
CAMILLA ADMITS DEFEAT
From the moment Camilla Shand (later Camilla Parker Bowles) is introduced to The Crown, she’s a dominant figure cockily juggling the two loves of her life – Prince Charles and her husband, Andrew.
But by the late ’80s Princess Diana has seen her stock soar, and suddenly the heir to the throne’s mistress realises she’s the underdog.
In a heartbreaking scene Camilla tells Charles she can never be with the Prince permanently because competing with Di will see her “humiliated and attacked”.
She says: “That's what will happen if you put me in a popularity contest with her – I will lose. I’m an old woman, I’m a married woman, nowhere near as pretty, nowhere near as radiant. She will always defeat me in the court of public opinion.”
Camilla’s words have been borne out. Although she split from her husband in 1995, and Charles and Di divorced shortly after, she remained deeply unpopular with the public.
It would be another decade before she and the Prince of Wales married.
RELATED: MOMENT DIANA DISCOVERED CHARLES’S AFFAIR
QUEEN GETS POLITICAL
After pledging to protect the Commonwealth as a 21-year-old, an older Queen asks Margaret Thatcher to agree to pressuring South Africa into ending apartheid.
When the PM doesn’t comply, the Queen demands her press secretary, Michael Shea, allows a leak to a newspaper highlighting the strained relationship between monarch and first Minister.
Maggie reacts furiously, and the Queen realises she has to act to save face after appearing to act politically – a huge taboo for a royal. So she makes Shea her scapegoat, forcing him to take the blame and resign.
The palace have always denied this story, and the ex-press secretary has always maintained his departure from the palace was nothing to do with the scandal.
RELATED: News.com.au’s Wenlei Ma reviews season four of The Crown
CHARLES SLATES SIBLINGS
In a nod to how arrogant Prince Charles was becoming, he is seen taking a swipe at Prince Andrew on the day of his wedding to Sarah Ferguson.
When Andrew grumbles about the lack of media coverage of their big day, Charles says: “You can hardly blame the newspapers for wanting to write about something other than a fringe member of the family that will never be king.
“You’re fourth in line now, and by the time William’s had children, and his children have had children – fringe.”
Prince Edward, who witnesses the slight, remarks: “That was impressively c***y!”
But Prince Andrew is far from humble and is seen telling the Queen how much better he would be at being the “heir” and how jealous Charles is of his close relationship with the monarch.
PHILIP’S DIRE WARNING
One of the greatest conspiracy theories surrounding the 1997 death of Princess Diana in Paris is that it was orchestrated by the Duke of Edinburgh.
Mohamed Al Fayed claimed he took the drastic action as she was having the child of his son, Dodi, who was also killed in the infamous car crash.
And this series of The Crown ends with a sinister scene where Diana tells her father-in-law that she plans to leave Charles if they can’t patch up their marriage.
He responds in a menacing way, saying: “I wouldn’t do that if I were you … let’s just say, I can’t see it ending well for you.”
Diana asks: “I hope that isn’t a threat, sir?” Ominously, he doesn’t reply.
Though there’s no evidence that a conversation like this took place, it is known that the Duke wrote to Diana asking that she “help maintain the dignity of the Crown”, warning her “fit in or get out”.
But an inquest into the death of Diana concluded there wasn’t “a shred of evidence” that Philip had ordered the “execution” of the princess.
REVIEW
If the first three series of The Crown were uncomfortable viewing for the royal family, season four will be excruciating.
They are portrayed as cruel, neglectful, unscrupulous hypocrites who are not only disloyal to one another, but also terrifyingly out of touch with the country.
But what makes the latest instalment disturbing is what makes them the most sensational. By comparison, the first three seasons feel like prequels that were just building up this moment.
And the whole whirlwind inevitably revolves around the arrival of the late Princess Diana who is almost brought back to life by brilliant newcomer Emma Corrin.
From the shy smile, to the cocked head and whispered voice, the actress has perfectly captured the mouse that eventually roared.
As for the heartbreaking bulimia scenes, they’re explicit without being gratuitous.
Josh O’Connor plays second fiddle to her as Prince Charles, but he’s still impressive as her selfish, insensitive husband who can’t help but return to his mistress and true love, Camilla Parker-Bowles.
Meanwhile, the Queen desperately tries to keep their crumbling marriage together – not for the sake of love but the sake of the family’s reputation and the future of the Crown.
After an uncertain performance in series three, Colman really embodies Her Majesty this time round and, at times, is shockingly cold and intimidating.
That leads to some spectacular clashes with her Prime Minister, Mrs Thatcher, which sees Gillian Anderson deliver a passable Maggie, and a more human version of the ex-PM.
In one row, the Queen tells the PM that she’s worried her harsh policies may combat inflation and interests but says she’s worried about Britain’s “moral economy”.
But on the basis of her own family’s behaviour – particularly their treatment of Diana – it’s the Windsors who are left looking morally bankrupt.
The Crown season four premieres on Netflix on Sunday, November 15.
This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission
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2020-11-15 08:15:23Z
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