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The Crown (TV series)

The Crown is a historical drama television series about the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, created and principally written by Peter Morgan and produced by Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures Television for Netflix. Morgan developed it from his drama film The Queen (2006) and especially his stage play The Audience (2013). The first season covers the period from Elizabeth's marriage to Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, in 1947 to the disintegration of her sister Princess Margaret's engagement to Group Captain Peter Townsend in 1955. The second season covers the period from the Suez Crisis in 1956 to the retirement of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1963 and the birth of Prince Edward in 1964. The third season spans 1964 to 1977, includes Harold Wilson's two periods as prime minister, and introduces Camilla Shand. The fourth season spans 1979 to 1990 and includes Margaret Thatcher's tenure as prime minister and Prince Charles' marriage to Lady Diana Spencer. The fifth spans 1991 to 1997 and covers John Major's tenure as prime minister and the breakdown of Charles and Diana's marriage. The sixth season, which will close the series, will cover the Queen's reign into the 21st century.

The Crown
GenreHistorical drama
Created byPeter Morgan
Starring
Theme music composerHans Zimmer
Composers
Country of origin
  • United Kingdom[1]
  • United States[2]
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes50 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Andy Stebbing
  • Martin Harrison
  • Michael Casey
  • Andrew Eaton
  • Oona O'Beirn
  • Faye Ward
Production locationUnited Kingdom
Running time47–61 minutes
Production companies
DistributorNetflix Streaming Services
Release
Original networkNetflix
Picture format4K UHDTV[3]
Original release4 November 2016 (2016-11-04) –
present (present)

For each of the two-season increments, new actors fill the roles to reflect the ageing process over the periods of time portrayed. Claire Foy portrays the Queen in the first two seasons, alongside Matt Smith as Prince Philip and Vanessa Kirby as Princess Margaret. For the third and fourth seasons, Olivia Colman takes over as the Queen, Tobias Menzies as Prince Philip, and Helena Bonham Carter as Princess Margaret. Also added to the cast in season three is Josh O'Connor as Prince Charles. In the fourth season, new cast members include Emma Corrin as Lady Diana Spencer and Gillian Anderson as Margaret Thatcher. Imelda Staunton, Jonathan Pryce, and Lesley Manville succeed Colman, Menzies, and Bonham Carter, respectively, for the final two seasons, while Dominic West and Elizabeth Debicki take the roles of Charles and Diana.

Filming took place at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, with location shooting throughout the United Kingdom and internationally. The first season was released by Netflix on 4 November 2016, the second on 8 December 2017, the third on 17 November 2019, and the fourth on 15 November 2020. The fifth season premiered on 9 November 2022.[4] As of 2020, the estimated production budget of The Crown has been reported to be $260 million, making it one of the most expensive television series ever.[5]

The Crown has been praised by critics for its acting, directing, writing, cinematography, and production values, though its historical inaccuracies have received some criticism, particularly with respect to the fourth and fifth seasons. It has received numerous accolades, including a total of sixty-three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for its first four seasons, winning twenty-one, including Outstanding Drama Series for its fourth season, and seven awards for the cast.[6] The series has also twice won the Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series - Drama, at the 74th and 78th ceremonies, with additional acting wins for Foy, Colman, Corrin, O'Connor, and Anderson.[7]

Plot

The Crown portrays the life of Queen Elizabeth II from her wedding in 1947 to Philip, Duke of Edinburgh,[8] until the early 21st century.[9][10]

The first season depicts events up to 1955, with Winston Churchill resigning as prime minister and the Queen's sister Princess Margaret deciding not to marry Peter Townsend.[11] The second season covers the Suez Crisis in 1956, leading to the retirement of Prime Minister Anthony Eden in 1957; the retirement of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1963, following the scandal of the Profumo affair; and the birth of Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex in 1964.[12][13][14]

The third season covers 1964 to 1977, beginning with Harold Wilson's election as prime minister and ending with the Queen's Silver Jubilee,[15] also covering Edward Heath's time as prime minister.[16] Camilla Shand is also introduced.[16] The fourth season is set during Margaret Thatcher's period as prime minister from 1979 to 1990 and also focuses on Lady Diana Spencer.[17]

The fifth season covers the period 1991 to 1997, and focuses on the "War of the Waleses" and the resulting divorce of Diana and Prince Charles, as well as the rise of the Al-Fayed family and the "annus horribilis" of Queen Elizabeth II in 1992.

Episodes

SeriesEpisodesOriginally released
1104 November 2016 (2016-11-04)
2108 December 2017 (2017-12-08)
31017 November 2019 (2019-11-17)
41015 November 2020 (2020-11-15)
5109 November 2022 (2022-11-09)

Cast and characters

Main

Featured

The following actors are credited in the opening titles of up to two episodes in a season:

Production

Development

In November 2014, it was announced that Netflix was to adapt the 2013 stage play The Audience into a television series.[19] Peter Morgan, who wrote the 2006 film The Queen and the play, is the main scriptwriter for The Crown.[20] The directors of the first season are Stephen Daldry, Philip Martin, Julian Jarrold, and Benjamin Caron.[21] The first 10-part season was the most expensive drama produced by Netflix and Left Bank Pictures to date, costing at least £100 million.[22][23][24] A second season was commissioned,[25][26] with the series intended to span 60 episodes over six seasons.[8] By October 2017, "early production" had begun on an anticipated third and fourth season,[27] and by the following January, Netflix confirmed the series had been renewed for third and fourth seasons.[17]

In January 2020, Morgan announced that the series had been renewed for a fifth and final season. Speaking to ending the series with five seasons, after it had been intended to last six, Morgan said while crafting the stories for season five, "it has become clear to me that this is the perfect time and place to stop"; Netflix and Sony supported Morgan's decision.[9] However, in July 2020, Netflix announced that the series would receive a sixth season as originally intended. Morgan said that when the storylines were being discussed for season five, "it soon became clear that in order to do justice to the richness and complexity of the story we should go back to the original plan and do six seasons". He added that the final two seasons would enable them "to cover the same period in greater detail".[28]

Casting

By November 2014, Claire Foy had entered negotiations to portray Queen Elizabeth II.[29] By May 2015, Vanessa Kirby was in negotiations to portray Princess Margaret.[30] In June 2015, John Lithgow was cast as Winston Churchill and Matt Smith was cast as Prince Philip, while Foy was confirmed as Queen Elizabeth II.[31] Also starring in the first season were Victoria Hamilton, Jared Harris, and Eileen Atkins.[32] Foy would reprise her role as the young Queen in cameos. As of 2022 this has happened both in season 4 and in season 5. For her appearance in "48:1", the 8th episode of series 4, Foy won an Emmy.[33][34]

The producers recast the continuing roles with older actors every two seasons, as the timeline moves forward.[35] In October 2017, Olivia Colman was cast as Queen Elizabeth II for the third and fourth seasons.[27] By January 2018, Helena Bonham Carter and Paul Bettany were in negotiations to portray Princess Margaret and Prince Philip, respectively, for these seasons.[36][14] However, by the end of the month Bettany was forced to drop out due to the time commitment required.[37] By the end of March 2018, Tobias Menzies was cast as Prince Philip for the third and fourth seasons.[38] In early May 2018, Bonham Carter was confirmed to have been cast, alongside Jason Watkins as Prime Minister Harold Wilson.[39] The next month, Ben Daniels was cast as Tony Armstrong-Jones for the third season,[40] along with Erin Doherty joining the series as Princess Anne.[41] A month later, Josh O'Connor and Marion Bailey were cast as Prince Charles and the Queen Mother, respectively, for the third and fourth seasons.[42] In October 2018, Emerald Fennell was cast as Camilla Shand.[43] In December 2018, Charles Dance was cast as Louis Mountbatten.[44] In April 2019, Emma Corrin was cast as Lady Diana Spencer for the fourth season.[45] Gillian Anderson, who had been rumoured since January 2019 to be in talks to portray Margaret Thatcher in the fourth season, was officially confirmed for the role in September 2019.[46][47][48]

In January 2020, Imelda Staunton was announced as succeeding Colman as the Queen in the fifth season, with her role in the final season reported in July.[9][28] Also in July 2020, Lesley Manville was announced as portraying Princess Margaret,[28][49] and the following month, Jonathan Pryce and Elizabeth Debicki had been cast as Prince Philip and Diana, Princess of Wales, respectively.[50][51] In October 2020, Dominic West was in talks to play Prince Charles.[52] His casting was confirmed in April 2021 when the start date for production of the fifth season was announced.[53] In June 2021, Jonny Lee Miller was cast as John Major.[54] During the same month, Olivia Williams confirmed during an interview that she had joined the cast as Camilla Parker Bowles for the series's fifth and sixth seasons.[55] In July 2021, actress Marcia Warren joined the cast during filming as Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother.[56] That same month, the casting of Claudia Harrison as Princess Anne was also confirmed.[57] In September 2021, Khalid Abdalla was announced to play Dodi Fayed and that Salim Daw would be portraying Mohamed Al-Fayed.[58] Later that month, it was confirmed that Timothy Dalton had been cast as Peter Townsend.[59] In January 2022, Humayun Saeed had been cast as Dr Hasnat Khan.[60]

A casting search for actors to play teenage Prince William and Prince Harry in the sixth season began in March 2022. The new actor for Prince William would replace Senan West, who was cast as a young Prince William for season five, with the other new castings for the fifth season expected to remain for the sixth season.[61] In April 2022, a casting call was posted for a young Catherine Middleton to be portrayed in the sixth season.[62]

In September 2022, it was announced that Rufus Kampas and Ed McVey will portray Prince William, and Meg Bellamy will portray Catherine Middleton.[63]

Gender pay gap controversy

The Left Bank producers stated that Smith was paid more than Foy for the first two seasons, partly because of his Doctor Who fame.[64] This led to a gender pay gap controversy, including the creation of a petition asking Smith to donate the difference between his and Foy's salary to the Time's Up Legal Defense Fund.[65] Left Bank later apologised to Foy and Smith for putting them "at the center of a media storm... through no fault of their own". Left Bank also clarified that they "are responsible for budgets and salaries; the actors are not aware of who gets what, and cannot be held personally responsible for the pay of their colleagues". They added that they support "the drive for gender equality in film and TV and [were] eager to talk to the British Time's Up campaign and [were] already speaking to Era 50:50, a group campaigning for gender equality on screen and stage".[66] Suzanne Mackie, Left Bank's creative director, did note that in future no actor would be paid more than the actress portraying the Queen.[64] Regarding the controversy, Foy was "not [surprised about the interest in the story] in the sense that it was a female-led drama. I'm not surprised that people saw [the story] and went, 'Oh, that's a bit odd'. But I know that Matt feels the same that I do, that it's odd to find yourself at the center [of a story] that you didn't particularly ask for."[67] Smith noted that he supported Foy and was "pleased that it was resolved and [the producers] made amends for it because that's what needed to happen". The Hollywood Reporter noted it was unclear what Smith was referring to as resolved, since Netflix and Left Bank had not commented further.[68] Foy later described reports that she had received backpay to bring her salary up to parity as "not quite correct".[69]

Filming

An estimated 25% of the first season was filmed at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, with the remainder filmed on location, altogether taking 152 days. Sets for private quarters, the interior of a private jet, the cabinet room, and the exterior of 10 Downing Street, were built at Elstree Studios,[26][70] while Lancaster House, Wrotham Park and Wilton House were used to double as Buckingham Palace. Ely Cathedral and Winchester Cathedral stood in for Westminster Abbey, while locations in South Africa doubled as Kenya.[26] Additional locations in the UK included Belvoir Castle,[71] Waddesdon Manor, Eltham Palace, the Royal Naval College,[72] Goldsmiths' Hall, Shoreham Airport, New Slains Castle,[73] Balmoral Castle, Cruden Bay, Lyceum Theatre, Loseley Park, Hatfield House,[70] The Historic Dockyard Chatham,[74] Southwark Cathedral, Ardverikie House, Englefield House, Wellington College, the Great Central Railway and the Glenfeshie Estate.[75] Filming on the second season began in early October 2016.[35] Each episode of the first two seasons would shoot for about 22 days, with each costing about £5 million to produce.[64] The third season began filming in July 2018,[76] and concluded in February 2019. The fourth season began filming in August 2019 and wrapped in March 2020.[77][78] Shooting locations used to double foreign settings included Manchester (New York City), Málaga and Almería (Sydney and other Australian settings), as well as Atlanterra, Cádiz (Mustique).[79] The filming of the fifth season began in July 2021.[80] The year break in filming between the end of season four and the start of season five was built into the series's production schedule and was not related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[81] On 16 February 2022, items previously used in the series's production worth £150,000 were stolen from three vehicles, most of which were described to have "limited value for resale", but "are valuable as pieces to the UK film industry".[82][83] Locations featured in series five included Cobham Hall, which doubled as Eton College, and the Historic Dockyard at Chatham, both in Kent.[84] Filming for the sixth season began in August 2022,[61] but Morgan noted he expected it to stop for a period of time in September following the death of Elizabeth II "out of respect".[85] In October 2022, it was reported that the events just before and right after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales in Paris would be filmed for season six.[86]

The re-enactment of the removal of King George VI's cancerous lung, originally performed by Sir Clement Price Thomas, was researched and planned by Pankaj Chandak, a specialist in transplant surgery at Guy's Hospital, London. Chandak and his surgical team then became part of the actual scene filmed for the show.[87] The surgical model of King George VI was donated to the Gordon Museum of Pathology in King's College, London for use as a teaching aid.[88]

Historical accuracy

The series has been both commended and criticised for its depiction of historical events.[89]

Season 1

Though the show depicted a dispute over Michael Adeane being the natural successor to Tommy Lascelles as the Queen's private secretary, this did not, in reality, happen; Martin Charteris accordingly took the role in 1972.[90][91]

Churchill's wife Clementine is depicted as overseeing the burning of her husband's portrait by artist Graham Sutherland shortly after Churchill's retirement. In reality, the painting was destroyed by the brother of their private secretary, Grace Hamblin, without the involvement of Hamblin herself.[90][92]

Royal biographer Hugo Vickers denied that Princess Margaret had acted as monarch while the Queen was on tour, and claimed that her speech at the ambassador's reception never happened. Charteris was on tour with the Queen and not in London during these events. The Queen Mother bought the Castle of Mey a year earlier than depicted on the show, and often looked after Prince Charles and Princess Anne while the Queen was away.[90][93]

The show has been interpreted as perpetuating the idea that the Queen and Churchill forced Princess Margaret to give up her plan to marry Peter Townsend, and depicted the Queen informing her that, due to the Royal Marriages Act 1772, she would no longer be a member of the family if they married. However, there is clear evidence that, in reality, efforts had been made by the Queen and Anthony Eden in developing a plan which would have allowed Princess Margaret to keep her royal title and her civil list allowance, stay in the country, and continue with her public duties. But she would have been required to renounce her rights of succession and those of her children.[94]

Season 2

After season two was released, Peggy Noonan of The Wall Street Journal commented on its historical inaccuracy, and argued for "more truth in art and entertainment".[95] Baron Nahum, for instance, continued to be featured in the season, but in reality had died in 1956.[96] The show also depicts the Queen as giving a speech at a Jaguar factory, when in reality there is no evidence that she gave a speech there. Similarly, while it is possible that she might have met Lord Altrincham to discuss his article, there is no record of it.[90][97]

Vickers wrote that the Queen did condemn the Duke of Windsor after she read the Marburg Files, but suggested that the series gave the false implication that the Duke was banished from the royal family upon publication. In reality, the Duke remained in contact with his family, and his public appearances continued.[90]

The depiction of the relationship between the American First Lady Jackie Kennedy and the royal family also drew criticism as inaccurate; reports from the time indicate that she had described Prince Philip as "nice but nervous", with no real bond between them.[98] The implication that the Queen visited Ghana to compete with Kennedy's popularity was ridiculed by critics.[99] Reviews noted that that episode ignored more significant events, such as President Kennedy's sister-in-law Lee and her husband Prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł's initial exclusion from the banquet invitation list due to their divorcee status; they were eventually invited,[100] although Princess Margaret and Princess Marina did not attend, despite the Kennedys apparently wanting to meet them.[101]

Gordonstoun School responded to its negative portrayal, claiming that Prince Charles's personal feedback to the school had been overwhelmingly positive.[102] Vickers said that the same episode inaccurately depicted Prince Philip's sister's death in a plane crash as having arisen from his own misbehaviour at Gordonstoun: "It is beyond me how serious film-makers would wish to turn such a dreadful tragedy into a series of invented scenes bearing no relation to the truth".[102] Vickers later added that Philip considered suing the show's producers over the inaccurate portrayal of his sister's death and its aftermath.[103]

Phil Owen of The Wrap saw dry comedy in Northam's portrayal of Prime Minister Eden, stating: "I'm assuming that creator Peter Morgan meant for it to be comedy. There's really no other explanation for why Jeremy Northam played Prime Minister Anthony Eden like he's having a nervous breakdown in every scene."[104]

Season 3

The Queen did not visit Churchill following his final stroke. Vickers claims that by then he was senile and incapable of holding a conversation.[105] Anthony Blunt's exposure as a Soviet spy also drew criticism. Vickers noted that the episode did not mention that he was publicly exposed in 1979 and stripped of his knighthood, while also noting that he never resided at Buckingham Palace and ridiculing a scene in which he discusses his exposure with Prince Philip in an attempt to blackmail the royal family.[90][106]

The depiction of the relationship with President Johnson has been criticised. It has been suggested that he did not refuse to attend Churchill's funeral, in response to Wilson's refusal to support the Vietnam War, but that he was genuinely unable due to poor health. His disappointment with Wilson's views on Vietnam had developed much later.[90][107] Historians also denied the episode's implication that no US president had ever been to Balmoral; Eisenhower had visited Balmoral while president in 1959.[108] Critics noted that the episode did not mention that Johnson had been the only president since Truman never to have met the Queen.[90][109] The implication that Johnson did not know who Princess Margaret was before her visit to America was also criticised.[90] The Princess did attend a White House dinner, but the details are mostly fictional (such as her carousing with Johnson and kissing him, dirty limericks, and helping secure a US bailout, which in fact had already been negotiated).[110][111] The depiction of Princess Margaret and President Johnson publicly insulting the late President Kennedy during the same White House dinner was seen as highly unlikely, as members of the Kennedy family, as well as John Connally, who was riding with Kennedy during the assassination, were reportedly among those who attended the dinner.[112]

The relationship with Princess Alice has also drawn criticism for Prince Philip's depiction as being estranged from his mother and objecting to her visiting London. In reality, he visited her regularly and often transported her by plane, and her depicted interview with a journalist from The Guardian never happened. Vickers also stated that the same episode ignored that Prince Philip encouraged her to move to London permanently.[105]

Prince Charles did visit the Duke of Windsor in Paris in 1972,[113] although the depiction of the letters concerning his affections for Camilla was criticised: the Prince and Camilla had met, but were not intimately close during the Duke's lifetime.[89][105] The Queen did visit the Duke ten days before his death, but this had been long-planned and not requested at short notice.[105] Simpson was not with the Duke when he died.[90][114]

The timeframe of Woods's posting as Dean of Windsor around the time of the Apollo 11 spaceflight and lunar landing in July 1969 is inaccurate, as he had taken the role in 1962.[115][90] Prince William of Gloucester had also died five years before the Queen's Silver Jubilee.[90]

It has been suggested that there was no plot by the palace to prevent Prince Charles and Camilla's marriage, with Camilla's love for Andrew Parker Bowles being genuine, and Prince Charles unable to decide.[90][116] It has also been suggested that Princess Anne's relations with Andrew Parker Bowles did not overlap with Prince Charles and Camilla's introduction. Reviews of the episode noted that it ignored more significant events, citing Princess Anne's 1973 wedding to Captain Mark Phillips and her attempted kidnapping in 1974.[89]

Season 4

Vickers further argued that season four is "yet more subtly divisive than earlier seasons", with "pretty much every character" shown as "dislikeable", and that "every member of the royal family ... comes out of it badly, except the Princess of Wales".[117] He also called season four the least accurate season in the series.[118] Royal commentator Emily Andrews said that "sources close to Prince Charles" have labelled some of the scenes "trolling on a Hollywood budget".[119] It was also reported that Prince Charles and Camilla turned off comments on their Instagram and Twitter accounts, such was the intensely negative reaction to their portrayals.[118]

Throughout the season, the Private Secretary to the Sovereign is portrayed as Sir Martin Charteris, yet in reality, he retired in 1977.[120]

The opening scene when Prince Charles first meets Diana is fictionalised, although they did meet during a date with her sister. Vickers has stated that Prince Charles had no personal contact with Camilla during the first five years of his marriage; their relationship developed after 1986, by which time the marriage had broken down.[117] The frenzy around Prince Charles and Diana's Australian tour is accurately depicted, including his feelings of being overshadowed by Diana, which have been confirmed by multiple sources. Diana's former press secretary has confirmed their fractious relationship when away from the media.[121] Their schedule was never revised to accommodate Prince William, and the sheep station was arranged for them in advance by the former Australian Prime Minister, specifically so that the couple could be with their son each night.[117] According to Dickie Arbiter, the meeting in which Sir John Riddell, the Prince of Wales's private secretary, questions Diana's mental fitness before her solo trip to New York never happened.[122]

Mountbatten did not write to the Prince of Wales shortly before he died, although he had written advising him in the past.[117] The newsreel clips of Northern Ireland shown alongside Mountbatten's assassination included events that had happened years earlier, and others that had not yet occurred.[123]

Vickers suggested that almost all the details concerning how visitors are treated at Balmoral are inaccurate, and noted that the Thatchers' first visit is depicted out of sequence with Mountbatten's funeral. The Thatchers did not enjoy their visits to Balmoral, but there is no evidence that the Prime Minister dressed inappropriately.[121] Diana's visit happened an entire year later, when the Queen was not present. He added that Diana was already familiar with royal etiquette, and would not have needed the intensive lessons given by Lady Fermoy that were portrayed in the show.[117]

Charles Moore, Margaret Thatcher's biographer, deemed the scene where Thatcher begs the Queen to dissolve Parliament so she can stay on as PM "factual nonsense".[121] It is true, however, that she used to do her own ironing at Downing Street.[123] It is unlikely that Prince Philip ever mocked her for being a scientist, given his own interest in the sciences.[123] Mark Thatcher going missing during the Paris–Dakar Rally did not coincide with the Falklands invasion.[124]

Michael Fagan has said that his conversation with the Queen in the palace bedroom was "short, polite and non-controversial", and that he never spoke about Margaret Thatcher.[123]

The scene where the Queen guesses who the Prime Minister might appoint to cabinet is entirely fictional, nor would the PM have ever left a royal audience early or criticised the Queen for her privilege.[123] Vickers says that, in reality, it was the Queen's press secretary who took it upon himself to pass his own views about the Prime Minister to the media, and he was forced to leave the palace as a consequence.

The plot involving the family's relationship with the Bowes-Lyon sisters is largely inaccurate. Princess Margaret played no part in discovering their existence, nor did she confront her mother about this. John "Jock" Bowes-Lyon died six years before Edward VIII's abdication, and the sisters were placed in the Royal Earlswood Hospital by their mother Fenella in 1941. The Queen Mother believed her nieces to be dead until 1982 and upon discovering that they were alive, sent money for toys and sweets on their birthdays and at Christmas. According to the Bowes-Lyon family, there was never any attempt at a coverup.[125] The relationship between Princess Margaret and Father Derek "Dazzle" Jennings is also heavily fictionalised. Jennings did not have any involvement with the Bowes-Lyon sisters, and remained Princess Margaret's friend and spiritual advisor, with the Princess visiting his sickbed before he died in 1995.[126] Similarly, Princess Margaret's interest in Catholicism is underplayed; she did not convert, but Jennings was reportedly convinced she would, even going so far as to arrange for a dinner between the Princess and Cardinal Hume in 1988.[127]

Season 5

Ahead of its release, the former Prime Minister John Major publicly criticised the series, and Tony Blair's spokesman described the first episode of the season, where in 1991 Prince Charles is portrayed attempting to recruit John Major and Tony Blair to support the Queen's abdication in favour of him, as "complete and utter rubbish".[128][129] Major stated that no such conversation took place, and that the scene was "a barrel-load of malicious nonsense".[130] The Sunday Times article recorded that at the time nine out of ten people felt 'very favourably' or 'mainly favourably' about the Queen, while four in ten felt she should abdicate 'at some point in the future', rather than continue until her death.[131] In the same episode, Major suggests that the Queen should give up on the idea of having HMY Britannia refurbished or replaced at a time of national belt-tightening. Correspondence with his principal private secretary Alex Allan, however, shows that the decision was made "in the light of the current debate about the Royal Family and the Monarchy", which stemmed from high profile separations and divorces among family members.[132] The plot in episode two which shows James Colthurst run off the road by a white van and Andrew Morton finding his home ransacked is fictionalised.[132]

Episode three shows the Duke and Duchess of Windsor visiting Alexandria in 1946, where they are seen by a young Mohamed Al-Fayed from a distance. However, there is no record of the couple having visited Egypt that year.[132] The episode also suggests that Diana met Dodi Fayed during a polo match in the 1990s, but the two reportedly met during a match in 1986 where Charles was also present.[132] In episode three after the death of Wallis, Duchess of Windsor in 1986, Sydney Johnson the former valet for 30 years to her husband Edward VIII is deeply saddened and so his new employer Mohamed Al-Fayed takes him to visit her now dilapidated Paris home nicknamed Villa Windsor. Al Fayed is shocked to learn that the French government has seized the house with intent to auction it and its contents. Fayed purchases the estate from France and renovates everything as a gift to the Royal Family. A representative of the family arrives in place of a Royal visit, and requests all the restored items including the abdication desk, paintings and papers. Rather than being upset at the apparent snub Al-Fayed is instead overjoyed that his efforts have been recognised. The true circumstances however were different: the house had always been rented from the Paris Council, Al Fayed took a 50-year lease for $1m per year under the proviso that he would restore it; he was also allowed to keep the art and furniture to decorate it. She bequeathed the rest of her belongings, which had personal value to the Royal Family, as charity to the Pasteur Institute. Al Fayed paid $4.5m to acquire them at auction but was outbid on her jewellery which sold the following year for $50m. In 1998 he auctioned the Windsor Collection in aid of his and his sons' charities raising $23m.[133] The Royal Family were believed to have acquired all the items by bidding via proxies, finally returning the abdication desk (sale price $415,000), papers and other belongings to the family.

Episode four, which covers the Queen's annus horribilis speech, shows her acknowledging "the errors of the past" in her speech, none of which occurred during the lunch at the Guildhall.[132] The episode also incorrectly depicts Princess Margaret appearing on Desert Island Discs, whereas she was a guest on the show in 1981. Additionally, her initial reunion with Peter Townsend had occurred in 1978, not in the 1990s.[132] The scene in the next episode which depicts Prince Charles breakdancing in the mid 1990s is inspired by a charity visit by the prince in 1985.[132] Episode six features the execution of the Romanov family and portrays King George V refusing to offer political asylum to the Russian imperial family at the advice of his wife Queen Mary, who is shown to have opposed the idea because the tsarina was pro-German. Government papers released in the 1980s show that it was George himself who opposed the idea due to the tsar's unpopularity in Britain.[132]

Episode eight shows Diana warning the Queen about her forthcoming Panorama interview, but it has been reported that in reality the interview had surprised the royal family, with no advance warning.[132] A scene in episode ten that shows Charles confronting the Queen about the prospects of her abdication is an invention, but the prince did privately meet Prime Minister Blair during the handover of Hong Kong, although the meeting was brief.[132]

Release

The series's first two episodes were released in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2016.[134] The first season was released worldwide in its entirety on 4 November 2016.[135][136] The second season was released on 8 December 2017.[137] The third season was released on 17 November 2019.[138] The fourth season was released on 15 November 2020.[139] The fifth season was released on 9 November 2022.[81][4]

The first season was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2017[140] and worldwide on 7 November.[141] The second season was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 22 October 2018[142] and worldwide on 13 November 2018.[143] The third season was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 2 November 2020[144] and worldwide the following day.[145] The fourth season was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2021[146] and worldwide the following day.[147]

Reception

Critical response

Critical response of The Crown
SeasonRotten TomatoesMetacritic
188% (77 reviews)[148]81 (29 reviews)[149]
289% (85 reviews)[150]87 (27 reviews)[151]
390% (100 reviews)[152]84 (30 reviews)[153]
495% (111 reviews)[154]86 (28 reviews)[155]
571% (101 reviews)[156]65 (37 reviews)[157]
 
John Lithgow won multiple awards for his performance as Winston Churchill.

The Crown has been praised as a drama, being described by The Telegraph as "TV's best soap opera" and given a 5/5 rating, although some reviewers, such as in The Times, raised concerns that some of the episodes are based on false premises.[158][90] The series received an overall score of 87% on Rotten Tomatoes and 80 on Metacritic.[159][160]

For the first season, review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported 88% approval based on 74 reviews with an average rating of 8.6/10. Its critical consensus reads, "Powerful performances and lavish cinematography make The Crown a top-notch production worthy of its grand subject."[148] Metacritic gives the season a score of 81 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[149] For the second season, Rotten Tomatoes reported 89% approval from 85 reviews, with an average rating of 8.3/10: "The Crown continues its reign with a self-assured sophomore season that indulges in high drama and sumptuous costumes."[150] Metacritic holds a score of 87 out of 100, based on 27 critics, with "universal acclaim".[151] For the third season, Rotten Tomatoes reported 90% approval based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of 8.5/10: "Olivia Colman shines, but as The Crown marches on in reliably luxurious fashion through time it finds space for the characters around her, providing ample opportunity for the appealing ensemble to gleam, too."[152] Metacritic gives a score of 84 out of 100 based on 30 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[153] For the fourth season, Rotten Tomatoes reports 95% approval from 111 reviews, with an average rating of 8.6/10. Its critical consensus reads: "Whatever historical liberties [the season] takes...are easily forgiven thanks to the sheer power of its performances – particularly Gillian Anderson's imposing take on The Iron Lady and newcomer Emma Corrin's embodiment of a young Princess Diana."[154] On Metacritic, the season holds a score of 86 out of 100 based on 27 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[155] For the fifth season, Rotten Tomatoes reports 71% approval from 101 reviews, with an average rating of 6.75/10. Its critical consensus reads: "In its fifth season, it's hard to shake the feeling that this series has lost some of its luster – but addictive drama and a sterling cast remain The Crown's jewels."[156] On Metacritic, the season holds a score of 65 out of 100 based on 37 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[157]

However, the series has also received backlash from British critics and the royal family. British reviewers have criticised the fourth season for being "inaccurate" and "anti-monarchy".[161][120][162] Simon Jenkins writing for The Guardian described it as "fake history", "reality hijacked as propaganda, and a cowardly abuse of artistic licence" which fabricated history to suit its own preconceived narrative, and argued that "Morgan could have made his point truthfully".[163] Royal biographer Sally Bedell Smith criticised the inaccuracies and negative portrayal of the royal family, stating, "Because The Crown is such a lavish and expensive production, so beautifully acted and cleverly written, and so much attention has been paid to visual details about historical events, viewers are tricked into believing that what they are seeing actually happened", concluding that "while the earlier seasons were period pieces, this is recent history, so it seems more cruel in its false depictions".[164] Following some negative reactions to the fourth season, British culture secretary Oliver Dowden suggested that the series should have a fiction warning at the beginning as a disclaimer.[165] During a 2021 appearance on The Late Late Show with James Corden, Prince Harry stated that he was comfortable with The Crown's portrayal of the royal family, noting that, while as a work of fiction it is "not strictly accurate", it does give a "rough idea" of the pressures of "putting duty and service above family and everything else". Harry also said that, if he was ever to feature on the series, he would like to be portrayed by Damian Lewis.[166][167]

After the Queen's death in 2022, calls grew for the fifth season to contain a disclaimer, given that it was being released so soon after the monarch's death. In October 2022, Oscar-winning actress Dame Judi Dench criticised the show in an open letter to The Times, denouncing it as "cruel and unjust towards the individuals and damaging to the institution they represent".[168][169][170] In addition she openly criticised the programme makers for having "resisted all calls for them to carry a disclaimer at the start of each episode",[169] further requesting "Netflix to reconsider — for the sake of a family and a nation so recently bereaved, as a mark of respect to a sovereign who served her people so dutifully for 70 years, and to preserve its reputation in the eyes of its British subscribers".[168] Netflix eventually added a disclaimer to the show's title synopsis page on its website, and to the YouTube description of the trailer for season five, that described the series as a "fictional dramatisation" that was "inspired by real events".[171]

Awards and nominations

Costume exhibit

Costumes from both The Crown and The Queen's Gambit were displayed by Brooklyn Museum as part of its virtual exhibition The Queen and the Crown.[172][173]

Potential prequel series

In April 2022, it was reported that Netflix and Left Bank were having preliminary conversations about a prequel.[174] It is believed that the series will span a period of nearly 50 years, starting with the death of Queen Victoria in 1901 and ending around the wedding of Queen Elizabeth II in 1947. The series will also reportedly cover the reigns of the four kings who ruled during that period: Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII and George VI.[175]

See also

References

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External links

crown, series, crown, historical, drama, television, series, about, reign, queen, elizabeth, created, principally, written, peter, morgan, produced, left, bank, pictures, sony, pictures, television, netflix, morgan, developed, from, drama, film, queen, 2006, e. The Crown is a historical drama television series about the reign of Queen Elizabeth II created and principally written by Peter Morgan and produced by Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures Television for Netflix Morgan developed it from his drama film The Queen 2006 and especially his stage play The Audience 2013 The first season covers the period from Elizabeth s marriage to Philip Duke of Edinburgh in 1947 to the disintegration of her sister Princess Margaret s engagement to Group Captain Peter Townsend in 1955 The second season covers the period from the Suez Crisis in 1956 to the retirement of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1963 and the birth of Prince Edward in 1964 The third season spans 1964 to 1977 includes Harold Wilson s two periods as prime minister and introduces Camilla Shand The fourth season spans 1979 to 1990 and includes Margaret Thatcher s tenure as prime minister and Prince Charles marriage to Lady Diana Spencer The fifth spans 1991 to 1997 and covers John Major s tenure as prime minister and the breakdown of Charles and Diana s marriage The sixth season which will close the series will cover the Queen s reign into the 21st century The CrownGenreHistorical dramaCreated byPeter MorganStarringSeasons 1 2Claire Foy Matt Smith Vanessa Kirby Eileen Atkins Jeremy Northam Victoria Hamilton Ben Miles Greg Wise Jared Harris John Lithgow Alex Jennings Lia Williams Anton Lesser Matthew GoodeSeasons 3 4Olivia Colman Tobias Menzies Helena Bonham Carter Ben Daniels Jason Watkins Marion Bailey Erin Doherty Charles Dance Josh O Connor Gillian Anderson Emma Corrin Stephen Boxer Emerald FennellSeasons 5 6Imelda Staunton Jonathan Pryce Lesley Manville Dominic West Jonny Lee Miller Olivia Williams Claudia Harrison Natascha McElhone Marcia Warren Elizabeth DebickiTheme music composerHans ZimmerComposersRupert Gregson Williams s 1 2 Lorne Balfe s 2 Martin Phipps s 3 5 Country of originUnited Kingdom 1 United States 2 Original languageEnglishNo of seasons5No of episodes50 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersPeter Morgan Stephen Daldry Andy Harries Philip Martin Suzanne Mackie Matthew Byam Shaw Robert Fox Tanya Seghatchian Nina Wolarsky Allie Goss Benjamin CaronProducersAndy Stebbing Martin Harrison Michael Casey Andrew Eaton Oona O Beirn Faye WardProduction locationUnited KingdomRunning time47 61 minutesProduction companiesLeft Bank Pictures Sony Pictures TelevisionDistributorNetflix Streaming ServicesReleaseOriginal networkNetflixPicture format4K UHDTV 3 Original release4 November 2016 2016 11 04 present present For each of the two season increments new actors fill the roles to reflect the ageing process over the periods of time portrayed Claire Foy portrays the Queen in the first two seasons alongside Matt Smith as Prince Philip and Vanessa Kirby as Princess Margaret For the third and fourth seasons Olivia Colman takes over as the Queen Tobias Menzies as Prince Philip and Helena Bonham Carter as Princess Margaret Also added to the cast in season three is Josh O Connor as Prince Charles In the fourth season new cast members include Emma Corrin as Lady Diana Spencer and Gillian Anderson as Margaret Thatcher Imelda Staunton Jonathan Pryce and Lesley Manville succeed Colman Menzies and Bonham Carter respectively for the final two seasons while Dominic West and Elizabeth Debicki take the roles of Charles and Diana Filming took place at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood Hertfordshire with location shooting throughout the United Kingdom and internationally The first season was released by Netflix on 4 November 2016 the second on 8 December 2017 the third on 17 November 2019 and the fourth on 15 November 2020 The fifth season premiered on 9 November 2022 4 As of 2020 update the estimated production budget of The Crown has been reported to be 260 million making it one of the most expensive television series ever 5 The Crown has been praised by critics for its acting directing writing cinematography and production values though its historical inaccuracies have received some criticism particularly with respect to the fourth and fifth seasons It has received numerous accolades including a total of sixty three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for its first four seasons winning twenty one including Outstanding Drama Series for its fourth season and seven awards for the cast 6 The series has also twice won the Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series Drama at the 74th and 78th ceremonies with additional acting wins for Foy Colman Corrin O Connor and Anderson 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Episodes 3 Cast and characters 3 1 Main 3 2 Featured 4 Production 4 1 Development 4 2 Casting 4 2 1 Gender pay gap controversy 4 3 Filming 5 Historical accuracy 5 1 Season 1 5 2 Season 2 5 3 Season 3 5 4 Season 4 5 5 Season 5 6 Release 7 Reception 7 1 Critical response 7 2 Awards and nominations 8 Costume exhibit 9 Potential prequel series 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksPlot EditThe Crown portrays the life of Queen Elizabeth II from her wedding in 1947 to Philip Duke of Edinburgh 8 until the early 21st century 9 10 The first season depicts events up to 1955 with Winston Churchill resigning as prime minister and the Queen s sister Princess Margaret deciding not to marry Peter Townsend 11 The second season covers the Suez Crisis in 1956 leading to the retirement of Prime Minister Anthony Eden in 1957 the retirement of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1963 following the scandal of the Profumo affair and the birth of Prince Edward Earl of Wessex in 1964 12 13 14 The third season covers 1964 to 1977 beginning with Harold Wilson s election as prime minister and ending with the Queen s Silver Jubilee 15 also covering Edward Heath s time as prime minister 16 Camilla Shand is also introduced 16 The fourth season is set during Margaret Thatcher s period as prime minister from 1979 to 1990 and also focuses on Lady Diana Spencer 17 The fifth season covers the period 1991 to 1997 and focuses on the War of the Waleses and the resulting divorce of Diana and Prince Charles as well as the rise of the Al Fayed family and the annus horribilis of Queen Elizabeth II in 1992 Episodes EditMain article List of The Crown episodes SeriesEpisodesOriginally released1104 November 2016 2016 11 04 2108 December 2017 2017 12 08 31017 November 2019 2019 11 17 41015 November 2020 2020 11 15 5109 November 2022 2022 11 09 Cast and characters EditMain article List of The Crown characters Main Edit Claire Foy seasons 1 2 featured season 4 guest season 5 Olivia Colman seasons 3 4 and Imelda Staunton season 5 as Queen Elizabeth II Matt Smith seasons 1 2 Tobias Menzies seasons 3 4 and Jonathan Pryce season 5 as Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh Vanessa Kirby seasons 1 2 guest season 5 Helena Bonham Carter seasons 3 4 and Lesley Manville season 5 as Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon Eileen Atkins season 1 and Candida Benson guest season 5 as Queen Mary Jeremy Northam as Anthony Eden seasons 1 2 Victoria Hamilton seasons 1 2 Marion Bailey seasons 3 4 and Marcia Warren season 5 as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Ben Miles season 1 featured season 2 guest season 5 and Timothy Dalton featured season 5 as Peter Townsend Greg Wise seasons 1 2 and Charles Dance season 3 featured season 4 as Louis Mountbatten 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma Jared Harris as King George VI season 1 featured season 2 John Lithgow as Winston Churchill season 1 featured seasons 2 3 Alex Jennings season 1 featured seasons 2 and 5 and Derek Jacobi featured season 3 as Prince Edward Duke of Windsor Lia Williams season 1 featured seasons 2 and 5 and Geraldine Chaplin featured season 3 as Wallis Duchess of Windsor Anton Lesser as Harold Macmillan season 2 Matthew Goode season 2 and Ben Daniels season 3 as Antony Armstrong Jones 1st Earl of Snowdon Jason Watkins as Harold Wilson season 3 Erin Doherty seasons 3 4 and Claudia Harrison season 5 as Princess Anne Josh O Connor seasons 3 4 and Dominic West season 5 as Charles Prince of Wales Emma Corrin season 4 and Elizabeth Debicki season 5 as Diana Princess of Wales Gillian Anderson as Margaret Thatcher season 4 Stephen Boxer as Denis Thatcher season 4 Emerald Fennell season 4 featured season 3 and Olivia Williams season 5 as Camilla Parker Bowles Jonny Lee Miller season 5 and Marc Ozall guest season 4 as John Major Natascha McElhone season 5 as Penny Knatchbull Lady RomseyFeatured Edit The following actors are credited in the opening titles of up to two episodes in a season Stephen Dillane as Graham Sutherland a noted artist who paints a portrait of the ageing Churchill season 1 Gemma Whelan as Patricia Campbell a secretary who works with Lord Altrincham and types up his editorial season 2 John Heffernan as Lord Altrincham a writer who penned a scathing criticism of Elizabeth II season 2 Paul Sparks as Billy Graham a prominent American preacher whom Elizabeth consults season 2 18 Michael C Hall as John F Kennedy the president of the United States who visits Elizabeth season 2 Jodi Balfour as Jacqueline Kennedy the first lady of the United States who visits Elizabeth season 2 Burghart Klaussner as Dr Kurt Hahn the founder of Gordonstoun where Philip and Charles went to school season 2 Finn Elliot as school aged Prince Philip season 2 guest season 3 18 Julian Baring as school aged Prince Charles season 2 18 Clancy Brown as Lyndon B Johnson the president of the United States following Kennedy season 3 Jane Lapotaire season 3 Rosalind Knight recurring season 1 and Sophie Leigh Stone recurring season 2 as Princess Alice of Battenberg Philip s mother Mark Lewis Jones as Edward Millward Prince Charles s Welsh language tutor season 3 Tim McMullan as Robin Woods the Dean of Windsor season 3 Michael Maloney as Edward Heath season 3 Andrew Buchan season 3 recurring season 4 and Daniel Flynn guest season 5 as Andrew Parker Bowles Camilla s husband Harry Treadaway as Roddy Llewellyn Princess Margaret s boyfriend season 3 guest season 4 Tom Brooke as Michael Fagan a man who enters the Queen s bedroom in 1982 season 4 Richard Roxburgh as Bob Hawke the prime minister of Australia season 4 Tom Burke as Derek Dazzle Jennings a civil servant and friend of Princess Margaret season 4 Nicholas Farrell as Michael Shea Elizabeth s press secretary season 4 Salim Daw as Mohamed Al Fayed Dodi Fayed s father and owner of Hotel Ritz Paris and Harrods season 5 Khalid Abdalla as Dodi Fayed Diana s lover and Mohamed Al Fayed s son season 5 Prasanna Puwanarajah as Martin Bashir the journalist who conducted An Interview with HRH The Princess of Wales season 5 Bertie Carvel as Tony Blair Prime Minister elected in 1997 season 5 Production EditDevelopment Edit In November 2014 it was announced that Netflix was to adapt the 2013 stage play The Audience into a television series 19 Peter Morgan who wrote the 2006 film The Queen and the play is the main scriptwriter for The Crown 20 The directors of the first season are Stephen Daldry Philip Martin Julian Jarrold and Benjamin Caron 21 The first 10 part season was the most expensive drama produced by Netflix and Left Bank Pictures to date costing at least 100 million 22 23 24 A second season was commissioned 25 26 with the series intended to span 60 episodes over six seasons 8 By October 2017 early production had begun on an anticipated third and fourth season 27 and by the following January Netflix confirmed the series had been renewed for third and fourth seasons 17 In January 2020 Morgan announced that the series had been renewed for a fifth and final season Speaking to ending the series with five seasons after it had been intended to last six Morgan said while crafting the stories for season five it has become clear to me that this is the perfect time and place to stop Netflix and Sony supported Morgan s decision 9 However in July 2020 Netflix announced that the series would receive a sixth season as originally intended Morgan said that when the storylines were being discussed for season five it soon became clear that in order to do justice to the richness and complexity of the story we should go back to the original plan and do six seasons He added that the final two seasons would enable them to cover the same period in greater detail 28 Casting Edit By November 2014 Claire Foy had entered negotiations to portray Queen Elizabeth II 29 By May 2015 Vanessa Kirby was in negotiations to portray Princess Margaret 30 In June 2015 John Lithgow was cast as Winston Churchill and Matt Smith was cast as Prince Philip while Foy was confirmed as Queen Elizabeth II 31 Also starring in the first season were Victoria Hamilton Jared Harris and Eileen Atkins 32 Foy would reprise her role as the young Queen in cameos As of 2022 update this has happened both in season 4 and in season 5 For her appearance in 48 1 the 8th episode of series 4 Foy won an Emmy 33 34 The producers recast the continuing roles with older actors every two seasons as the timeline moves forward 35 In October 2017 Olivia Colman was cast as Queen Elizabeth II for the third and fourth seasons 27 By January 2018 Helena Bonham Carter and Paul Bettany were in negotiations to portray Princess Margaret and Prince Philip respectively for these seasons 36 14 However by the end of the month Bettany was forced to drop out due to the time commitment required 37 By the end of March 2018 Tobias Menzies was cast as Prince Philip for the third and fourth seasons 38 In early May 2018 Bonham Carter was confirmed to have been cast alongside Jason Watkins as Prime Minister Harold Wilson 39 The next month Ben Daniels was cast as Tony Armstrong Jones for the third season 40 along with Erin Doherty joining the series as Princess Anne 41 A month later Josh O Connor and Marion Bailey were cast as Prince Charles and the Queen Mother respectively for the third and fourth seasons 42 In October 2018 Emerald Fennell was cast as Camilla Shand 43 In December 2018 Charles Dance was cast as Louis Mountbatten 44 In April 2019 Emma Corrin was cast as Lady Diana Spencer for the fourth season 45 Gillian Anderson who had been rumoured since January 2019 to be in talks to portray Margaret Thatcher in the fourth season was officially confirmed for the role in September 2019 46 47 48 In January 2020 Imelda Staunton was announced as succeeding Colman as the Queen in the fifth season with her role in the final season reported in July 9 28 Also in July 2020 Lesley Manville was announced as portraying Princess Margaret 28 49 and the following month Jonathan Pryce and Elizabeth Debicki had been cast as Prince Philip and Diana Princess of Wales respectively 50 51 In October 2020 Dominic West was in talks to play Prince Charles 52 His casting was confirmed in April 2021 when the start date for production of the fifth season was announced 53 In June 2021 Jonny Lee Miller was cast as John Major 54 During the same month Olivia Williams confirmed during an interview that she had joined the cast as Camilla Parker Bowles for the series s fifth and sixth seasons 55 In July 2021 actress Marcia Warren joined the cast during filming as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother 56 That same month the casting of Claudia Harrison as Princess Anne was also confirmed 57 In September 2021 Khalid Abdalla was announced to play Dodi Fayed and that Salim Daw would be portraying Mohamed Al Fayed 58 Later that month it was confirmed that Timothy Dalton had been cast as Peter Townsend 59 In January 2022 Humayun Saeed had been cast as Dr Hasnat Khan 60 A casting search for actors to play teenage Prince William and Prince Harry in the sixth season began in March 2022 The new actor for Prince William would replace Senan West who was cast as a young Prince William for season five with the other new castings for the fifth season expected to remain for the sixth season 61 In April 2022 a casting call was posted for a young Catherine Middleton to be portrayed in the sixth season 62 In September 2022 it was announced that Rufus Kampas and Ed McVey will portray Prince William and Meg Bellamy will portray Catherine Middleton 63 Gender pay gap controversy Edit The Left Bank producers stated that Smith was paid more than Foy for the first two seasons partly because of his Doctor Who fame 64 This led to a gender pay gap controversy including the creation of a petition asking Smith to donate the difference between his and Foy s salary to the Time s Up Legal Defense Fund 65 Left Bank later apologised to Foy and Smith for putting them at the center of a media storm through no fault of their own Left Bank also clarified that they are responsible for budgets and salaries the actors are not aware of who gets what and cannot be held personally responsible for the pay of their colleagues They added that they support the drive for gender equality in film and TV and were eager to talk to the British Time s Up campaign and were already speaking to Era 50 50 a group campaigning for gender equality on screen and stage 66 Suzanne Mackie Left Bank s creative director did note that in future no actor would be paid more than the actress portraying the Queen 64 Regarding the controversy Foy was not surprised about the interest in the story in the sense that it was a female led drama I m not surprised that people saw the story and went Oh that s a bit odd But I know that Matt feels the same that I do that it s odd to find yourself at the center of a story that you didn t particularly ask for 67 Smith noted that he supported Foy and was pleased that it was resolved and the producers made amends for it because that s what needed to happen The Hollywood Reporter noted it was unclear what Smith was referring to as resolved since Netflix and Left Bank had not commented further 68 Foy later described reports that she had received backpay to bring her salary up to parity as not quite correct 69 Filming Edit An estimated 25 of the first season was filmed at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood Hertfordshire with the remainder filmed on location altogether taking 152 days Sets for private quarters the interior of a private jet the cabinet room and the exterior of 10 Downing Street were built at Elstree Studios 26 70 while Lancaster House Wrotham Park and Wilton House were used to double as Buckingham Palace Ely Cathedral and Winchester Cathedral stood in for Westminster Abbey while locations in South Africa doubled as Kenya 26 Additional locations in the UK included Belvoir Castle 71 Waddesdon Manor Eltham Palace the Royal Naval College 72 Goldsmiths Hall Shoreham Airport New Slains Castle 73 Balmoral Castle Cruden Bay Lyceum Theatre Loseley Park Hatfield House 70 The Historic Dockyard Chatham 74 Southwark Cathedral Ardverikie House Englefield House Wellington College the Great Central Railway and the Glenfeshie Estate 75 Filming on the second season began in early October 2016 35 Each episode of the first two seasons would shoot for about 22 days with each costing about 5 million to produce 64 The third season began filming in July 2018 76 and concluded in February 2019 The fourth season began filming in August 2019 and wrapped in March 2020 77 78 Shooting locations used to double foreign settings included Manchester New York City Malaga and Almeria Sydney and other Australian settings as well as Atlanterra Cadiz Mustique 79 The filming of the fifth season began in July 2021 80 The year break in filming between the end of season four and the start of season five was built into the series s production schedule and was not related to the COVID 19 pandemic 81 On 16 February 2022 items previously used in the series s production worth 150 000 were stolen from three vehicles most of which were described to have limited value for resale but are valuable as pieces to the UK film industry 82 83 Locations featured in series five included Cobham Hall which doubled as Eton College and the Historic Dockyard at Chatham both in Kent 84 Filming for the sixth season began in August 2022 61 but Morgan noted he expected it to stop for a period of time in September following the death of Elizabeth II out of respect 85 In October 2022 it was reported that the events just before and right after the death of Diana Princess of Wales in Paris would be filmed for season six 86 The re enactment of the removal of King George VI s cancerous lung originally performed by Sir Clement Price Thomas was researched and planned by Pankaj Chandak a specialist in transplant surgery at Guy s Hospital London Chandak and his surgical team then became part of the actual scene filmed for the show 87 The surgical model of King George VI was donated to the Gordon Museum of Pathology in King s College London for use as a teaching aid 88 Historical accuracy EditThis article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The series has been both commended and criticised for its depiction of historical events 89 Season 1 Edit Though the show depicted a dispute over Michael Adeane being the natural successor to Tommy Lascelles as the Queen s private secretary this did not in reality happen Martin Charteris accordingly took the role in 1972 90 91 Churchill s wife Clementine is depicted as overseeing the burning of her husband s portrait by artist Graham Sutherland shortly after Churchill s retirement In reality the painting was destroyed by the brother of their private secretary Grace Hamblin without the involvement of Hamblin herself 90 92 Royal biographer Hugo Vickers denied that Princess Margaret had acted as monarch while the Queen was on tour and claimed that her speech at the ambassador s reception never happened Charteris was on tour with the Queen and not in London during these events The Queen Mother bought the Castle of Mey a year earlier than depicted on the show and often looked after Prince Charles and Princess Anne while the Queen was away 90 93 The show has been interpreted as perpetuating the idea that the Queen and Churchill forced Princess Margaret to give up her plan to marry Peter Townsend and depicted the Queen informing her that due to the Royal Marriages Act 1772 she would no longer be a member of the family if they married However there is clear evidence that in reality efforts had been made by the Queen and Anthony Eden in developing a plan which would have allowed Princess Margaret to keep her royal title and her civil list allowance stay in the country and continue with her public duties But she would have been required to renounce her rights of succession and those of her children 94 Season 2 Edit After season two was released Peggy Noonan of The Wall Street Journal commented on its historical inaccuracy and argued for more truth in art and entertainment 95 Baron Nahum for instance continued to be featured in the season but in reality had died in 1956 96 The show also depicts the Queen as giving a speech at a Jaguar factory when in reality there is no evidence that she gave a speech there Similarly while it is possible that she might have met Lord Altrincham to discuss his article there is no record of it 90 97 Vickers wrote that the Queen did condemn the Duke of Windsor after she read the Marburg Files but suggested that the series gave the false implication that the Duke was banished from the royal family upon publication In reality the Duke remained in contact with his family and his public appearances continued 90 The depiction of the relationship between the American First Lady Jackie Kennedy and the royal family also drew criticism as inaccurate reports from the time indicate that she had described Prince Philip as nice but nervous with no real bond between them 98 The implication that the Queen visited Ghana to compete with Kennedy s popularity was ridiculed by critics 99 Reviews noted that that episode ignored more significant events such as President Kennedy s sister in law Lee and her husband Prince Stanislaw Albrecht Radziwill s initial exclusion from the banquet invitation list due to their divorcee status they were eventually invited 100 although Princess Margaret and Princess Marina did not attend despite the Kennedys apparently wanting to meet them 101 Gordonstoun School responded to its negative portrayal claiming that Prince Charles s personal feedback to the school had been overwhelmingly positive 102 Vickers said that the same episode inaccurately depicted Prince Philip s sister s death in a plane crash as having arisen from his own misbehaviour at Gordonstoun It is beyond me how serious film makers would wish to turn such a dreadful tragedy into a series of invented scenes bearing no relation to the truth 102 Vickers later added that Philip considered suing the show s producers over the inaccurate portrayal of his sister s death and its aftermath 103 Phil Owen of The Wrap saw dry comedy in Northam s portrayal of Prime Minister Eden stating I m assuming that creator Peter Morgan meant for it to be comedy There s really no other explanation for why Jeremy Northam played Prime Minister Anthony Eden like he s having a nervous breakdown in every scene 104 Season 3 Edit The Queen did not visit Churchill following his final stroke Vickers claims that by then he was senile and incapable of holding a conversation 105 Anthony Blunt s exposure as a Soviet spy also drew criticism Vickers noted that the episode did not mention that he was publicly exposed in 1979 and stripped of his knighthood while also noting that he never resided at Buckingham Palace and ridiculing a scene in which he discusses his exposure with Prince Philip in an attempt to blackmail the royal family 90 106 The depiction of the relationship with President Johnson has been criticised It has been suggested that he did not refuse to attend Churchill s funeral in response to Wilson s refusal to support the Vietnam War but that he was genuinely unable due to poor health His disappointment with Wilson s views on Vietnam had developed much later 90 107 Historians also denied the episode s implication that no US president had ever been to Balmoral Eisenhower had visited Balmoral while president in 1959 108 Critics noted that the episode did not mention that Johnson had been the only president since Truman never to have met the Queen 90 109 The implication that Johnson did not know who Princess Margaret was before her visit to America was also criticised 90 The Princess did attend a White House dinner but the details are mostly fictional such as her carousing with Johnson and kissing him dirty limericks and helping secure a US bailout which in fact had already been negotiated 110 111 The depiction of Princess Margaret and President Johnson publicly insulting the late President Kennedy during the same White House dinner was seen as highly unlikely as members of the Kennedy family as well as John Connally who was riding with Kennedy during the assassination were reportedly among those who attended the dinner 112 The relationship with Princess Alice has also drawn criticism for Prince Philip s depiction as being estranged from his mother and objecting to her visiting London In reality he visited her regularly and often transported her by plane and her depicted interview with a journalist from The Guardian never happened Vickers also stated that the same episode ignored that Prince Philip encouraged her to move to London permanently 105 Prince Charles did visit the Duke of Windsor in Paris in 1972 113 although the depiction of the letters concerning his affections for Camilla was criticised the Prince and Camilla had met but were not intimately close during the Duke s lifetime 89 105 The Queen did visit the Duke ten days before his death but this had been long planned and not requested at short notice 105 Simpson was not with the Duke when he died 90 114 The timeframe of Woods s posting as Dean of Windsor around the time of the Apollo 11 spaceflight and lunar landing in July 1969 is inaccurate as he had taken the role in 1962 115 90 Prince William of Gloucester had also died five years before the Queen s Silver Jubilee 90 It has been suggested that there was no plot by the palace to prevent Prince Charles and Camilla s marriage with Camilla s love for Andrew Parker Bowles being genuine and Prince Charles unable to decide 90 116 It has also been suggested that Princess Anne s relations with Andrew Parker Bowles did not overlap with Prince Charles and Camilla s introduction Reviews of the episode noted that it ignored more significant events citing Princess Anne s 1973 wedding to Captain Mark Phillips and her attempted kidnapping in 1974 89 Season 4 Edit Vickers further argued that season four is yet more subtly divisive than earlier seasons with pretty much every character shown as dislikeable and that every member of the royal family comes out of it badly except the Princess of Wales 117 He also called season four the least accurate season in the series 118 Royal commentator Emily Andrews said that sources close to Prince Charles have labelled some of the scenes trolling on a Hollywood budget 119 It was also reported that Prince Charles and Camilla turned off comments on their Instagram and Twitter accounts such was the intensely negative reaction to their portrayals 118 Throughout the season the Private Secretary to the Sovereign is portrayed as Sir Martin Charteris yet in reality he retired in 1977 120 The opening scene when Prince Charles first meets Diana is fictionalised although they did meet during a date with her sister Vickers has stated that Prince Charles had no personal contact with Camilla during the first five years of his marriage their relationship developed after 1986 by which time the marriage had broken down 117 The frenzy around Prince Charles and Diana s Australian tour is accurately depicted including his feelings of being overshadowed by Diana which have been confirmed by multiple sources Diana s former press secretary has confirmed their fractious relationship when away from the media 121 Their schedule was never revised to accommodate Prince William and the sheep station was arranged for them in advance by the former Australian Prime Minister specifically so that the couple could be with their son each night 117 According to Dickie Arbiter the meeting in which Sir John Riddell the Prince of Wales s private secretary questions Diana s mental fitness before her solo trip to New York never happened 122 Mountbatten did not write to the Prince of Wales shortly before he died although he had written advising him in the past 117 The newsreel clips of Northern Ireland shown alongside Mountbatten s assassination included events that had happened years earlier and others that had not yet occurred 123 Vickers suggested that almost all the details concerning how visitors are treated at Balmoral are inaccurate and noted that the Thatchers first visit is depicted out of sequence with Mountbatten s funeral The Thatchers did not enjoy their visits to Balmoral but there is no evidence that the Prime Minister dressed inappropriately 121 Diana s visit happened an entire year later when the Queen was not present He added that Diana was already familiar with royal etiquette and would not have needed the intensive lessons given by Lady Fermoy that were portrayed in the show 117 Charles Moore Margaret Thatcher s biographer deemed the scene where Thatcher begs the Queen to dissolve Parliament so she can stay on as PM factual nonsense 121 It is true however that she used to do her own ironing at Downing Street 123 It is unlikely that Prince Philip ever mocked her for being a scientist given his own interest in the sciences 123 Mark Thatcher going missing during the Paris Dakar Rally did not coincide with the Falklands invasion 124 Michael Fagan has said that his conversation with the Queen in the palace bedroom was short polite and non controversial and that he never spoke about Margaret Thatcher 123 The scene where the Queen guesses who the Prime Minister might appoint to cabinet is entirely fictional nor would the PM have ever left a royal audience early or criticised the Queen for her privilege 123 Vickers says that in reality it was the Queen s press secretary who took it upon himself to pass his own views about the Prime Minister to the media and he was forced to leave the palace as a consequence The plot involving the family s relationship with the Bowes Lyon sisters is largely inaccurate Princess Margaret played no part in discovering their existence nor did she confront her mother about this John Jock Bowes Lyon died six years before Edward VIII s abdication and the sisters were placed in the Royal Earlswood Hospital by their mother Fenella in 1941 The Queen Mother believed her nieces to be dead until 1982 and upon discovering that they were alive sent money for toys and sweets on their birthdays and at Christmas According to the Bowes Lyon family there was never any attempt at a coverup 125 The relationship between Princess Margaret and Father Derek Dazzle Jennings is also heavily fictionalised Jennings did not have any involvement with the Bowes Lyon sisters and remained Princess Margaret s friend and spiritual advisor with the Princess visiting his sickbed before he died in 1995 126 Similarly Princess Margaret s interest in Catholicism is underplayed she did not convert but Jennings was reportedly convinced she would even going so far as to arrange for a dinner between the Princess and Cardinal Hume in 1988 127 Season 5 Edit Ahead of its release the former Prime Minister John Major publicly criticised the series and Tony Blair s spokesman described the first episode of the season where in 1991 Prince Charles is portrayed attempting to recruit John Major and Tony Blair to support the Queen s abdication in favour of him as complete and utter rubbish 128 129 Major stated that no such conversation took place and that the scene was a barrel load of malicious nonsense 130 The Sunday Times article recorded that at the time nine out of ten people felt very favourably or mainly favourably about the Queen while four in ten felt she should abdicate at some point in the future rather than continue until her death 131 In the same episode Major suggests that the Queen should give up on the idea of having HMY Britannia refurbished or replaced at a time of national belt tightening Correspondence with his principal private secretary Alex Allan however shows that the decision was made in the light of the current debate about the Royal Family and the Monarchy which stemmed from high profile separations and divorces among family members 132 The plot in episode two which shows James Colthurst run off the road by a white van and Andrew Morton finding his home ransacked is fictionalised 132 Episode three shows the Duke and Duchess of Windsor visiting Alexandria in 1946 where they are seen by a young Mohamed Al Fayed from a distance However there is no record of the couple having visited Egypt that year 132 The episode also suggests that Diana met Dodi Fayed during a polo match in the 1990s but the two reportedly met during a match in 1986 where Charles was also present 132 In episode three after the death of Wallis Duchess of Windsor in 1986 Sydney Johnson the former valet for 30 years to her husband Edward VIII is deeply saddened and so his new employer Mohamed Al Fayed takes him to visit her now dilapidated Paris home nicknamed Villa Windsor Al Fayed is shocked to learn that the French government has seized the house with intent to auction it and its contents Fayed purchases the estate from France and renovates everything as a gift to the Royal Family A representative of the family arrives in place of a Royal visit and requests all the restored items including the abdication desk paintings and papers Rather than being upset at the apparent snub Al Fayed is instead overjoyed that his efforts have been recognised The true circumstances however were different the house had always been rented from the Paris Council Al Fayed took a 50 year lease for 1m per year under the proviso that he would restore it he was also allowed to keep the art and furniture to decorate it She bequeathed the rest of her belongings which had personal value to the Royal Family as charity to the Pasteur Institute Al Fayed paid 4 5m to acquire them at auction but was outbid on her jewellery which sold the following year for 50m In 1998 he auctioned the Windsor Collection in aid of his and his sons charities raising 23m 133 The Royal Family were believed to have acquired all the items by bidding via proxies finally returning the abdication desk sale price 415 000 papers and other belongings to the family Episode four which covers the Queen s annus horribilis speech shows her acknowledging the errors of the past in her speech none of which occurred during the lunch at the Guildhall 132 The episode also incorrectly depicts Princess Margaret appearing on Desert Island Discs whereas she was a guest on the show in 1981 Additionally her initial reunion with Peter Townsend had occurred in 1978 not in the 1990s 132 The scene in the next episode which depicts Prince Charles breakdancing in the mid 1990s is inspired by a charity visit by the prince in 1985 132 Episode six features the execution of the Romanov family and portrays King George V refusing to offer political asylum to the Russian imperial family at the advice of his wife Queen Mary who is shown to have opposed the idea because the tsarina was pro German Government papers released in the 1980s show that it was George himself who opposed the idea due to the tsar s unpopularity in Britain 132 Episode eight shows Diana warning the Queen about her forthcoming Panorama interview but it has been reported that in reality the interview had surprised the royal family with no advance warning 132 A scene in episode ten that shows Charles confronting the Queen about the prospects of her abdication is an invention but the prince did privately meet Prime Minister Blair during the handover of Hong Kong although the meeting was brief 132 Release EditThe series s first two episodes were released in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2016 134 The first season was released worldwide in its entirety on 4 November 2016 135 136 The second season was released on 8 December 2017 137 The third season was released on 17 November 2019 138 The fourth season was released on 15 November 2020 139 The fifth season was released on 9 November 2022 81 4 The first season was released on DVD and Blu ray in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2017 140 and worldwide on 7 November 141 The second season was released on DVD and Blu ray in the United Kingdom on 22 October 2018 142 and worldwide on 13 November 2018 143 The third season was released on DVD and Blu ray in the United Kingdom on 2 November 2020 144 and worldwide the following day 145 The fourth season was released on DVD and Blu ray in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2021 146 and worldwide the following day 147 Reception EditCritical response Edit Critical response of The CrownSeasonRotten TomatoesMetacritic188 77 reviews 148 81 29 reviews 149 289 85 reviews 150 87 27 reviews 151 390 100 reviews 152 84 30 reviews 153 495 111 reviews 154 86 28 reviews 155 571 101 reviews 156 65 37 reviews 157 John Lithgow won multiple awards for his performance as Winston Churchill The Crown has been praised as a drama being described by The Telegraph as TV s best soap opera and given a 5 5 rating although some reviewers such as in The Times raised concerns that some of the episodes are based on false premises 158 90 The series received an overall score of 87 on Rotten Tomatoes and 80 on Metacritic 159 160 For the first season review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported 88 approval based on 74 reviews with an average rating of 8 6 10 Its critical consensus reads Powerful performances and lavish cinematography make The Crown a top notch production worthy of its grand subject 148 Metacritic gives the season a score of 81 out of 100 based on 29 critics indicating universal acclaim 149 For the second season Rotten Tomatoes reported 89 approval from 85 reviews with an average rating of 8 3 10 The Crown continues its reign with a self assured sophomore season that indulges in high drama and sumptuous costumes 150 Metacritic holds a score of 87 out of 100 based on 27 critics with universal acclaim 151 For the third season Rotten Tomatoes reported 90 approval based on 100 reviews with an average rating of 8 5 10 Olivia Colman shines but as The Crown marches on in reliably luxurious fashion through time it finds space for the characters around her providing ample opportunity for the appealing ensemble to gleam too 152 Metacritic gives a score of 84 out of 100 based on 30 critics indicating universal acclaim 153 For the fourth season Rotten Tomatoes reports 95 approval from 111 reviews with an average rating of 8 6 10 Its critical consensus reads Whatever historical liberties the season takes are easily forgiven thanks to the sheer power of its performances particularly Gillian Anderson s imposing take on The Iron Lady and newcomer Emma Corrin s embodiment of a young Princess Diana 154 On Metacritic the season holds a score of 86 out of 100 based on 27 critics indicating universal acclaim 155 For the fifth season Rotten Tomatoes reports 71 approval from 101 reviews with an average rating of 6 75 10 Its critical consensus reads In its fifth season it s hard to shake the feeling that this series has lost some of its luster but addictive drama and a sterling cast remain The Crown s jewels 156 On Metacritic the season holds a score of 65 out of 100 based on 37 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 157 However the series has also received backlash from British critics and the royal family British reviewers have criticised the fourth season for being inaccurate and anti monarchy 161 120 162 Simon Jenkins writing for The Guardian described it as fake history reality hijacked as propaganda and a cowardly abuse of artistic licence which fabricated history to suit its own preconceived narrative and argued that Morgan could have made his point truthfully 163 Royal biographer Sally Bedell Smith criticised the inaccuracies and negative portrayal of the royal family stating Because The Crown is such a lavish and expensive production so beautifully acted and cleverly written and so much attention has been paid to visual details about historical events viewers are tricked into believing that what they are seeing actually happened concluding that while the earlier seasons were period pieces this is recent history so it seems more cruel in its false depictions 164 Following some negative reactions to the fourth season British culture secretary Oliver Dowden suggested that the series should have a fiction warning at the beginning as a disclaimer 165 During a 2021 appearance on The Late Late Show with James Corden Prince Harry stated that he was comfortable with The Crown s portrayal of the royal family noting that while as a work of fiction it is not strictly accurate it does give a rough idea of the pressures of putting duty and service above family and everything else Harry also said that if he was ever to feature on the series he would like to be portrayed by Damian Lewis 166 167 After the Queen s death in 2022 calls grew for the fifth season to contain a disclaimer given that it was being released so soon after the monarch s death In October 2022 Oscar winning actress Dame Judi Dench criticised the show in an open letter to The Times denouncing it as cruel and unjust towards the individuals and damaging to the institution they represent 168 169 170 In addition she openly criticised the programme makers for having resisted all calls for them to carry a disclaimer at the start of each episode 169 further requesting Netflix to reconsider for the sake of a family and a nation so recently bereaved as a mark of respect to a sovereign who served her people so dutifully for 70 years and to preserve its reputation in the eyes of its British subscribers 168 Netflix eventually added a disclaimer to the show s title synopsis page on its website and to the YouTube description of the trailer for season five that described the series as a fictional dramatisation that was inspired by real events 171 Awards and nominations Edit Main article List of awards and nominations received by The CrownCostume exhibit EditCostumes from both The Crown and The Queen s Gambit were displayed by Brooklyn Museum as part of its virtual exhibition The Queen and the Crown 172 173 Potential prequel series EditIn April 2022 it was reported that Netflix and Left Bank were having preliminary conversations about a prequel 174 It is believed that the series will span a period of nearly 50 years starting with the death of Queen Victoria in 1901 and ending around the wedding of Queen Elizabeth II in 1947 The series will also reportedly cover the reigns of the four kings who ruled during that period Edward VII George V Edward VIII and George VI 175 See also EditBritish royal family The CrownReferences Edit Netflix plans original UK drama about the Queen BBC News 23 May 2014 Archived from the original on 6 April 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Brown Mick 3 November 2016 The Crown Claire Foy and Matt Smith on the making of the 100m Netflix series The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 4 November 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2016 The Crown Real or Fake 4K Archived from the original on 2 April 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2017 a b Bamigboye Baz 24 September 2022 The Crown Gets November Premiere Date After Sensitive Behind The Scenes Discussions Following Death Of Queen Deadline Retrieved 24 September 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Crown audiences as Princess Margaret s former lover The Telegraph Ramachadran Naman 9 January 2022 The Crown Pakistani Star Humayun Saeed Cast as Princess Diana s Companion Dr Hasnat Khan in Hit Netflix Series EXCLUSIVE Variety a b Yossman K J 17 March 2022 Netflix Set to Shoot The Crown Season 6 This Summer Looks to Cast Teenage Prince William and Harry Variety Retrieved 18 March 2022 Yossman K J 26 April 2022 Netflix s The Crown Posts a Casting Call for a Young Kate Middleton Variety Retrieved 3 May 2022 Bamigboye Baz 2 September 2022 Netflix Drama The Crown Finds Its William And Kate Two Actors To Play Prince amp Newcomer Cast As Kate Middleton In Season 6 Deadline Retrieved 2 September 2022 a b c Birnbaum Debra 13 March 2018 Claire Foy Was Paid Less Than Matt Smith on The Crown Variety Archived from the original on 25 March 2018 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Clarke Stewart 19 March 2018 Petition Calls on Matt Smith to Donate Part of His Salary From The Crown to Time s Up Variety Archived 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from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Verney Joseph 8 September 2020 Belvoir Castle loses The Crown to Burghley House The Lincolnite Archived from the original on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2021 The Crown Where was it filmed Radio Times 9 January 2017 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 The Crown Where was it filmed Page 2 Radio Times 9 January 2017 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 The Crown 2016 Kent Film Office 31 October 2016 Archived from the original on 17 November 2016 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Fedko Blake Vaira 7 November 2016 The Crown Where Was The Expensive New Drama Filmed Movie Pilot Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Frederick Clint 18 July 2018 New The Crown Season 3 Photos Featuring Helena Bonham Carter ComingSoon net Archived from the original on 14 November 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2018 Gill James 30 November 2019 When is 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behind The Crown Radio Times Archived from the original on 27 November 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2019 Nugent Ciara 3 June 2019 Here s How Every Meeting Between the Queen and a U S President Went Time Archived from the original on 27 October 2019 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Foussaines Chloe 12 July 2018 Here s How Every Meeting Between the Queen and a U S President Went Time Archived from the original on 6 December 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2019 Claire Marie 17 November 2019 Did LBJ Reject The Queen s Invitation to Visit the U K Marie Claire Archived from the original on 6 December 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2019 Feller Madison 16 November 2019 The Crown The True Story Of Princess Margaret s 1965 Trip To America Elle Archived from the original on 22 December 2019 Retrieved 21 December 2019 Haynes Suyin 15 November 2019 The True Story Behind Princess Margaret s Storyline on The Crown Season 3 Time Archived from the original on 19 November 2019 Retrieved 21 December 2019 Arkin Daniel 17 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Times Retrieved 16 November 2020 a b Fieber Pamela 2 December 2020 Royal historian says Season 4 of Netflix series The Crown paints unfair portrait of Royal family Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 26 August 2021 Fowler Bella 18 November 2020 The Crown season 4 Series creator addresses criticism over Prince Charles portrayal news com au Retrieved 19 November 2020 a b Vickers Hugo 17 November 2020 Is The Crown true to life A royal expert s analysis of season 4 The Times Retrieved 19 November 2020 a b c Stolworthy Jacob 26 November 2020 How accurate is The Crown season 4 Separating fact from fiction independent co uk Independent Newspaper Retrieved 16 November 2020 The Crown should carry fiction warning says culture secretary BBC News 29 November 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2020 a b c d e Mount Harry 22 November 2020 How accurate is season 4 of The Crown telegraph co uk Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 16 November 2020 Did Margaret Thatcher s son go missing as shown in The Crown The Independent 16 November 2020 Retrieved 9 November 2022 The Crown fact check Did the Queen and Margaret really have two secret cousins with developmental disabilities Radio Times 15 November 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2021 Dane Patrick 15 November 2020 The Crown Season 4 Who was Derek Dazzle Jennings Metro Retrieved 30 August 2021 Brayson Johnny 15 November 2020 The Crown Changed A Major Detail About Princess Margaret s Relationship With Dazzle Bustle Retrieved 30 August 2021 The Crown Lord Heseltine praises John Major and Tony Blair for speaking out against latest series of show Sky News 5 November 2022 Retrieved 6 November 2022 Montgomery Hugh 5 November 2022 The Crown series 5 review Gripping but badly told soap BBC Retrieved 6 November 2022 Saunders Emma 17 October 2022 The Crown Netflix defends show after Sir John Major criticism BBC Retrieved 17 October 2022 Rayment Tim 21 January 1990 For better or for worse The Sunday Times Retrieved 6 November 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Larman Alexander 14 November 2022 The Crown season 5 separating fact from fiction The Telegraph Retrieved 17 November 2022 Windsor Auction Brings In 23 Million The Associated Press 28 February 1998 Retrieved 28 November 2022 via The New York Times The Crown Season 1 Episodes 1 amp 2 15 British Board of Film Classification 25 October 2016 Archived from the original on 26 October 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2016 Kickham Dylan 11 April 2016 Matt Smith s Netflix drama The Crown gets premiere date Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 12 April 2016 Claire Foy and Matt Smith face the challenges of royal life in new extended trailer for Netflix drama The Crown Radio Times 27 September 2016 Archived from the original on 27 September 2016 Retrieved 27 September 2016 Otterson Joe 10 August 2017 The Crown Season 2 Sets Premiere Date Releases First Trailer Variety Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 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b The Crown Season 4 Metacritic Archived from the original on 10 November 2020 Retrieved 11 November 2020 a b The Crown Season 5 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 22 November 2022 a b The Crown Season 5 Metacritic Retrieved 6 November 2022 Singh Anita 5 November 2019 The Crown season 3 Netflix review The Telegraph Archived from the original on 28 May 2020 Retrieved 5 May 2020 The Crown Rotten Tomatoes The Crown Metacritc Williams Zoe 26 November 2019 The Crown shameless royal propaganda or an insult to the monarchy The Guardian Retrieved 20 November 2020 Heffer Simon 20 November 2020 The Royal family are right to be furious about The Crown this series is a disgrace The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Jenkins Simon 16 November 2020 The Crown s fake history is as corrosive as fake news Simon Jenkins The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 17 November 2020 Miller Julie 18 November 2020 Why The Crown Season 4 s Prince Charles Appalls Royal Experts Vanity Fair Retrieved 21 November 2020 Arkin Daniel 30 November 2020 Netflix needs to make clear The Crown is fictional British culture minister says NBC News Retrieved 30 November 2020 Davies Caroline 26 February 2021 Prince Harry defends Netflix s The Crown in James Corden interview The Guardian Retrieved 26 February 2021 Ramachandran Naman 26 February 2021 Prince Harry Talks The Crown Stepping Back From Royalty on Bus Tour With James Corden Variety Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b Low Valentine The Crown is crude and cruel says Dame Judi Dench The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 21 October 2022 a b Judi Dench diz que The Crown faz sensacionalismo bruto e pede medidas a Netflix F5 in Brazilian Portuguese 20 October 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2022 The Crown Dame Judi Dench accuses Netflix hit of crude sensationalism BBC News 20 October 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2022 Glynn Paul Bushby Helen 21 October 2022 Netflix adds disclaimer under The Crown s trailer for series five BBC Retrieved 23 October 2022 Soriano Jianne 4 November 2020 Costumes From Netflix s The Queen s Gambit And The Crown Featured At The Brooklyn Museum Tatler Hong Kong Retrieved 26 November 2020 The Queen and The Crown A Virtual Exhibition of Costumes from The Queen s Gambit and The Crown Brooklyn Museum Retrieved 26 November 2020 Goldbart Max 8 April 2022 The Crown Prequel Netflix And Left Bank In Early Stage Conversations Deadline Hollywood Retrieved 11 April 2022 Maitland Hayley 9 April 2022 A Sumptuous Prequel to The Crown May Be On the Horizon Vogue Retrieved 14 April 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to The Crown TV series The Crown on Netflix The Crown Timeline on Netflix The Crown at IMDb The Crown on Instagram The Crown on Twitter The Crown at Metacritic The Crown at Rotten Tomatoes The Crown Masterclass BAFTA Guru 28 February 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Crown TV series amp oldid 1132934184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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