Times Colonist

The Crown fans can carry on royal-watching

- LEANNE ITALIE

NEW YORK — Are you a royal desperado, in that binge-watching kind of way?

The House of Windsor, under that and other grand names, has provided five British monarchs to date, but it took you a quick minute to breeze through the recently released second season of The Crown on Netflix. And the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle isn’t until May 19, for heaven’s sake.

Word is the third season of The Crown won’t be released until 2019, so what’s a royal obsessive to do in the interim? Some ideas on what to read and watch while you wait:

A CORONATION

The Smithsonia­n Channel will mark the 65th anniversar­y of the Queen’s coronation on Jan. 14 with a rare TV appearance by the Queen herself in a new documentar­y about her big day, aptly titled The Coronation.

The 91-year-old monarch has a look back at the King Edward crown she wore only once, a solid gold, five-pound ornament made in 1660 with 440 jewels. The documentar­y, to be shown in the United States, Britain and Australia, is a partnershi­p with the BBC and Australia’s ABC.

VICTORIA

How about some appointmen­t TV for the second season of this Masterpiec­e series that began in 2016. Season 2 debuts tonight (see story above).

HOUSE OF WINDSOR

Diana, in Her Own Words, Empire of the Tsars, Prince Philip: The Plot to Make a King, Elizabeth at 90: A Family Tribute, The Royals and The Royal House of Windsor are all available on Netflix, a mixture of drama and documentar­y.

The first season of the The Royal House of Windsor, a Channel 4 documentar­y in the United Kingdom, includes interviews and archival footage that jibes nicely with events covered in The Crown. It begins during the First World War as the family navigates antiGerman sentiment and rebrands as Windsor from previous family names of German descent on the paternal side.

Interested in time-hopping? There’s the Showtime series The Tudors, available on Netflix. It stars Jonathan Rhys Meyers and covers the tumultuous 16thcentur­y court of Henry VIII.

And there’s Reign, a vivid drama originally on the CW that spans the rise of Mary, Queen of Scots. It’s also on Netflix. Plenty of sex and political intrigue there.

LATEST FROM THE BIG SCREEN

If you feel like big and fresh film production­s, find Dunkirk and Darkest Hour. They’ve got you covered on Second World War Britain. In the latter, Winston Churchill (this one played by the recent Golden Globe-winning Gary Oldman) is newly appointed as prime minister and must decide to fight or negotiate with Adolf Hitler. The gritty Dunkirk puts viewers on the beach and in the heart of peril as the famous evacuation during fierce battle unfolds in the French town of Dunkirk.

Out in 2017 and still to be had on demand is Victoria & Abdul,a follow-up to Judy Dench’s star turn in the 1997 Mrs. Brown. Both feature Dench as a sad Queen Victoria.

WHAT TO READ

There’s an official companion book to The Crown. Written by British historian Robert Lacey, The Crown: The Official Companion, Volume 1 covers 1947 through 1955. For all those viewers of the series who found themselves Wikipedia-ing and YouTube-ing real events depicted on the show, this book will be dessert.

In addition to production and cast details, the book includes loads of photos and fact-checking. More volumes are expected. Look up Lacey for other royal matter he has taken on.

One could get lost in the reading options spanning the family’s branches, generation­s and reallife drama, all offering different tones and levels of credibilit­y.

One book, described by the Sunday Telegraph as possessing a “bouncy charm,” is Philip and Elizabeth: Portrait of a Royal Marriage, by Gyles Brandreth — who, according to Amazon, has met all the principal players, quotes no anonymous sources, has known the Duke of Edinburgh for 25 years and interviewe­d him. The book came out in paperback in 2016. Going way back, if you’re up for a bit of literary controvers­y, pick up The Royals and take in provocateu­r Kitty Kelley’s 1997 look at behind-the-scenes Buckingham Palace.

Take a Prince Charles time out with a fresh look at the life of the oldest heir to the throne in more than 300 years with Prince Charles: The Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable Life, by Sally Bedell Smith. It’s out in paperback and includes the years after the death of Diana and his marriage to Camilla.

WHAT TO DIP INTO ONLINE

The History Channel’s website, History.com, is a palooza of factchecki­ng and other period reportage spanning The Crown years, chroniclin­g the private life of the Queen to the Suez crisis and the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy. There are sideby-side period photos of key scenes and characters.

 ??  ?? Claire Foy plays the Queen and Matt Smith plays Prince Philip in The Crown. The series’ third season is due to be screened next year.
Claire Foy plays the Queen and Matt Smith plays Prince Philip in The Crown. The series’ third season is due to be screened next year.

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