Vancouver Sun

ROYAL DEBATE

Will Princess Margaret reveal all when The Crown enters the ’60s?

- BILL HARRIS BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. billharris­tv@gmail.com

The Crown

Season 2, Streaming on Netflix

You don’t hear the term “royal boob” very often in casual conversati­on.

But “royal boob” apparently was a prime topic of discussion on the set of The Crown as season 2 was being filmed.

“We had a big debate whether or not to show ‘royal boob,’” said Vanessa Kirby, who plays Princess Margaret.

The verdict? We’ll get to that. The subject came up while Kirby and former Doctor Who Matt Smith, who plays Prince Philip, were interviewe­d together to promote season 2 of The Crown, which debuts Dec. 8 on Netflix. The series follows the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, played by Claire Foy.

With season 2 picking up where season 1 left off — in the mid-1950s — Smith was talking about how the changing times really started affecting the relationsh­ips and inner workings of the Royal Family as the Swinging ’60s approached.

And when you think about it, that has been one of the struggles for the Royal Family ever since, hasn’t it? Should you modernize? Can you modernize? How much? Does modernizat­ion expose uncomforta­ble ironies, leaving you vulnerable to obsolescen­ce?

Today’s Prince Harry — who will marry TV actress and humanitari­an Meghan Markle — is the Princess Margaret of the ’50s and ’60s. You know, the younger sibling of the monarch, the “spare” after the heir, with limited freedom that expands once the heir has children, each one moving the “spare” further away from the actual throne.

“Margaret, she’s the one character who really embraces the ’60s,” Smith pointed out. “The rest of the Royal Family don’t quite know what to be. “The perception of them changes so greatly, and then Maggie gets on with it, doesn’t she, with Tony (Margaret’s eventual husband Antony Armstrong-Jones, played by Matthew Goode). It’s quite interestin­g. There’s sex in it. I’m just saying.”

That’s when Kirby recalled there had been a debate about whether or not to show “royal boob” in a sex scene featuring Margaret and Tony. But beyond those physical concerns, Kirby acknowledg­ed the emotional trap Margaret is in, both as a young woman in season 1 and continuing into full adulthood in season 2.

“In the first season Margaret was really kind of combative with (Elizabeth),” Kirby said. “And then (in season 2), as Margaret looks elsewhere for reassuranc­e, and for identity and for a sense of self, in Tony and that world, I think she kind of grows with confidence. But wounds don’t heal that easy.”

With the Royal sisters still in opposition in season 2, Kirby found herself protective of Margaret.

“Playing it with Claire (Foy), I felt like in fact Margaret had to step up even more,” Kirby said. “Margaret had to define who she isn’t, meaning, ‘I’m not you, I’m free to break away, I’m free to live, I’m free to love, I know who I am now, I’m a woman for the modern age, i.e., you’re not.’”

Smith agreed that Queen Elizabeth must have felt somewhat abandoned by her husband Philip and her sister Margaret in the late ’50s and into the ’60s, “at least in terms of the vibrant social scene.

“Elizabeth is sort of left behind, because she can’t go to the theatre in quite the same way, she can’t engage culturally with the world around her in quite the same way that Philip and Margaret do,” Smith said. “They go and they live their lives a bit more.”

I must admit, there were times in season 1 of The Crown when I felt sorry for the young Elizabeth, dealing with her bratty sister and pouty husband. Hey, Elizabeth didn’t ask for any of this. Her uncle abdicated and her dad died. Suddenly she was Queen. How about a little understand­ing and co-operation, huh?

Be that as it may, Kirby and Smith had a fun exchange when asked if they had heard anything about how the real Royal Family has reacted to The Crown.

“I might have,” Smith said playfully.

“I haven’t,” Kirby said. Smith said to Kirby, “I don’t know about you. We have heard, but I think it’s prudent and respectful of us not to say anything.”

Kirby said, “The only reason I’ve heard from another route is that an American friend of mine was in London and happened to be chatting to Princess Beatrice.”

“I’m talking about the big guns,” said Smith, prompting laughter.

“But (Princess Beatrice) was talking about her granny, in context of The Crown, and my American friend was like, ‘Who is this girl talking about her granny?’” Kirby said. “And then later (the friend) was like, ‘Oh my God, it’s the Queen!’ ”

“Oh wow, really? That’s funny,” Smith said. “(Princess Beatrice) sent us a lovely email, actually. She’s nice, Princess Beatrice.”

But back to the question. What do the “big guns” among the Royals think of The Crown?

“Um, yeah, we’ve heard,” Smith said. “Philip hasn’t watched it.”

This seems like an odd place to revive the debate about “royal boob,” but we can’t leave it unanswered. So what was the final determinat­ion?

“No royal boob,” Kirby confirmed. “It wasn’t raunchy at all, in the end. It was respectful.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? One of the arguments on the season 2 set of the Netflix biographic­al drama The Crown was whether or not Princess Margaret (Vanessa Kirby) should show “royal boob” during a sex scene with Tony (Matthew Goode). The series is picking up where season 1...
NETFLIX One of the arguments on the season 2 set of the Netflix biographic­al drama The Crown was whether or not Princess Margaret (Vanessa Kirby) should show “royal boob” during a sex scene with Tony (Matthew Goode). The series is picking up where season 1...

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