The Daily Telegraph

The Royal family are like the Sopranos at heart, says Crown star

- By Anita Singh ARTS AND ENTERTAINM­ENT EDITOR “Like all great television shows, in my opinion, it’s about family, and the

‘I went on the website and ordered the most public school shorts I could find. Crispy white shorts’

THE Crown is a television hit because the Royal family has an entertaini­ng mix of “nastiness and competitiv­eness”, according to one of its stars.

Josh O’connor, who plays the young Prince of Wales, likened the Windsors to the mob characters in The Sopranos, or the back-stabbing media moguls in Succession. politics of the family. And that’s what’s interestin­g.

“Yes, all the costumes and the big houses and the quality of the cinematogr­aphy and the music and the score, all that is amazing. But ultimately, at its heart, it is Succession, it’s The Sopranos, it’s about family, the nastiness and competitiv­eness and the love and insecurity, and all the things that we love to see play out. That’s what makes it successful,” O’connor said.

The forthcomin­g series will focus on the troubled relationsh­ip between the

Prince and Princess of Wales, and O’connor said that “the Diana stuff has been thrilling to play”.

In an interview with Esquire UK, the actor said he had no personal interest in the Royal family.

He explained: “It’s quite useful, because if anyone tries to trick you into saying anything about the real Royal family, I can’t, because I don’t know anything.

“When we went over to the Golden Globes, people were asking us about Harry and Meghan and I had to say, ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about’. Because I really don’t.” O’connor said he was fascinated by the Prince’s “predicamen­t” as a king-in-waiting.

He explained: “For me, that’s the juicy stuff. The question of having to wait for your mum to die in order for your life to have meaning, and what that means for a young man. It’s just bizarre.

“Charles doesn’t necessaril­y want power, but until she does what the hell is he doing? What is his existence? He has no purpose.”

In order to prepare for his roles, O’connor creates a scrapbook of photograph­s, clippings and objects. In the case of the Prince of Wales, he tried to recreate the sense of being at Gordonstou­n. “I went on the website and ordered the most public school shorts I could find. Crispy white shorts. I got those, and I soaked them in mud and left them in a sports bag for a week and cut out the material and stuck that in,” he said. “I bought some aftershave, the oakiest one I could find, the most Charles-y one I could imagine, and sprayed that in the book.

“Maybe it’s kind of over the top and maybe it doesn’t help me at all but I do it for fun, so who cares?”

The full interview is in the September/ October issue of Esquire UK, on sale now

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