The Daily Telegraph

Dimbleby to re-evaluate role of monarchy in BBC series

- By Hannah Furness

THE BBC is to “re-evaluate” the role of the monarchy in modern British life in a new documentar­y promising “scrutiny”, after it received complaints over its Royal coverage.

David Dimbleby is to present a threepart series on the institutio­n, aiming to offer a “fresh appraisal of an old institutio­n”. The documentar­y makers claim it will explore the monarchy’s “power, wealth and public role”, questionin­g how the institutio­n “may evolve” and “explore what today’s monarchy tells us about modern Britain”.

It will be written with insight from “insiders”, programme makers say, and Dimbleby will interview a range of age groups to hear public opinion.

Quoting Queen Elizabeth II as he announced the new series, Dimbleby said: “It was the late Queen herself who said back in 1992, ‘no institutio­n – city, monarchy, whatever – should expect to be free from the scrutiny of those who give it their loyalty and support, not to mention those who don’t’.

“I have often thought about that comment and it’s a challenge I look forward to taking up.”

It is understood that programme-makers have approached Buckingham Palace for access, but no filming has yet been agreed.

It is rare that television cameras are allowed special access to royal engagement­s, and even rarer for members of the Royal family to give interviews, but requests are said to be dealt with on the basis that it has “nothing to hide”.

Simon Young, the BBC head of

history, said: “As one reign ends and a new one takes shape, I can think of no better time to re-evaluate the role of the monarchy in modern British life. And with David having been there at many of the key moments, witnessing first hand the critical relationsh­ip between monarchy and public, there is no better broadcaste­r to present it.”

The tone of the series is set to be markedly different from recent BBC coverage.

A Boxing Day documentar­y about the King’s coronation received 900 complaints. The corporatio­n conceded that those viewers “felt the tone of the programme was overly positive”. Defending the programme, it said: “The BBC seeks to reflect a range of viewpoints in news and current affairs coverage of the monarchy.”

The BBC also received a record number of complaints for coverage of the death of Prince Philip: most of the nearly 111,000 complaints were about the extent of the coverage.

The new series, provisiona­lly called Dimbleby on the Monarchy, will broadcast on BBC One and offer a decidedly different tone.

The programme, yet to be filmed and due for broadcast in 2025, promises Dimbleby will “examine how the monarchy works, delivering a fresh appraisal of an old institutio­n on a new chapter”, the BBC said.

Dimbleby, like his father before, has been in place for the major Royal moments across decades. He provided commentary for Queen Elizabeth II’S funeral, while Richard Dimbleby anchored her coronation in 1953, and the funeral of the late Queen’s father, George VI, in 1952.

Jonathan Dimbleby, his brother, wrote the 1994 biography of the then Prince Charles and accompanyi­ng television interview in which he famously admitted to infidelity, by saying he had been faithful to Diana, Princess of Wales “until [the marriage] became irretrieva­bly broken down, us both having tried”.

Dimbleby on the Monarchy, three one-hour episodes, will be made by The Garden, part of ITV Studios.

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