The Mail on Sunday

30 royally ridiculous lies that make The Crown a travesty of the truth

-

IT’S the most gripping real-life drama of our time, and it’s back for a third series. But despite the critical acclaim, there’s a host of jarring falsehoods – as CLAUDIA JOSEPH and HUGO VICKERS reveal in this definitive investigat­ion of the Netflix hit’s ‘facts’... EPISODE 1 OLDING 1964

The Queen’s private secretary Michael Adeane shows her the design for a new set of stamps featuring an image of her profile and she refers to herself as an ‘old bat’.

FALSE: The stamps, which were designed by Arnold Machin, were not issued until 1967, three years later. The image is still in use.

The Queen, played by Olivia Colman, visits her first Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill, on his deathbed following a stroke and kisses him goodbye, saying: ‘God bless you, Winston.’

FALSE: Pure schmaltz. Churchill did not have a stroke until the following year – 1965 – after which he neither spoke nor moved again. The Queen would never have kissed him.

The Queen finds out about Churchill’s death during a family tea party.

FALSE: Sir Winston died at 8am on Sunday, January 24, 1965 – not at tea time.

EPISODE 2: MARGARETOL­OGY 1965

Prime Minister Harold Wilson asks the Queen to roll out the red carpet for American President Lyndon B. Johnson to keep ‘the special relationsh­ip afloat’ – Johnson did not attend Churchill’s funeral because Britain failed to assist in the Vietnam War.

FALSE: Johnson wanted to attend the funeral but was confined to bed with bronchitis. Johnson did get annoyed with Wilson for not supporting him over Vietnam, referring to him as ‘a little creep’, but not until later.

Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon attend a White House dinner with President Johnson and his wife Claudia after which Margaret kisses the President on the lips and there is a dirty limerick contest.

FALSE: They did attend the White House and there was dancing but no kiss on the lips. Reports at the time suggested that they both gave polite diplomatic speeches. Creator Peter Morgan has admitted making up the limerick scene.

EPISODE 3: ABERFAN 1966

On Thursday, October 27, 1966, Prince Philip attends the mass funeral of children killed in the Aberfan colliery disaster, when a collapsing spoil heap destroyed a Welsh village, crushing a junior school and killing 144 people, 116 of whom were pupils. Philip gives the Queen a moving account of events.

ONLY PARTLY TRUE: He visited Aberfan on Saturday, October 22, the morning after the accident, but did not attend the funeral.

The Queen is said to have faked her tears during her visit to Wales in the aftermath of the disaster. After meeting grieving parents, she is seen dabbing her eye with a handkerchi­ef and later comments: ‘I dabbed a bone-dry eye and by some miracle no one noticed.’

FALSE: Joe Haines, the then press secretary to Harold Wilson, has called The Crown’s version of events ‘absolute nonsense’. There is no evidence that her tears, which were witnessed, were fake.

EPISODE 4: BUBBIKINS 1967

Greek police visit Prince Philip’s mother, Princess Alice, at the nursing sisterhood she ran in Athens, after she tried to sell a sapphire brooch to raise money for the convent.

FALSE: Princess Alice was always in search of funds for her nursing home but there is no evidence that she was interviewe­d by police.

Prince Philip’s mother addresses her grown-up son as ‘Bubbikins’.

FALSE: She only used the name when he was a child.

Alice is seen fitting in well to Palace life.

FALSE: She was deaf and could be rather unapproach­able.

The Queen reads hostile reviews of the Royal Family, a groundbrea­king television documentar­y which showed everyday life behind the Palace doors.

FALSE: A fly- on- the- wall documentar­y was indeed made but it was not broadcast until 1969 – two years l ater – and i n fact received ecstatic notices. More than 400 million people watched it in 130 countries across the world.

Reporter John Armstrong from the Guardian is sent to interview Princess Anne about the (non-existent) negative reviews of the TV documentar­y, but wanders around the Palace and interviews Princess Alice instead.

FALSE: No such journalist existed and no interview took place.

EPISODE 5: COUP 1968

Newspaper magnate and director of the Bank of England Cecil King tries to encourage Earl Mountbatte­n of Burma, an uncle of Prince Philip and recently ousted Chief of the Defence Staff, to lead a military coup against Harold Wilson’s government after the devaluatio­n of the pound. They are shown discussing the plan at Broadlands, Mountbatte­n’s country estate.

UNKNOWN: Mountbatte­n did host King at his London flat and invited his friend Sir Solly Zuckerman along. Mountbatte­n insisted he would not have contemplat­ed such an outrageous propositio­n, but King later suggested that Mountbatte­n was intrigued by the plan.

Prince Philip confronts the Queen, hinting at a romance between her and racing manager Lord Porchester, or Porchie. The Queen snaps: ‘ If you have something to say, say it now. Otherwise, if you don’t mind, I’m busy.’

FALSE: This is gossip that has been around for decades and has no substance. There is no evidence that the Queen and Lord Porchester were ever more than friends before his death in 2001. Lady Porchester always accompanie­d them on their overseas visits to studs.

EPISODE 6: TYWYSOG CYMRU/ PRINCE OF WALES 1969

Harold Wilson suggests that the Queen send Charles to learn Welsh at Aberystwyt­h University before his investitur­e as Prince of Wales at Caernarfon Castle, in a bid to quell mounting nationalis­m.

FALSE: The decision was taken two years earlier by Welsh Secretary George Thomas.

Prominent Welsh nationalis­t Edward Millward, vice-president of Plaid Cymru, is ordered to tutor Charles in Welsh despite saying: ‘You can’t make me do this. It would violate every belief in my body.’

FALSE: Dr Millward was a prominent Welsh nationalis­t, but he did not object, as he realised the Prince would be making his speech in Welsh.

The Prince of Wales is portrayed as an arrogant student who does not visit the l i brary and has not heard of his 13th Century predecesso­r, Llywelyn ap Gruffydd. After he is berated by Dr Millward, he becomes a conscienti­ous student.

FALSE: Dr Millward claimed: ‘He was eager, and did a lot of talking. By the end, his accent was quite good. Towards the end of his term, he said good morning – “bore da” – to a woman at college. She turned to him and said, “I don’t speak Welsh.” ’

Prince Charles says goodbye to his tutor, giving him a present. Dr Millward asks him what his family thought of his speech and Charles said they didn’t understand it because it was in Welsh.

FALSE: He did the speech both in English and Welsh.

The Queen gives Charles a dressing down for changing his investitur­e speech. He tells her ‘Mummy, we have a voice’, and the Queen cruelly replies: ‘ Let me let you into a secret – no one wants to hear it.’

FALSE: Prince Charles’s tour of Wales was a triumph. In fact, he got back to Windsor Castle to find no one there to greet him. His father and sister had gone to bed, and his mother was in London with a cold. So he retreated to his room to write his diary.

EPISODE 7: MOONDUST 1969

The three American astronauts, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, who successful­ly made the first Moon landing are gi ven a pri vate audience with Prince Philip.

FALSE: He met them alongside the Queen, and Buzz Aldrin wrote in his memoirs: ‘Prince Philip, an aviation buff, was full of questions.’

Philip admits he is in spiritual crisis and has a ‘jealous fascinatio­n with these young astronauts’.

FALSE: There is no evidence he had a loss of faith after the Moon landing.

EPISODE 8: DANGLING MAN 1970-1971

The Duke of Windsor visits the American Hospital in Paris where he is told he has terminal throat cancer.

FALSE: The Duke of Windsor did not become ill until 1971 and was never told his diagnosis.

Princess Anne meets Andrew Parker Bowles at a ball and ends up romping with him in a four- poster bed while he is still dating Camilla.

UNKNOWN: There are photos of them both at polo matches at Windsor between 1969 and 1971 but there is no evidence of a love triangle.

Prince Charles invites Camilla for dinner while listening to the results of the 1970 General Election, won by Ted Heath.

FALSE: Camilla did not meet Charles until 1971.

The Queen pays a spontaneou­s visit to the dying Duke of Windsor and he gives her letters that he had received from Prince Charles.

FALSE: She did pay a visit, but it was the following year, in May 1972. In reality, this visit had been planned and she was not alone but with the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Charles. The letters portrayed in the series did not exist.

The Duke of Windsor dies with the Duchess by his bedside holding his hand.

FALSE: The Duchess was not there. The Duke did not want her to see him suffering. She was asleep in her own bed when he died.

EPISODE 9: IMBROGLIO 1972-1973

The Duchess of Windsor gives Prince Charles a pocket watch and some advice on his love life and his family.

FALSE: Prince Charles was fond of his Aunt Wallis – and sought a reconcilia­tion with his family – but she was unwell and in no state to give Charles advice about his love life.

The Queen Mother and Lord Mountbatte­n join forces to frustrate Charles and Camilla’s romance.

FALSE: Mountbatte­n and the Queen Mother couldn’t stand each other and she mistrusted what she saw as Lord Mountbatte­n’s perpetual plotting. There was also no need for a plot – Camilla was in love with Andrew Parker Bowles and Charles was not ready to commit.

Lord Mountbatte­n t el l s Pri nce Charles that Camilla is to marry Andrew Parker Bowles.

FALSE: Charles was overseas with the Royal Navy when he heard in 1973 t hat Camilla had become engaged to Andrew Parker Bowles, whom she married that summer.

EPISODE 10: CRI DE COEUR 1974-1977

Princess Margaret hosts a dinner party for her 44th birthday party in 1974 during which the Queen talks about Harold Wilson’s return to power.

FALSE: The dates do not make sense as Princess Margaret’s birthday was on August 21, five months after Wilson formed a minority government and two months after the Duke of Gloucester, also seen at the table, had died.

With her marriage in crisis, Princess Margaret and her young lover, Roddy Llewellyn, return from the Caribbean island of Mustique to face a showdown with her husband, Lord Snowdon, at Kensington Palace.

FALSE: Lord Snowdon was in Australia at the time and had already moved out of the Palace.

The Queen visits Margaret after she takes an overdose following publicity of her affair with Llewellyn.

FALSE: She did take an overdose but not on this occasion. It happened a few years later when she had been staying in a commune with Llewellyn and he fled to Turkey.

The Duke of Gloucester, the Queen’s uncle, is shown to have been a guest at Princess Margaret’s birthday in August 1974 and again at the Silver Jubilee celebratio­ns in May 1977.

FALSE: He died in June 1974, so could not have attended either event.

 ?? ?? The series hints at a romance between the Queen and Lord Porchester NONSENSE: NO EVIDENCE:
The Queen’s ‘fake’ tears at Aberfan
The series hints at a romance between the Queen and Lord Porchester NONSENSE: NO EVIDENCE: The Queen’s ‘fake’ tears at Aberfan
 ?? ?? WRONG DATE:
Queen views stamps in 1964, three years too early
WRONG DATE: Queen views stamps in 1964, three years too early
 ?? ?? The Monarch kisses a dying Churchill NEVER HAPPENED:
The Monarch kisses a dying Churchill NEVER HAPPENED:
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Anne (Erin Doherty) evades a reporter in Buckingham Palace FICTION:
Anne (Erin Doherty) evades a reporter in Buckingham Palace FICTION:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom