National Post

The Ultimate TV Prize

QUEEN ELIZABETH II, UNSCRIPTED

- Ellen Barry The New York Times

Int he annals of television interviews, a drawing-room chat with a 91- year-old woman, watching home movies and offering occasional droll remarks, would not seem like edgy stuff.

But that all changes when the woman is Queen Elizabeth II.

The Coronation, a documentar­y on the 1953 ceremony that aired on Sunday, marks a thaw for the queen, who has never agreed to an interview on camera. ( The exchange, in deference to palace sensitivit­ies, is being described as a “conversati­on.”)

It represents the culminatio­n of 20 years of petitions to the palace, backdoor lobbying with protective courtiers, leveraging of family relationsh­ips dating back centuries and a television culture that has, with the popular cable series The Crown, yielded the queen’s inner life to the domain of fiction.

Anthony Geffen, the film’s producer, said in an interview that The Crown was a key element of the case he and commentato­r Alastair Bruce brought to Buckingham Palace early last year, in the hope of softening the long- standing resistance to the idea.

“I watched the episode of The Crown about the coronation and it struck me that this was bizarre: We have Peter Morgan, who is a wonderful writer, but had no access to the queen, writing his version, which people loved,” he said. “Then there is a version from 1953, and the only person who could tell us the truth about this is the queen herself.”

The argument came at an auspicious time, before the tide of cotton- candy publicity that will accompany Prince Harry’s wedding in May. Advisers were concerned that “coverage of the royals was constantly just going out and opening a supermarke­t,” Geffen said, and were looking for ways to focus attention on the more solemn aspects of the monarchy.

Nothing could be as solemn as t he coronation, in which the monarch is anointed with oil and is believed to be brought into direct contact with God.

Ancient rules surround every aspect of the ceremony. Geffen was surprised to discover that he was prohibited from filming the two crowns used in the ceremony from above, because that is the vantage point reserved for God.

“They didn’t want you to really stand above them at all,” he said. “You’ve got to realize, the crowns are considered quite sacred, and even filming them is seen as if it could devalue them in some way.”

The Coronation marks the first time the crown jewels, a collection of regalia used in British coronation­s, have been filmed, and offers loving, hypnotic footage of crowns rotating slowly on velvet- swathed stands, with resolution so high that you can see motes of dust circulatin­g in the light beams.

For decades, Britain’s royal family has measured out media access with teaspoons.

Elizabeth led this approach at the age of 26, siding with palace traditiona­lists who feared that allowing cameras into her coronation would erode the monarchy’s mystique. The decision provoked such public outrage that she then backpedall­ed, allowing the BBC to broadcast the early stages of t he ceremony, though not her anointing.

In the years that followed, royal gatekeeper­s have re- tained stringent control over broadcaste­rs seeking interviews.

A 15- page contract leaked to The Independen­t, a daily newspaper, in 2015, laid out an eye-popping list of conditions for interviewi­ng Prince Charles, including the right to preapprove the wording of questions, and to review the film at the “rough cut” and “fine cut” stages, with the option to withdraw the interview at any point.

Al i e nati ng t he royal f amily, meanwhile, has proved damaging to broadcast careers.

In 2007, a trailer for a BBC documentar­y was edited, inaccurate­ly, to make it appear that the queen had angrily left a photo session with Annie Leibovitz. ( The footage had actually shown her walking into the session.) The corporatio­n waited until the next day to publish a correction, allowing the story to proliferat­e in tabloids and stoking such resentment that the head of one of the BBC’s TV networks, Peter Fincham, was forced to resign.

A reminder of that hazard came this week, when Rigby & Peller, a bra manufactur­er that had designed undergarme­nts for the royal family since 1960, lost its royal warrant, a coveted designatio­n, after its director, in her autobiogra­phy, Storm in a D- Cup, described interactin­g with the queen. Buckingham Palace gave no reason for the decision.

For the most part, Britain’s broadcaste­rs have re- frained from pushing back against the palace, which has the power to curtail access altogether, said Valentine Low, who covers the royal family for The Times of London.

“The broadcaste­r is essentiall­y going to play ball,” he said. “They know they have got a massive property on their hands and therefore you have to accede to any palace demands.”

Though The Coronation does not interrogat­e the monarchy — indeed, it comes off as a lush advertisem­ent for the institutio­n — it does capture Elizabeth in revealing, unscripted moments.

In preparatio­n for the shoot, two crowns were removed from the Tower of London and transporte­d, under secretive conditions, to Buckingham Palace, where the queen is given the chance to examine them. She does so with an unsentimen­tal, appraiser’s eye, as if they were racehorses or hunting dogs, and deems them, with a perfect deadpan, “unwieldy.”

“You can’t look down to read the speech,” she remarks. “Because if you did, your neck would break.”

Geffen, whose previous subjects have included Barack Obama and Saddam Hussein, said he was pleasantly surprised at the queen’s relaxed manner during the shoot, especially when she reached out to touch one of the crowns. According to custom, she is one of three people on earth — along with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the crown jeweller — who are allowed to touch it, he said.

“The atmosphere during the filming, even for the courtiers looking on, was ‘ Wow, this is the queen we might not have seen before,’” he said. “I think everyone was delighted to see that happen. Because she was quite free- flowing. She wasn’t guarded.”

The impression is one of a woman considerin­g her legacy, but Geffen warned against reading too much into that.

“Some people thought, ‘ Gosh, now that she’s done that, she’s going to resign,’” he said. “But from what I gathered, from everything in that room and from that day, there was absolutely never an intention of that.”

He added, though, that the next monarch is almost certain to simplify and shorten the ceremony. Geffen, whose lineage can be traced to Anne Boleyn, a queen beheaded by her husband, Henry VIII, stopped there, noting jokingly that Tudorera statutes made it a crime to plan the next coronation.

“You’re not allowed to talk about the next coronation, you know,” he said. “It’s treason. So you have to be careful.”

WOW, THIS IS THE QUEEN WE MIGHT NOT HAVE SEEN BEFORE.

 ?? CHRIS JACKSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II has been famously withdrawn when it comes to offering broad media access.
CHRIS JACKSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II has been famously withdrawn when it comes to offering broad media access.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? In this June 2, 1953, file photo, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II wears the bejewelled Imperial Crown at the end of her coronation ceremony.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES In this June 2, 1953, file photo, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II wears the bejewelled Imperial Crown at the end of her coronation ceremony.

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