The Star Late Edition

HOW ‘THE CROWN’ SHAPED VIEW OF PHILIP

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FOR the past five years, general reaction to nearly any British royal happening has been to wonder how The Crown would choose to tackle it on-screen.

Such has been the impact of the show on curious American viewers, many of whom only had a passing familiarit­y with the Windsor family before creator Peter Morgan devised his own version of the royals to present to them.

So for a certain subset of Americans, the Prince Philip they were best acquainted with might have been the character from a popular Netflix series - granting the dramatisat­ion an outsized influence on his legacy this side of the Atlantic.

From Matt Smith's pouting newlywed to Tobias Menzies' bitterly sidelined husband, fictionali­sed takes on the Duke of Edinburgh, who died Friday at 99, lent depth to a man otherwise largely defined by his family's behaviour and his own unfiltered, sometimes insensitiv­e comments.

While the second season furthers Philip's characteri­zation by exploring his strained marriage with Queen Elizabeth II (portrayed by Claire

Foy), the third dives fully into his backstory.

Menzies explores the psychologi­cal effects of Philip's family having been overthrown and exiled from Greece, only for his mother to later be diagnosed with schizophre­nia and committed to a sanatorium.

In the most recent season, heavily focused on Prince Charles and Princess Diana, Philip seems to find it easier to bond with another outsider than Charles (Josh O'Connor), his own son and heir to the throne.

Baked into the character's psyche is lingering resentment at having set aside his own ambition for a lifetime of playing second fiddle. S

peaking to Vanity Fair last fall about Philip's mainly ceremonial role in the monarchy, Menzies noted that he "chafes at it, doesn't necessaril­y find it comfortabl­e."

The Crown has been critical of Philip's behaviour, especially in Smith's seasons.

While accompanyi­ng his wife to Kenya, for instance, he makes a disparagin­g joke about a chief's headdress, a nod to the actual duke's habit of making off-color - and in this on-screen instance, racist remarks. But one can argue the show is ultimately empathetic toward him; Smith, after all, claimed to "love Philip."

The fourth season concludes with a conversati­on between Philip and Diana (Emma Corrin), who says to him, "Although we are both outsiders who married in, you and I are quite different."

He agrees with the assessment but, in addressing her frustratio­n, adds that "everyone in this system is a lost, lonely, irrelevant outsider apart from the one person, the only person, that matters."

The danger of fictionali­zing a contentiou­s figure lies in maintainin­g the delicate balance of writing a compelling character while acknowledg­ing the truth of his reallife actions. While Netflix responded to those who find The Crown to be overly critical by expressing confidence viewers "understand it's a work of fiction," others might have watched with the dramatized quality in mind all along - if only because of how the show increasing­ly avoids the family's role in perpetuati­ng a harmful colonialis­t legacy.

In the Vanity Fair interview, Menzies characteri­sed the duke as "a pretty complex person."

"I felt like that was where to start - with someone who has quite a lot of emotion in him but has spent a lot of time not showing it and suppressin­g it," he said of his on-screen portrayal.

"That basic tension was the touchstone for me going into it."

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| ROBERT VIGLASKY Netflix MATT Smith as Prince Philip in The Crown.

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