The Daily Telegraph

The Crown’s fabricatio­ns ‘deeply hurtful’, say ex-pms

- By Victoria Ward, Robert Mendick and Christophe­r Hope

TWO former prime ministers today condemn The Crown for showing the King trying to involve them in a plot against his mother.

Sir Tony Blair warned that scenes depicting him and the then Prince of Wales in cahoots against Queen Elizabeth II were “complete and utter rubbish”.

Sir John Major said that “utterly untrue” storylines presented as fact so soon after the death of the Queen would be devastatin­g for the Royal family.

He wrote in a letter to The Daily Telegraph that such scenes “will be profoundly hurtful to a family who are still grieving for the very person on whose life the entire drama was founded”.

It comes as the first reviews of the Netflix show are published, offering the critics’ verdicts on what has already proved to be a highly controvers­ial series. There will be no disclaimer – informing viewers that the show was a fictionali­sed dramatisat­ion – added when the fifth season is released on Wednesday, despite a mounting outcry and suggestion­s that friends of the King and Queen would support such a move.

Netflix confirmed its position against including a notice would not change.

“Perhaps there should be a health warning before every episode of Morse and Lewis to point out that there is not, in fact, a murder every week in Oxford?” one source said. The relationsh­ip between the Queen and Prince Charles is portrayed as fraught throughout the series.

In the show, the latter expresses increasing frustratio­n about his position and the direction in which the monarchy is heading. He asks his mother when he might get to take over, warning that her “Victorian” outlook might leave no institutio­n to inherit.

Shortly after his election in 1997, Sir Tony is shown being lobbied by the heir to the throne, who suggests they could be brothers: “Two men of a similar age, both committed and impatient for change.”

He tries to recruit the new Labour prime minister as an ally, suggesting they could work together to protect his future and pave the way for him to marry Camilla Parker Bowles.

Sir Tony’s spokesman said: “It should come as no surprise that this is complete

complete and utter rubbish.” Meanwhile, Sir John, whose spokesman had previously dismissed the show as “malicious nonsense”, has now personally intervened.

In his letter, he warned: “Netflix may well take the view that any publicity is good publicity. But I assure them it is not – most especially when it disrespect­s the memory of those no longer alive, or puts words into the mouths of those still living and in no position to defend themselves.

“Fiction should not be paraded as fact.”

Sir John, who was prime minister from 1990 to 1997, is portrayed throughout the series as a calm and trusted confidant of the Queen, ranking “very highly” in her “personal table of prime ministers”.

Meanwhile, Kensington Palace has announced that the Princess of Wales will return to host a special Christmas carol service at Westminste­r Abbey which will pay tribute to the late Queen.

The event, to be held on Thursday Dec 15, will be broadcast on ITV on Christmas Eve.

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