Daily Press

Royal love story ‘Victoria’ returns Sunday for Season 3

- By Luaine Lee

It sounds like a soap opera: First cousins meet and fall madly in love. They’re from different cultures and their romance is unsettled by politics. She’s the breadwinne­r but manages to bear him nine children. He refuses to be subservien­t and forges ahead through his own invention.

No, we’re not talking about the royals of afternoon TV, but of a real queen and her consort: Queen Victoria and her lifetime love, Albert. The storybook lovers return Sunday for Season 3 of “Victoria” on PBS.

The show’s author admits Queen Victoria’s life could easily compete with those of today’s daytime dramas.

“The idea of the royal family as a sort of a fabulous royal soap opera to entertain the nation is something that Victoria wittingly or unwittingl­y created,” says Daisy Goodwin, author of both the book and the TV series about England’s monarch.

“Because she had all these children, the nine children. She had this famously happy marriage. She was the first monarch to really become a media monarch,” she says.

Victoria was the first queen to be photograph­ed, says Goodwin. And she took advantage of the publicity it afforded. “She wasn’t photograph­ed in her crown. She was photograph­ed in a bonnet. And she very carefully crafted her image,” Goodwin says.

“She realized that the way to bed in the monarchy in Britain — and you’ve got to remember that this is a time of revolution where kings are being thrown off their thrones all over Europe — was to make an identifica­tion with the public, that they can see her children, her dogs, her clothes, that they can see that she is a woman like them. She’s not a godlike figure. And that, I think, was a really clever thing to do,” she says. “I think the reason we still have a monarchy in Britain is because of Victoria and Albert.”

While arranged marriages between royals in Europe rarely worked, the union between Victoria and Albert proved unassailab­le.

“The reason I think they got along so well is they both had a missing parent,” Goodwin says.

“He didn’t have a mother because his mother had run away. And she didn’t have a father. And so I think they found that in each other. They found a parent in each other as well as a lover and a spouse. I think, also, Victoria just fancied the pants off him, as we say in England. She was in lust with him as well as in love with him.”

Goodwin, who’s written two novels that made the best-seller list, “The American Heiress” and “The Fortune Hunter,” says she was writing the book about Victoria when she realized that it would make a corking good TV series.

“I thought, ‘I’m going to write a drama.’ I did that with the confidence of somebody who has never written a drama before,” she says, smiling, “and then I finished it and finished the novel afterwards.”

Because she is a novelist, Goodwin thinks she brings a unique sensibilit­y to the script. “That means that I really enjoyed the process, sort of fleshing it out. When I’m writing a novel, I love the fact that I’m sitting alone in a room and I can have as many people as I want on the page. I can have the whole of the British army kind of massing in Trafalgar Square.

“Whereas when you write that in a script, people read it, and they’ll go, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah.’ And then they’ll suddenly go, ‘You know when you said you wanted three regiments? What about three people? What about three soldiers? Will that work for you?’ So that’s the problem with writing scripts.”

 ?? JUSTIN SLEE PHOTO ?? Jenna Coleman plays Queen Victoria in PBS’ “Victoria.”
JUSTIN SLEE PHOTO Jenna Coleman plays Queen Victoria in PBS’ “Victoria.”

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