Column: âThe Crownâ was Netflixâs crown jewel. Then it pushed Queen Elizabeth II aside
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In the last few minutes of the âThe Crownâsâ Season 4 finale, Prince Philip (Tobias Menzies) attempts to connect with and comfort the increasingly isolated and unhappy Princess Diana (Emma Corrin). When she responds in too-little-too-late frustration and threatens to âbreak away,â Philip reminds her what the royal family, and indeed âThe Crown,â is all about â the queen.
âEveryone in this system is a lost, lonely, irrelevant outsider,â he tells her, âapart from the one person, the only person, that matters. Sheâs the oxygen we all breathe, the essence of all our duty. Your problem, if I may say, is you seem to be confused about who that person is.â
Diana, as it turns out, was not the only one. Which may be one reason why, as it arrives at its grand finale Thursday, âThe Crownâ cannot claim the glory, or the audience, it once had.
Although the series has regularly devoted episodes to those who surround the queen â including Philip, Princess Margaret, Prince Charles and Princess Anne â its focus consistently remained on Queen Elizabeth II, played in the first two seasons by Claire Foy and the next two by Olivia Colman.
Until, alas, the final two seasons. With the words he gave Philip still ringing in his ears, creator Peter Morgan proceeded to relegate the âessence of all our dutyâ increasingly to the back pew; by the first half of the sixth and final season, which premiered last month, Imelda Stauntonâs Elizabeth II was lucky to get a word in edgewise.
Instead, âThe Crownâ became a nonstop, and surprisingly controversial, Wales watch.
Part 2 of the Season 6 is out now. Hereâs what you need to know about the Netflix series that centers on the British royal family, including Prince Charles, Camilla, Queen Elizabeth, Prince Harry, Prince William, Kate Middleton and more.
Existentially, it makes some sense. One of the biggest narrative tensions has long been the relevance of the monarchy â Season 5 opened with an episode in which much is made of the mediaâs suggestion that the U.K. has grown tired of its queen, who is said to be suffering from âQueen Victoria syndrome,â in reference to her 19th-century predecessorâs 63-year reign.
As if to prove the media correct, the series shifted its gaze to the oft-chronicled troubles of Diana (Elizabeth Debicki), Charles (Dominic West) and Camilla (Olivia Williams).
At the start of Season 6, even Dodi (Khalid Abdalla) and Mohamed Fayed (Salim Daw) seemed to have more screen time than the âoxygen we all breathe,â who was too often squeezed in as a reactionary footnote â nodding or frowning over the breakfast table or offering brief commentary as she heads off to cut the ribbon at yet another boot factory .
The final five episodes initially follow the trend, devoting their stories to Prince Williamâs (Ed McVey) courtship of Kate Middleton (Meg Bellamy), with a few glancing mentions of âpoorâ Prince Harry (Luther Ford).
Morganâs narrative choices in seasons 5 and 6 may reflect the cultural gaze of the time, but it has greatly diminished the series in the process. What once reigned supreme as perhaps the final offering of TVâs Golden Age, and as Netflixâs grand entry into period prestige, has dwindled to a soap-operatic rehash of scandal and tragedy that includes, one must regretfully observe, an excruciating, minute-by-minute account of Dianaâs last day on this earth
Not exactly a story that has never been told.
Obviously, no tale of Queen Elizabeth II could possibly gloss over the tragedy of Dianaâs death or the profound effect the âpeopleâs princessâ had on the monarchy, Britain and the world, any more than it could ignore the deleterious psychological effect that the prospect of succession has had on Charles, now king, and William. As a title, âThe Crownâ refers as much to the institution as the person.
But even if the goal is to chronicle the eclipsing of the queen by younger royals or simply by time, it is difficult for any series to survive the sidelining of its main character. Especially when she is the longest-reigning monarch in British history, played by a powerhouse like Staunton.
The outpouring of grief over her death last year proved that Elizabeth II remained a fixed point in the hearts of millions, including fans of âThe Crown,â who, no matter what they might feel about the actual monarchy, watched the queen cope with the trials and tribulations of her strangely confined but undeniable influence for years.
The power of the seriesâ early seasons emanated directly from Elizabeth and the astonishing performances each actor was allowed to give. We watched rapt as the queen navigated all manner of churning waters â familial, national and international â all while trying to keep some part of her own identity from being crushed by the weight of expectation, tradition and protocol.
In Season 6, âthe only person that mattersâ has too often been reduced to the role of âgranny.â
Which is sweet, in a way, but also quite ageist. Are we to suppose that the British monarch had nothing on her plate that did not involve Diana? That she became less interesting as a main character as she grew older and a bit fatter? That her long-enduring marriage to Philip (Jonathan Pryce) or the inner and outer conflicts of a post-menopausal woman wonât hold the viewersâ attention as easily as the more headline-grabbing issues of the younger generation?
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As the storylines have become more current, they have, perhaps inevitably, become both slighter and messier. Moving out of the realm of the historical and into the realm of contemporary drama, the writers have less scholarship and more tabloid fodder â Churchill is long gone, and any potential plots about national secrets would no doubt still be classified.
Instead, we are left with âpost-Dianaâ as a leitmotif, and there are only so many ways in which William can be allowed to express his depression by moodily staring out the window or into his beer (though Morgan certainly uses them all).
Regrettably, Princess Anne (Claudia Harrison) is also missing from most of Season 6, despite being the royal most worthy of a spin-off . Lesley Manvilleâs Princess Margaret is also in short supply, though Margaret does dominate an exquisite episode as the series comes to a close.
As does Elizabeth. Far too much of the final seasonâs second half is devoted to William â his grief, his discomfort with growing public adoration and, of course, his relationship with Kate â but as the series nears its end, it fixes its eyes once again on the woman who wears âThe Crown.â
Staunton, when given even the smallest bit of room, comes shining through. In scenes small and large, she radiates both the humor and the dignity of her majesty in later years and the womanâs own increased isolation as she outlasts and outlives so many of the people closest to her.
In each of the powerful scenes Elizabeth is granted, we see breathtaking glimmers of early seasons and a reminder that in telling the story of âThe Crown,â it is never the wisest move to sacrifice your queen.
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