![]() Charles, who, at least as The Crown tells it, lacks that ability, sees this as a publicity stunt. When she hears that children like this young boy are often not adopted due to fear of the virus, she immediately reaches out to him, an illustration of her ability to literally and metaphorically erase the space between herself and others. That latter warm embrace, which condenses Diana’s long history of work on HIV/AIDS into a single dramatic moment, comes from a place of instinct for the princess. We see it in the pair of significant hugs she gives, first to Queen Elizabeth, whom she embraces while Her Royal Highness, taken aback, flails like a turtle unable to extricate its legs from its shell, and second, to a child suffering from HIV in a Harlem hospital. Peter Morgan and The Crown’s directors weave visual and verbal cues throughout season four that emphasize the focus on Diana’s attempts to connect, both personally and publicly, within her new role. Diana is a figure hungry for and capable of forging bonds, stuck in a family that avoids intimacy and presses on even when open wounds have not adequately been stitched back together. “She’s just like us,” exclaims one adoring fan in Brisbane during Charles and Diana’s royal tour of Australia. We also see her fully connecting the monarchy to citizens around the world in a way that no one else has managed. We see a woman whose unconventional choices are viewed by the populace as achievements yet stifled by Charles and a royal family who find her a bit much. In Diana’s experience, we see her marriage to a spouse with whom she can’t quite identify. Those controversies bring Elizabeth and her relatives down to a lower level, which makes them seem a bit more accessible to those who don’t reside in palaces.Īll of these examples of the potentially destructive power in insurmountable divisions manifest in the arrival of a single human being onto the royal scene: Diana Spencer, the shy, Duran Duran–loving teenager who quickly goes from kindergarten aide to the world’s ultimate Cinderella. But there remains a sense that the royals exist in some high tower far, far away from regular folks, which helps explain why royal scandals have been such a fascination for so many years. Queen Elizabeth has tried, with mixed success, to mind the gap (sorry) between evolving public opinion and traditional royal standards, either by responding to criticism, as she did in season two when Lord Altrincham attacked her public image, or taking action, as she did in season three by overcoming her initial reluctance to express her condolences in person after that deadly and disastrous mining disaster in Aberfan. Then there’s the more politically significant distance that Elizabeth is constantly grappling with: the one between the monarchy and its subjects in the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth. So is Margaret’s interest in serving a more important royal role, which is again sabotaged in season four by those pesky rules related to birthright and lines of succession. Philip’s frustration with playing second fiddle to Elizabeth on the world stage is one example of that. ![]() Other times the space between ambition and reality provokes resentment. Often that has manifested itself in romantic relationships that were thwarted - see the marriage between Margaret and Peter Townsend, or the affair that refuses to go away between Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles - or in actual marriages that have soured, the one between Charles and Diana being the most high profile. Over the decades The Crown has covered so far, those distances have caused distress, over and over, for members of the royal family. But they also allude to a central theme that has run through this entire series and takes center stage in season four: the stubbornness of distance, between people, entities, or simply what one wants and what is actually possible. The words Anne chooses in that assessment - gap, chasm, different planets - describe where history’s most dissected royal couple stands as the 1980s and this season of The Crown approach their conclusion. ![]() She cites the age gap between the two: “Charles is older than his years and Diana is younger than hers, which makes it not an age gap but an age chasm.” Despite their similar aristocratic backgrounds, Anne says, “their personalities come from different planets.” She adds that “he doesn’t understand her, she doesn’t understand him,” and that this seems like something they are unlikely to overcome. In the penultimate episode of The Crown’s fourth season, Queen Elizabeth asks her daughter, Princess Anne, to level with her about the state of the marriage between Prince Charles and Princess Diana.Īnne, in her usual clipped, blunt fashion, says the marriage has no future. Season four uses many visual and verbal cues to emphasize Diana’s struggle to connect, both personally and publicly, with her new role. ![]()
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