Let the royal hand cease, as Princess Diana of Netflix says.
Seconds Variety, actress Emma Corrin, portraying the late princess of the fourth season of Netflix’s Emmy-winning drama The Crown, fully supports the streamer’s refusal to appease the royal court and its loyal champions, denying a call to to put an unnecessary disclaimer prior to episodes. “It’s very clear that it’s a dramatized version of the facts,” Corrin explains VarietyMarc Malkin, who interviewed the actress for an upcoming podcast episode. “This is fictitious in the same way that people are not wrong Succession so it really happened with the Murdochs. I understand that too [the request] comes from a place of sensitivity and protection of the royal family and Diana. ”
The petition he referred to came in early December in literal hands of the UK government secretary of culture, Oliver Dowden. The officer wrote a private letter on Netflix and publicly he expressed his concerns about future generations possibly not understanding the difference between real life and fiction, thus confusing insurance royal virgins as (and feel free to aspire here) highly problematic people. After suggesting to the platform that you add a disclaimer before the episodes explaining that the contents of the file show they are not real, Netflix responded with a very polite version of “No, we’re not doing this nonsense,” noting that it is subscribers are smart enough to draw the right lines between reality and the moments that are played on television.
Although the show has been a fan favorite since 2016, the most recent season it seems to draw more attention and clear concern from the British royal family is approaching the current timeline and continues to throw something unflattering (but still hypothetical, technically?) light on dignified figures. The fourth season covers the years 1977-1990 and introduced Princess Diana’s tumultuous experience in the courtyard. Widows highlighted Elizabeth Debicki he plans to play older Diana next season.