A Mesmerizing, Binge-Worthy Look At The Royal Family

If you are tired of the current shenanigans of our own politicians, or if you are an Anglophile, then the new Netflix series “The Crown” is for you. Planned to follow the life of Queen Elizabeth II from her wedding in 1947 to the present day in 60 hour-long episodes, the first 10 are streaming worldwide. (You can watch one a week or binge them all at once, as I did.)

What you will see is a brilliant study of a family of ordinary people who happen to be “royal” and so are expected to be extraordinary. They are allowed no private life. Everything they do, everywhere they go, their official schedules, even holidays, are reported in news media. It was not always so.

When the Queen was born in 1926, news of the Royal Family was carefully controlled by the king’s private secretary and by the government. Thus the English were never told about Edward VIII’s affair with Wallis Simpson, a woman with — to the horror of both church and government — two living husbands. His radio broadcast after abdicating for “the woman I love” came as a shock to the nation. It also made Elizabeth heiress presumptive.

Eleven years later, the princess’s romance with a handsome blonde prince, Phillip of Greece (which had thrown its own royal family out), was news both government and palace were pleased to share after the frightening, gray days of World War II and the London Blitz. Their wedding literally brightened the city and its spirits.

The series is written by its creator, Peter Morgan, who wrote “The Queen,” which won Helen Mirren an Academy Award for portraying Elizabeth II. It is directed by Stephen Daldry, best known for both the theatrical and film versions of “Billy Elliot.” Both have taken advantage of Netflix’s lavish spending on season one — over $100 million — for locations, costumes and cinematography. The episodes are gorgeous to see and filled with intelligent dialogue.

Claire Foy, who was Anne Boleyn in the BBC’s brilliant production of “Wolf Hall,” is a fine Elizabeth. Matt Smith, the Eleventh Doctor in the iconic BBC series “Doctor Who,” is an odd choice for Phillip, since he is neither as good looking nor as blonde. But he has a fine derrière. (Apparently the prince sleeps in the nude.)

John Lithgow is amazing as Winston Churchill. He catches the great man’s determination, slyness, unwillingness to yield power in the face of growing infirmities so well that one forgets his physical differences from Churchill. Harriet Walter’s Clementine Churchill is loving and firm and almost as tall as Lithgow. They make a marvelous couple.

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