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8->[[center:[[Characters/TheCrown2016 Main Character Index]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016TheBritishRoyalFamily The British Royal Family]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016TheBritishRoyalFamilyOlderGeneration The British Royal Family: Older Generation]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016RelativesOfTheRoyalFamily Relatives of the Royal Family]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016FriendsAndAcquaintancesOfTheRoyalFamily Friends & Acquaintances of the Royal Family]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016HerMajestysGovernment Her Majesty's Government]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016TheRoyalHousehold The Royal Household]] | [[Characters/TheCrown2016ForeignDignitariesAndLeaders Foreign Dignitaries and Leaders]] | '''Other Characters''']]
9
10The expanding political and social figures (including spouses and fictional characters) featured in ''Series/TheCrown2016''. Beware of spoilers.
11----
12
13[[foldercontrol]]
14
15
16!! Other Characters
17
18!!!Season 1
19
20[[folder:Clementine Churchill]]
21!!Dame Clementine "Clemmie" Churchill (née Hozier)
22[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ladyc.png]]
23
24->'''Played By''': Dame Creator/HarrietWalter
25
26->''"I had hoped I'd seen the back of this place."''\
27
28The wife of Winston Churchill. Loyal and devoted to her husband, her devotion extends to trying to help him realise that he is no longer the man of energy and accomplishment that he once was, and still believes himself to be.
29
30----
31
32* BurnBabyBurn: Her solution to the loathed Sutherland portrait that upsets her husband so much is to burn it on the lawn at Chartwell.
33* EatingTheEyeCandy: Churchill accuses her of doing this to his portrait painter, Graham Sutherland. She doesn't deny it.
34* HappilyMarried: To Sir Winston. She is loving, supportive, and above all patient — an essential requirement when dealing with her wilful husband.
35* OhNoNotAgain: She’s openly unhappy about living at 10 Downing Street a second time.
36* ParentingTheHusband: Clemmie has to do this on a few occasions.
37** She commands Winston (in a whisper) to shut up as he rather loudly reminds her why Philip's Nazi sisters were not invited to the royal wedding... in the middle of the royal wedding.
38** After Winston's stroke, she lectures him for deceiving the Queen about the extent of his health problems. She orders him back to bed in case the excitement of President Eisenhower's upcoming visit becomes too much for him... which it does seconds later.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Venetia Scott]]
42!!Miss Venetia Scott
43[[quoteright:235:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/venetiascott.PNG]]
44->'''Played By''': Kate Phillips
45
46->''"You were 24. All energy and hope and passion and fire. It's remarkable."''\
47
48A personal secretary to the Prime Minister.
49
50----
51* FiftiesHair: Wears her curly blonde hair in a PrimAndProperBun style.
52* AudienceSurrogate: As she experiences the particulars and peculiarities of life working at Number 10, so do we.
53* CelibateHero: She’s had enough disappointing one-night stands that she'd rather read Winston's memoirs at home than join her flatmate at the pub.
54* CompositeCharacter: Winston Churchill never had a secretary named Venetia Scott. However, her experiences as his secretary are in line with that of his many real-life secretaries.
55* DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife: After reading Winston's memoirs, she is inspired to make her own mark on the world however she can. She does just that, but only via her own tragic death, which makes enough of a mark on Churchill that he calls for a public inquiry into the cause of the Great Smog, which eventually leads to the Clean Air Act 1956.
56* {{Determinator}}: After walking her sick flatmate through the Great Smog to the hospital, she tells the skeptical doctor she can get the Prime Minister to supply more money. After he mocks her, she immediately sets off to do just that, with tragic results.
57-->'''Venetia:''' I'll show you!
58* GirlFriday: To Churchill, who takes a shine to the plucky young newcomer.
59* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: A sweet young woman with hay-coloured hair.
60* HeroWorshipper: She adores Churchill. Given that he is under siege from everyone else, he is deeply moved.
61* LookBothWays: The Great Smog basically makes this impossible, and she’s knocked down by a bus.
62* MoralityPet: For Churchill; her death during the Great Smog finally makes him see it as more than just extreme weather.
63* NiceGirl: A sweet girl who is one of the few people who can talk to Churchill and actually get him to listen. She's also selfless in helping her dangerously ill flatmate through the treacherous London fog to hospital.
64* PluckyOfficeGirl: She manages to get her friend to a hospital amidst the toxic fog and vows to get the government involved...only to get run over [[SurpriseCarCrash by a bus]].
65* SacrificialLamb: The sudden death of such a true-hearted, impressive young woman is the jolt it takes to compel Churchill to call a public inquiry and introduce the Clean Air Act of 1956.
66[[/folder]]
67
68%%[[folder:The Lord Moran]]
69%%!!The Right Honourable Charles Wilson, 1st Baron Moran
70%%->'''Played By''': Nicholas Jones
71
72%%Winston Churchill's personal doctor.
73%%[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Graham Sutherland]]
76!!Mr Graham Sutherland
77[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gsutherland.png]]
78
79->'''Played By''': Creator/StephenDillane\
80
81An English artist of the modernist school, who is commissioned by both Houses of Parliament to paint a portrait of Winston Churchill to celebrate his eightieth birthday. Devoted to capturing truth within his art, his refusal to be bound by the idealistic and mythic view of Churchill that the man himself holds and promotes leads to painful realisations and tension.
82
83----
84
85* ActorAllusion: This isn't the last time a character played by Stephen Dillane and Churchill will come to blows over the latter's self-image. Sutherland's heated disagreement with the Prime Minister echoes Dillane's later role as Churchill's Foreign Secretary [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Wood,_1st_Earl_of_Halifax Viscount Halifax]] in ''Film/DarkestHour''[[note]]in a nutshell, Churchill was opposed to Halifax's plan to negotiate peace with Germany even as they took France in 1940. Halifax was of the opinion that Churchill foolishly believed too much in a romanticised LastStand to admit his loss, preparing to resign in protest. He was eventually proven wrong as Churchill gained the support of Parliament and [[ReassignedToAntarctica shunted to Washington D.C. as a diplomatic envoy]].[[/note]].
86* BrutalHonesty: The crux of the tension between him and Churchill. Churchill wants a portrait that will reflect his mythic self-identity as a titan of British politics. Sutherland, however, values honesty, and instead depicts Churchill as he is — a weak, increasingly frail elderly man.
87* FriendlyEnemy: Sutherland is a modernist, something that hardly fails to get the deeply conservative (both in art and politics) Churchill's back up, and he accuses Sutherland at several points of being a "socialist." Nevertheless, Sutherland sincerely claims to have accepted the commission because he is an admirer of Churchill, and the two men end up finding some points of commonality and friendship. This is partly why Churchill reacts so poorly to the portrait that Sutherland ends up painting; he views it as a personal betrayal as well as political sabotage.
88* JerkassHasAPoint: From Churchill's perspective, at least; he initially accuses Sutherland of performing a cruel character assassination with his portrait, but ultimately cannot argue when Sutherland retorts that all he did was paint the truth, and the truth -- as much as Churchill tries to pretend otherwise -- is simply that Churchill is an elderly man in the twilight of his life.
89--> '''Sutherland:''' I showed those sketches to your wife throughout. She remarked on how accurate they were.\
90'''Churchill:''' That is the whole point! It is not a reasonably truthful image of me!\
91'''Sutherland:''' It ''is'', sir.\
92'''Churchill:''' It is not! It is cruel!\
93'''Sutherland:''' ''[Finally snapping]'' ''AGE IS CRUEL!'' If you see decay, it’s because there’s decay. If you see frailty, it’s because there’s frailty. I can’t be blamed for what is, and I refuse to hide and disguise what I see. If you are engaged in a fight with something, then it’s not with me. It’s with your own blindness.
94* TallDarkAndHandsome: Mrs. Churchill describes him as "a bit of a Heathcliff"
95* WartsAndAll: What Churchill dislikes about his portrait by Sutherland, as he wanted the portrait to show him as Sir Winston Churchill, Prime Minister and Statesmen, not Winston Churchill, a tired, 80-year-old man. After arguing with Sutherland about the portrait, he admits privately to his wife that the portrait is the truth, and he can do nothing about it. As in real life, Lady Churchill later has the portrait burned as the episode ends.
96* WhamLine: Compared to Stephen Dillane's otherwise understated delivery, his "AGE IS CRUEL!!!" really hits home.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Clarissa Eden]]
100!!Mrs Anne Clarissa Eden (née Spencer-Churchill)
101
102[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/f8e9409d_a3ff_41fa_994a_6ca9b0a41fa4.jpeg]]
103
104->'''Played By''': Creator/AnnaMadeley\
105
106The wife of Prime Minister Anthony Eden, who also happens to be Churchill's niece.
107
108----
109* FiftiesHair: She wears her hair in a neat ‘classic wave’ that evokes Creator/GraceKelly.
110* AgeGapRomance: 23 years younger than her husband (who was born in 1897 while she was born in 1920). By comparison, this enabled her to be alive in 2020, long after Season 1 was broadcast and when the only other living adults from the same season were the Queen and Philip — while her husband had been dead for more than forty years.
111* ChekhovsGunman: She is his ''second'' wife, who due to being raised Catholic caused some notoriety by marrying the divorced Eden. As the Queen points out, this makes her more-or-less[[labelnote:*]] Less in RealLife, where Eden was reasonably cooperative and expressed support[[/labelnote]] the chief reason the Cabinet is being extremely hypocritical about not supporting Margaret's proposed marriage.
112* HappilyMarried: Not only this to Eden but ''actually'' the chief reason he made his infamous trip to Jamaica — Clarissa was afraid Eden would die otherwise, even if he convalesced somewhere in the UK.
113* HeroOfAnotherStory: At the time of her death, December 2021, she was the oldest living spouse of a former Prime Minister (having turned 100 in June 2020) and published her memoirs in 2007, 30 years after the death of her husband. Due to her having known just about ''everyone'' (not merely in politics but art, literary, and society too), there was quite a lot to tell.
114* MiddleNameBasis: Quite normal for the world of British politics, although she is the slightly rarer female version.
115
116[[/folder]]
117
118!!!Season 2
119[[folder:Eileen Parker]]
120!!Mrs Eileen Parker (née Allan)
121[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eileen_9.png]]
122
123->'''Played By''': Creator/ChloePirrie\
124
125The wife of Mike Parker, Philip's Private Secretary. She has a much less glowing view of his life and connections to royalty than he does.
126
127----
128* FiftiesHair: Sports full, shoulder length hair in a style precursing a 60s bouffant.
129* AwfulWeddedLife: Her marriage to Mike is very unhappy as he cheats on her and is never around for their children. She decides to get a divorce as soon as she can.
130* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Queen Elizabeth and Tommy Lascelles are astonished that Eileen should dare speak to them so bluntly and harshly when they (separately) ask her to keep her divorce from Mike as quiet as possible, lest Prince Philip’s character be called into question. She tells them to get stuffed in a manner virtually no other character would ever dare use with Tommy, let alone the Queen.
131* MamaBear: One of her motivations to finally get a divorce occurs when Mike neglected to call their young daughter to wish her happy birthday.
132* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: She delivers one to Tommy and Elizabeth, telling them that working for the Royal family damages the family and marital relations of their employees.
133* ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight: In RealLife, Eileen is very loyal to the Royal Family, even after her divorce. However she’s uncompromising in her decision to divorce her husband (breaking social convention as well as the requests of her sovereign) to get out of a unhappy marriage to a man who cheats on her and neglects their children.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Helen King]]
137!!Miss Helen King
138
139[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/c6186a44_6083_4146_b0b6_04242842dc66.jpeg]]
140
141->'''Played By''': Mirrah Foulkes\
142
143An Australian journalist who charms her way into an interview with Prince Philip whilst he’s in Australia to open the Olympic Games, though her motives are far more confrontational than expected.
144----
145
146* BitchInSheepsClothing: With beguiling smiles, she makes sure she captures Prince Philip’s attention, but once she begins her interview with him, her questioning escalates from mildly probing, to highly personal, and finally to downright hostile as her own anti-monarchist leanings fully emerge.
147* CanonForeigner: She is fictional, and so obviously is her encounter with Philip, but she stands in for all his ambiguous encounters and relationships with women at the time.
148* DistractedByTheSexy: She’s an attractive, confident woman, and Prince Philip uncharacteristically lets his guard down, accepting her invitation to interview him and opening himself up to an at first awkward and then ultimately aggressive grilling at her hands. The show really leaves it up in the air as to whether Philip was expecting an interview at all, or something far steamier.
149--> '''Philip (to Mike Parker):''' Don’t ever let my vanity get the better of me ever again!
150* IntrepidReporter: Manages to land an interview with the notoriously uncooperative Prince Philip — largely due to her blonde good looks, it must be said. She is also not particularly good at her job — not starting interviews by asking rude and extremely personal questions and alienating the interviewee would seem to be elementary, let alone in a far more deferential era.
151* JerkassHasAPoint: Although she goes about it in a hostile manner, [[ImmoralJournalist and while some of her questions are way too personal to be considered polite]], her feeling that Australian citizens should have the right to question their leaders is valid.
152* ManipulativeBitch: Under a friendly, even flirty guise, she manages to appeal to Prince Philip’s own vanity and scores an interview with him, though her actual goal is to give him a grilling over the Crown’s role in governing Australia.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Lady Dorothy Macmillan]]
156!!Lady Dorothy Macmillan (née Cavendish)
157[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dot_0.png]]
158
159->'''Played By''': Sylvestra Le Touzel\
160
161The wife of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. They do not have a particularly happy relationship.
162
163----
164* FiftiesHair: She wears her hair in a PrimAndProperBun with the waves of the decade.
165* BlueBlood: She bears the title ‘Lady’ by right of birth, as her father was the 9th Duke of Devonshire and she grew up at the monumental family seat of Chatsworth. This makes her one of the highest-ranking non-royal women in the series.
166* DomesticAbuse: She takes pleasure in emasculating and ridiculing her husband whenever possible.
167* FamousAncestor: She and the Princess of Wales share a famous ancestor -- celebrated society beauty Georgiana Cavendish (née Spencer), wife of the 5th Duke of Devonshire and played by Creator/KeiraKnightley in the film ''Film/TheDuchess''.
168* FatBitch: She’s of a matronly build and has a very unpleasant (to the point of emotionally abusive) attitude towards Harold.
169* NoSympathy: She’s enjoying a blatant love affair with Baron Boothby and outright tells Harold about an upcoming rendezvous with her lover.
170* TokenEvilTeammate: Most PM's spouses are shown to be loving and supportive of their powerful halves (Denis Thatcher and Clementine Churchill) or in the background (Clarissa Eden, various unseen spouses) but Dorothy takes the cake for being her husband's biggest, and abrasively vocal critic, even attending a comedy show that makes fun of him.
171* UptownGirl: For her husband, Harold. Her condescension is part of the reason for his breakdown, presented in-series.
172[[/folder]]
173
174[[folder:Lord Altrincham]]
175!!The Right Honourable John Grigg, 2nd Baron Altrincham
176[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lorda.png]]
177
178->'''Played By''': John Heffernan\
179
180An English aristocrat and journalist, who holds views on the antiquated and out-of-touch nature of the monarchy and need for modernisation that causes much controversy.
181
182----
183
184* TheDentistEpisode: Skips out on a repeatedly postponed dental appointment throughout the Season 2 episode "Marionettes."
185* CompassionateCritic: He only criticizes Elizabeth because he wants the monarchy to succeed and endure, and part of that means modernization. The crux of his many recommendations is that the monarch and wider Royal Family must make more effort to connect with the common people.
186* PompousPoliticalPundit: Defenders of the monarchy view him as such.
187* SpeakTruthToPower: In a compassionate manner, he respectfully but earnestly explains to the Queen that in order to survive as an institution, the Crown must move with the egalitarian flow of the times. One of his key recommendations is that she open up the Palace and meet public guests — something the Queen, through gritted teeth, agrees to.
188* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: The end credits mention how the Crown eventually implemented nearly all of Altrincham's suggestions for reform, as well as the fact that he [[MeaningfulRename renounced his noble title]].
189[[/folder]]
190
191[[folder:Galina Ulanova]]
192!!Galina Sergeyevna Ulanova, Prima Ballerina Assoluta
193
194[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/00ffbf9f_477e_4482_9af1_69171f503672.jpeg]]
195
196->'''Played By''': Aliya Tanikpaeva\
197
198A world famous Russian ballerina who Elizabeth suspects of sleeping with Prince Phillip after she finds her portrait in his possession.
199----
200
201* AffairLetters: Well, jewelry. Elizabeth first becomes suspicious that Philip is having an affair with Galina when she discovers a locket containing her photograph in Philip’s travel bag.
202* BrickJoke: Elizabeth is still snarking about and making references to Philip and "ballerinas" ''decades'' later.
203* DancingRoyalty: Undisputedly one of the best and most respected dancers, ever.
204* IKnowYouKnowIKnow: Following her discovery of the photograph, detailed above, Elizabeth attends one of Galina’s performances and the ballerina can’t help herself but stare at Elizabeth in a manner that implies both acknowledgement of her awareness of the implicit affair with Philip, as well as a sheepish level of shame.
205* RavenHairIvorySkin: She has her dark hair bound in a bun and very pale skin, and is breathtakingly beautiful.
206* SensualSlavs: Breathtakingly beautiful? Check. Slavic origins? Check. Sexy enough to entice Prince Phillip to supposedly cheat on his wife? Check.
207[[/folder]]
208
209[[folder:Stephen Ward]]
210!!Mr Stephen Ward
211[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/profumo_4.jpg]]
212->'''Played By''': Richard Lintern\
213
214An osteopath and artist who was one of the central figures in the 1963 Profumo affair, a British political scandal.
215----
216
217* DenOfIniquity: The organisation of these is his specialism. Ward tells Prince Philip all about the completely discreet, though salaciously louche country house parties he organises, where the Prince can "party with Christine and Mandy" [[note]]Keeler and Rice-Davies, respectively -- 60s glamour girls[[/note]]. 
218* DrivenToSuicide: After the scandal of the Profumo Affair breaks in the press, and he is indicted for pimping, Ward kills himself before he can be convicted. 
219* TheFixer: His public persona is that of a skilled osteopath and artist, though behind the scenes, he acts as coordinator for salacious country house gatherings for the rich and powerful, where beautiful women like Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies provide the "entertainment". 
220* TheQuisling: Debated. Ward was a colourful character: by trade, an osteopath, but also a socialite, artist, and (most unfortunately for Profumo) a rumoured Soviet ally. He introduced escort Christine Keeler to Yevgeny Ivanov, a Soviet spy working undercover at his country's embassy in London, to extract information from Profumo. 
221* {{Scandalgate}}: He became intrinsically linked to the "Profumo Affair", detailed in Series 2 finale episode "Mystery Man", which refers to the scandal surrounding the War Secretary John Profumo's extra-marital affair with Christine Keeler after Ward introduced them to one another. During Keeler's brief relationship with Profumo, she was said to have also been romantically involved with Captain Yevgeny Ivanov, a Soviet naval attache who was also involved in espionage. Keeler was feared to have passed information about Profumo to Ivanov.
222* SignatureItemClue: As noted, Ward is an artist -- trouble is, he's allegedly sketched (from life) pictures of Prince Philip, supposedly in-situ at one of his scandalous parties. Although Philip claims IWasNeverHere, The Crown has to [[DestroyTheEvidence buy back the sketches]] at enormous expense to avoid implicating him in any way. 
223* TheScapegoat: Since Ward's suicide, many have suggested that he was made a scapegoat for the Profumo affair, which became so toxic for the Macmillan government. Supposedly, he knew that Profumo had lied to Parliament about his relationship with Keeler and he was threatening to expose the truth. 
224* ToxicFriendInfluence: Prince Philip is quite taken with Ward after he manages to fix his cricked neck with just a few careful tugs, but is soon drawn into Ward's scandalous world of glamour-girl parties. 
225[[/folder]]
226
227[[folder:Christine Keeler]]
228!!Miss Christine Keeler 
229[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/9f9c632d_3ccf_4a67_a442_cddf3df29f15.jpeg]]
230
231->'''Played By''': Gala Gordon\
232
233A beautiful glamour model and showgirl who, along with Stephen Ward above, was also one of the central figures in the 1963 Profumo Affair. 
234----
235
236* SixtiesHair: She sports big, luxuriously bouffant 'helmet hair'. 
237* DarkAndTroubledPast: After her father abandoned the family, she was brought up by her mother and abusive stepfather in a house made from two converted railway carriages.
238* DistractedByTheSexy: John Profumo -- married man, father and Secretary of War -- is beguiled by the beautiful Christine, and finds himself utterly scandalised because of it. 
239* HeadTurningBeauty: She's a celebrated 60s glamour girl, famed for her pouting, bee-stung lips and perfect hour-glass figure. 
240* HeroOfAnotherStory: Her story is detailed in the 1989 film ''Scandal'', where she was played by the uncannily similar-looking Creator/JoanneWhalley, as well as the 2019 TV series ''The Trial of Christine Keeler''.
241* ImpossibleHourglassFigure: Keeler was famed for her perfect figure, and at the height of the Profumo affair, she famously posed naked, [[EdgyBackwardsChairSitting straddling an Arne Jacobsen chair. ]]
242* TheOldestProfession: Keeler moved in with Ward, apparently platonically, and it was he who allegedly began pimping her and other girls out at parties for rich and powerful men -- including, again allegedly, Prince Philip. 
243* PerpSweating: When we first see her, she's being grilled by the police over her involvement with Profumo, though all she offers is "no comment". 
244* {{Scandalgate}}: Along with Ward, above, Keeler also became intrinsically linked to the "Profumo Affair", which refers to the scandal surrounding her affair with married War Secretary John Profumo, after they were introduced to one another by [[TheFixer Ward]]. During her brief relationship with Profumo, she was said to have also been romantically involved with Captain Yevgeny Ivanov, a Soviet naval attache who was also involved in espionage. Keeler was feared to have passed information about Profumo to Ivanov.
245[[/folder]]
246
247!!!Season 3
248[[folder:John Armstrong]]
249!!Mr John Armstrong
250[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/johnarmstrong.png]]
251
252-> '''Played by:''' Creator/ColinMorgan\
253
254A journalist for ''The Guardian'' who holds very critical views of the Royal Family.
255
256----
257
258* AggressiveCategorism: Absolutely ''hates'' the Royal Family, and writes withering columns in his newspaper, damning their exploits.
259* CanonForeigner: His scathing report on the "At home with the Royal Family" documentary, as well as his interview with Princess Alice, are pure fiction.
260* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Can't stand the Royal Family and isn't above mocking them; but with Princess Alice he does show a keen admiration of her works and appreciation for how she was marginalized for her disability and her years of being institutionalized, showing a rather progressive attitude towards mental health for someone of his era.
261* OddFriendship: Despite his staunch anti-monarchist stance, Princess Alice and her tragic backstory and altruistic life melt his heart, and he writes a suitably supportive piece on her at a time when the Royals badly need some good (in-series) PR.
262
263[[/folder]]
264
265[[folder:Edward Millward]]
266!!Dr Edward "Tedi" Millward
267[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/edmil.png]]
268
269-> '''Played by:''' Creator/MarkLewisJones\
270
271A proud Welsh nationalist and republican who finds himself tutoring Prince Charles in the Welsh language ahead of Charles' investiture as Prince of Wales.
272
273----
274
275* BerserkButton: He's enraged by intellectual laziness, especially when Charles cheerfully confesses to have not yet visited the university's library and demonstrates complete ignorance of Welsh history.
276* GoodParents: He and his wife Silvia are a very happy and close family with their young son Andras. It's telling how much Charles longingly notices this.
277* HappilyMarried: Met his wife at a Welsh political demonstration and is clearly affectionate with her and their son.
278* PatrioticFervor: Wales is part of the United Kingdom. He yearns for the days when Wales can call itself an independent republic like Ireland, as opposed to a principality within the UK.
279* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Unloads on Charles for not taking his Welsh education seriously and compares Charles unfavorably to Edward VIII and Edward VII (and presumably George V as well), who all showed little to no interest in Wales despite being past Princes of Wales.
280* SeriousBusiness: He despises the monarchy, but he also won't give up the chance to teach and promote the Welsh language and impart some knowledge of Wales and its history on someone in an influential position like Charles.
281* SympathyForTheDevil: For Millward, Charles represents a repressive force that's been holding down Wales for centuries. But he also comes to see Charles as a lonely soul who's been profoundly damaged by his upbringing.
282
283[[/folder]]
284
285[[folder:Silvia Hart Millward]]
286!!Mrs Silvia Hart Millward
287[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sylviam.png]]
288
289-> '''Played by:''' Nia Roberts\
290
291A proud Welsh nationalist and wife of Tedi Millward, who is less than pleased about her husband tutoring a member of the Royal Family in the Welsh language.
292
293----
294* SixtiesHair: She has a shoulder-length bouffant teased at the crown that isn't dissimilar to [[Series/{{Bewitched}} Samantha Stephens in the late 60s]].
295* AggressiveCategorism: Holds hostile feelings towards Charles without ever even having met him, due to him belonging to an institution she despises. Warms up somewhat when she spends time with Charles at dinner and realises his vulnerability and loneliness.
296* EasilyOverheardConversation: She is talking with someone on the phone about her husband bringing Charles round for dinner (in Welsh) when she sees the guest of honour has arrived (though luckily he is not fluent yet).
297* GoodParents: Enjoys a happy and close life with her husband and soon-to-be two children.
298* HappilyMarried: She reminds Tedi that Welsh nationalism underpins their whole marriage, but they also share a close marital bond and sense of humour.
299* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: In RealLife, as her husband says, she wouldn't have allowed Prince Charles to dine in their home.
300* {{Housewife}}: A classic example with the apron over a feminine and stylish dress, cooking in the kitchen.
301* PinkIsFeminine: She is constantly seen wearing pink in her introductory scenes (her cardigan in the above photo, the short dress she wears when Prince Charles comes for dinner, and her nightgown).
302* SympathyForTheDevil: The ‘devil’ being the institution to which Charles belongs. As a mother herself, she feels sympathy for Charles and his cold relationship with his own mother.
303* TranquilFury: Her mood when her husband brings Charles home as a guest counts as this, to say the least.
304
305[[/folder]]
306
307[[folder:Arthur Scargill]]
308!!Mr Arthur Scargill, President of the National Union of Mineworkers
309
310[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/de494d9c_3c72_489b_9047_2e6077d53eab.jpeg]]
311
312->'''Played By''': David Wilmot\
313
314The President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) who leads two strikes during 1972 and 1974 against the policies of Heath's government.
315
316----
317
318* EntertaininglyWrong: He presumptuously assumes Ted Heath is just another cosseted toff — little does he know that both men share a similar background, and Heath instantly and firmly shuts down his “[[EvilCannotComprehendGood you could never understand]]” diatribe.
319* FieryRedhead: Has ginger-colored hair and is quite a fiery leader.
320* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gets a fair way into giving one of these to Heath, pointing out how the miners are suffering underground to give everyone in the country power, heat, and light -- unfortunately, [[InUniverseFactoidFailure he assumed that Heath's Tory leadership, musical passions and "smooth hands" mean that Heath hasn't got a clue about any kind of labour or working-class life]]. Builder's son Ted promptly gives ''him'' one, focusing on the illegality of the strikes and calling him a hoodlum and a hostage-taker. Given the exchange of these, negotiations fail.
321* SloganYellingMegaphoneGuy: In his capacity as President of the NUM, he uses his strong oratory skills to whip his followers into an anti-government frenzy.
322* StrikeEpisode: As leader of the NUM, episodes in which he appears are set against the backdrop of the miners' strikes of the early 70s.
323* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: He also infamously clashed with and was crushed by Thatcher during her administration, but none of that is covered by the show.
324[[/folder]]
325
326[[folder:Sydney Johnson]]
327!!Mr Sydney Johnson
328[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sj_2.png]]
329[[quoteright:250:[[labelnote:Click here]] https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/8f6deb1b_140e_4190_a4ad_4a5ed673676c.jpeg[[/labelnote]] to see him in Season 5]]
330-> '''Played by:''' Connie M'Gadzah (Season 3), Joshua Kekana (young, Season 5), Jude Akuwudike (older, Season 5)\
331
332The Duke of Windsor's longtime valet. Later valet to Mohamed Al-Fayed.
333
334----
335
336* AscendedExtra: Johnson is at first just a valet in the background, very briefly seen in "Vergangenheit", a bit more in Season 3's "Dangling Man" but with his part still amounting to TheCameo and almost no reason to believe he'd appear again. In Season 5 he returns for an episode that gives him a much more substantial role, goes all the way up to his own death, and shows his resting place in Paris.
337* ADayInTheLimelight: Having worked for the Duke and Duchess in RealLife in his native Bahamas and later France, he left following the death of the Duke. He later came back to help curate a collection of the Duke and Duchess's belongings after Mohamed Al-Fayed, then his employer, restored their suburban Paris villa as a museum in the 1980s — all explored in Season 5's "Mou Mou".
338* FirstNameBasis: Ironically. As anyone who's read Creator/PGWodehouse would know, a proper valet is always on a LastNameBasis, to the extent one should be vaguely unsure of what his first name even ''is''. However, both the Duke of Windsor and Al-Fayed call him Sydney rather than Johnson, and even Sydney the etiquette expert seems fine with it.
339* IncurableCoughOfDeath: Like his former employer the Duke, although without BloodFromTheMouth or any doctors involved. In his case it basically cuts from an ongoing cough to him on his deathbed.
340* TheJeeves:
341** He's often called on for help in his introductory episode, as the Duke of Windsor was in the advanced stages of cancer at the time.
342** Years later, he begins working as a valet once more, but this time for Mohamed Al-Fayed, for whom he also acts as a {{Mentor}} in the ways of British high society.
343* OddCouple:
344** The former King Edward VIII was very fond of and dependent on him, treated him much more nicely than he did many other people, and gave him an unparalleled education in British customs and society, which Sydney uses in his memory after his death.
345** Mohamed Al-Fayed absolutely loathes him at first sight due to being black and discriminates against him; despite that and then being the man's employee, they gradually grow closer and end up as something like HeterosexualLifePartners. Al-Fayed is ''devastated'' when he dies.
346* OldRetainer: Worked for the Duke and Duchess for almost 30 years, beginning when he was 16 and the Duke was governor of the Bahamas.
347* TokenMinority: He's the sole black character of note in the entire series, though given the predominantly period setting and focus on the Royal Family's circle, it's not particularly surprising.
348* UndyingLoyalty: The Duke died several years ago and Sydney seemingly hasn't seen the Duchess since, but he's very upset about her death and difficult end and clearly holds both their memories in the highest regard, even while he tactfully feels no need to say anything negative about the British royal family, either. He even goes to work for an unpleasant racist in order to pass on the Duke's lessons and later save his former place of employ from ruin.
349
350[[/folder]]
351
352!!!Season 4
353
354[[folder:Denis Thatcher]]
355!!Mr Denis Thatcher
356[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2021_04_22_at_104010_pm.png]]
357
358-> '''Played by:''' Stephen Boxer\
359
360Margaret Thatcher's devoted husband who is her loyal confidant against the pressures brought by the office.
361----
362* AffectionateNickname: Margaret calls him "DT".
363* CloserToEarth: Inverted. He's a rare male example of this trope. When his son is returned safely from his dangerous trek, Denis scolds him for being ungrateful to the rescue team, while Margaret merely coddles him.
364* CoolOldGuy: His quips and snarks aimed at the royals are both supportive of Margaret and amusing.
365* DevotedToYou: Despite her obvious flaws, Denis is utterly supportive and dedicated to Margaret.
366* HappilyMarried: Despite their differences, he and Margaret have a strong and healthy relationship and are completely devoted to each other.
367* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: While Mark ''did'' do business in South Africa, in RealLife it was likely because of his father's strong ties and business dealings there, and it was likely ''Denis'' who played a part in Thatcher's hardline against sanctions there. Denis' support for the apartheid regime is completely excised here, in favour of Mark's awfulness and him being a CoolOldGuy.
368* NiceGuy: Good-natured, good-humoured, down-to-earth, holds his children to equal standards, and loving to and supportive of his powerful wife.
369* NiceToTheWaiter: Played with. He tips the maid who helps his wife get settled in at Balmoral. Though she protests that it's not supposed to be done until the stay is over, Denis insists and promises that he won't tell anyone — although this is presented as a bit crass and yet another faux pas, seemingly making the maid uncomfortable.
370* NoSenseOfHumor: Because Margaret is this, he balances and compensates.
371* PowerIsSexy: Amiable NiceGuy Denis is quite comfortable (and HappilyMarried) being the "support act" for the most powerful woman in the world.
372* SavvyGuyEnergeticGirl: As per RealLife. His wife's intense fervour and drive made her Prime Minister of the UK for eleven straight years. Part of Denis's support was providing her with calm, perspective, and his much better people skills.
373* UnderstandingBoyfriend: He is very patient and supportive of his wife's political career, despite belonging to a generation of men who expected women to StayInTheKitchen. He even financed his wife's law school when she took an interest in it.
374
375[[/folder]]
376
377[[folder:Carol and Mark Thatcher]]
378!!Miss Carol Thatcher & Mr Mark Thatcher
379[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carolthatch.png]]
380[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/markthatch.png]]
381
382->'''Played by:''' Rebecca Humphries & Freddie Fox\
383
384Margaret and Denis Thatcher's twin children who occupy different places in their mother's heart.
385----
386* EightiesHair: Both of them have examples of the luscious locks of the earlier part of the decade. Mark looks like a more toned down version of [[Series/StrangerThings Steve Harrington]] while Carol has a chin length bob that Diana's Sloaney friends would sport.
387* CallingTheOldWomanOut: Carol attempts to chastise her mother for her attitude towards other women and how she treats them (including her) with disdain.
388* DaddysGirl: Carol with her father Denis, "they are the support act in this show" and are pretty close, as the cocky Mark and formidable Margaret run the show.
389* ElmuhFuddSyndwome: As per real life, Carol sports her well-known speech impediment.
390* {{Expy}}: Mark Thatcher and Prince Andrew are virtually identical in personality and portrayal.
391* JerkJock: Mark, so much. Xenophobic, chauvinistic, ungrateful, arrogant, conceited and rude. He also is a sporty race car driver.
392* FoolishSiblingResponsibleSibling: Mark is the Foolish while the more Responsible Carol keeps to herself and out of trouble.
393* LikeFatherLikeSon: Oy.
394** Mark and Margaret are both people enamoured of their own egos and don't admit when they have made a mistake. Mark also seems to have inherited all of Margaret's prejudices and (lack of) people skills.
395** Carol and Denis are quieter and less likely to draw attention to themselves.
396* MamasBoy: Mark all the way. He is often spoiled and enabled by Margaret for his misbehavior.
397* NeverMyFault: Like his mother, he never admits when he is at fault, even when it gets him and teammates lost and several governments using resources to find his whereabouts. He also goes and accuses them of incompetence, using his prejudice as a cudgel.
398* PolarOppositeTwins: The irresponsible and ungrateful JerkJock Mark and the quieter and more responsible Carol.
399* TheUnfavorite: Poor Carol, whose mother spoils Mark and ignores her, all due to her mother's FemaleMisogynist tendencies.
400* UngratefulBastard: Mark.
401** Apparently not grateful enough to the people who found him in the desert and saved his life. Margaret's commentary is that it was their job and it took them a week, [[InTheBlood showing where he gets it]].
402** His reaction to his mother making him his favourite dinner of toad-in-the-hole post rescue? Whinge that she 'forgot the gravy' in the most entitled manner possible.
403[[/folder]]
404
405[[folder:Michael Fagan]]
406!!Mr Michael Fagan
407[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tom_brooke_plays_buckingham_palace_intruder_michael_fagan_in_the_crown_254946b.jpg]]
408
409-> '''Played by:''' Tom Brooke\
410
411A London-born decorator who breaks into Buckingham Palace (twice!)
412
413----
414* TheCassandra: He explains the consequences of Thatcher's libertarian policies to the Queen. Thatcher later dismisses Fagan's claims away on grounds of his mental health.
415* CharacterTitle: The episode in which he appears is simply titled "Fagan".
416* TheCloudcuckoolanderWasRight: He comes across as a lunatic but as the Queen puts it, he may be a fool but he is [[Theatre/KingLear Lear's fool]].
417* GeniusSlob: He's a LowerClassLout with some mental health issues and the propensity towards getting into fights with his ex-wife's boyfriend but he also shows a great knowledge of political and economic history and can critique the economics of the Thatcher administration and connect how her spending on the Falklands War affects his employment as a painter-decorator.
418* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: The real Michael Fagan had much more obvious mental issues and acted more like a StalkerWithACrush to Elizabeth, saying he loved her and threatening to kill himself with a piece of glass from the window he broke to get in. He also went on to attack a police officer and later became a heroin dealer, for which he was imprisoned.
419* LowerClassLout: His life is pretty brutal, being unemployed and separated from his wife and, by social services, from his children, so it's perhaps no wonder he turns to fighting and burgling royal palaces.
420* RefugeInAudacity: The real-life Fagan was off his face on mushrooms when he broke into the Palace, but in-series, it's his blatant disregard for authority and 'fuck it' attitude that spurs him on.
421* StormingTheCastle: Having been fobbed off by social services and his local MP regarding how to 'fix' Thatcher's Britain, he decides to take matters into his own hands and seek out an audience with the Queen herself -- which, ''unbelievably'', he manages to do by breaking into Buckingham Palace and confronting her in her own bedroom.
422* SpeakTruthToPower: He has the nerve (with some help of liquid courage) to be able to tell the Queen just how bad this country is doing under the Thatcher Administration, how dismal his life is, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking how shabby the palace looks]].
423* SympatheticPOV: Breaking in, confronting and frightening anyone in their own bedroom is nothing short of appalling. Here, he's presented as a gob-shite and a clearly a bit of a thug, but also that he does have a point about how broken the country is, and ultimately the episode presents his behaviour as mind-blowing ballsiness.
424* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: In keeping with the SympatheticPOV with which he is portrayed, his eponymous episode concludes with an epiloguous note that mentions his incarceration, but cheekily cuts to a follow up note which states that he only served three months, alongside an image of him and other rogues defiantly grinning like some heroic anarchists. It does ''not'' mention that he later received a three-month (suspended) sentence for attacking a policeman in 1984, and that he was later sent to prison for four years for dealing in heroin.
425[[/folder]]
426
427[[folder:Dr Penelope Carter]]
428!!Dr Penelope Carter
429[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/image_50406401.JPG]]
430
431->'''Played By:''' Gemma Jones\
432
433 A London-based psychotherapist visited by Princess Margaret.
434----
435* ArtisticLicenseMedicine: Telling patients sensitive information that you know and they do not is a serious ethical breach. Furthermore, as Dr Carter later reveals, the Bowes-Lyon cousins’ problems are developmental disorders[[labelnote:*]]and live in a facility that specifically cares for that type of patient, as opposed to other psychiatric issues[[/labelnote]], when she was originally asking Margaret about relatives' mental health — not even bringing up her more famous uncle Johnnie, as the Queen Mother does later. As Dr Carter finally says, the two issues don't usually connect, so there was even less reason to make reference to Katherine and Nerissa at all.
436* InsistentAppellation: Despite her hauteur, Margaret making her therapist call her "Ma'am" is funny, if not beneficial.
437* SayingTooMuch: During one of their therapy sessions, the subject turns to familial mental health problems and Dr Carter reveals to Margaret that two of her Bowes-Lyon cousins, whom she thought had died years before, are still alive and locked away in a mental institution. The sharing of this information leads Margaret down an investigative path, where she learns the horrifying truth and ultimately confronts her complicit mother.
438* TheShrink: Princess Margaret starts to see her to get on top of her mental health issues in Season 4.
439[[/folder]]
440
441!!!Season 5
442
443[[folder: Norma Major]]
444!!Mrs Norma Major (née Wagstaff)
445[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/af5f6476_0574_4839_87a5_b142d9d8fdb6.jpeg]]
446->'''Played By:''' Flora Montgomery\
447
448The ever-patient wife of Prime Minister John Major and his confidant.
449----
450
451* NinetiesHair: Her hair is cropped in a teased pixie-cut similar to the Princess of Wales.
452* TheGenericGuy: Norma is a softly-spoken, perfectly pleasant woman, and compared to prime ministerial spouses like the grandly steadfast Clementine Churchill, the pompous Dorothy Macmillan, the witty Denis Thatcher, and the grinning exuberance of Cherie Blair, she comes across as a little mousey and bland — which is famously how she was always spoofed, along with her husband.
453* TrademarkFavouriteFood: As a wry ShoutOut to a recurring gag on the satirical puppet show ''Series/SpittingImage'', which presented her husband as being so deathly dull that peas were all he ate (and discussed), Norma serves John a large serving of peas to go with his sausages and mash for dinner.
454
455[[/folder]]
456
457[[folder: Andrew Morton]]
458!!Mr Andrew Morton
459[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screenshot_2022_11_09_at_171445.png]]
460->'''Played By:''' Andrew Steele\
461
462 A journalist who ingratiates himself into Diana's circle. In 1992, he publishes a tell-all biography of her, entitled ''Diana: Her True Story''.
463----
464
465* BlatantLies: Morton befriends Diana's confidante, Dr James Colthurst, and with him acting as a go-between, Diana begins recording answers to the questions Morton poses, with his aim being to publish a work "in her own words". However, after he receives a BreakInThreat, and Diana is admonished by Prince Philip over the sanctity of privacy, the pair change tack, and Morton goes on national television claiming all of the (highly personal) information in his book was gleaned from "Diana's close friends".
466* ExactWords: "I can categorically state that I have not interviewed the princess."
467* GoingForTheBigScoop: Diana's phone at Kensington Palace is hacked, and it becomes apparent that the Palace is well aware of Morton's intentions when a warning for him to back off is sent his way in the form of his house being broken into and trashed.
468* IntrepidReporter: He's a tabloid hack, though Diana concedes that his coverage of her has been quite kind in the past, and after lurking about following the princess' every move, he approaches her trusted friend with a view to landing the biggest scoop of all -- a tell-all interview with the princess herself.
469
470[[/folder]]
471
472[[folder: Monique Ritz]]
473!!Madame Monique Ritz (née Ramseier)
474[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/b9b95f4c_b9bd_41b9_a8cb_bf8a39c1083e.jpeg]]
475
476->'''Played By:''' Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu\
477
478The head of the Ritz family and owner of the Ritz Hotel in Paris. In 1979, she sells the hotel to Mohamed Al-Fayed.
479----
480
481* BullyingADragon: With barely-concealed hauteur, she expresses her concerns over Al-Fayed buying her hotel, and lists her reasons for finding him an unsuitable new owner. Her tone galvanises Al-Fayad, and he rounds on her in Arabic (translated by Dodi), putting her in her place as a ham-strapped vendor.
482* FamilyBusiness: Her late husband, Charles Ritz, was the son of legendary Swiss hotelier César Ritz, the "King of Hoteliers, and Hotelier to Kings”. The dynasty died with her in 2011.
483* {{Foreshadowing}}: Scenes at the Ritz Hotel provide a grim portent of Diana and Dodi’s deaths, as it is from the hotel’s rear entrance that they will make their fatal journey on the 31st of August, 1997.
484* OnlyInItForTheMoney: She sells her family’s prize jewel hotel to a man she finds suspicious, shady, unqualified in hotel management, financially sketchy, [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and plain rude]], but his monetary offer is higher than others, and she relents.
485* {{Socialite}}: She’s a beautiful, elegant older woman and is a leading light of the Paris social scene.
486[[/folder]]
487
488[[folder: Martin Bashir]]
489!!Mr Martin Bashir
490[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/martinbashir.jpg]]
491
492->'''Played By:''' Prasanna Puwanarajah\
493
494 A BBC journalist who famously interviews Diana, Princess of Wales for an explosive episode of ''Series/{{Panorama}}''.
495----
496
497* AmbitionIsEvil: So keen is he to land a career-boosting interview with Diana that he’s prepared to besmirch the names of her loyal friends, staff, and even family members, and reduce an already-troubled woman to a paranoid wreck with entirely false evidence of a spy network out to get her.
498* BaddieFlattery: As soon as he meets Earl Spencer, he makes up some guff about how he inspired his journalistic work. He later gets on Diana’s good side by assuring her that the Palace is just jealous and scared of her “power”.
499* BlatantLies: He goes so far as to claim that because he works for the Creator/TheBBC, his integrity is unimpeachable.
500* FourEyesZeroSoul: Sports large-lensed glasses and shows zero compassion for his subject, those around her whom he slanders, or his BBC colleagues drawn into the deceit -- all he cares about is landing his interview.
501* ImmoralJournalist: To snare Earl Spencer and ultimately his sister, Diana, Bashir gets his tech guy to mock up a whole folio of fake invoices for payments made to a variety of parties (including the Diana’s Private Secretary, Patrick) which he claims are compensation for spying on the Princess. Earl Spencer instantly trusts what he hears and encourages her to go ahead with a TV interview with Bashir.
502* JanitorImpersonationInfiltration: Like in some sort of dramatic heist movie, on the day of filming Diana’s interview, Bashir and his crew disguise themselves as tradesmen sent to Kensington Palace to set up a new sound system for her. Despite the series’ fondness for embellishment, this really did happen.
503* MaliciousSlander: No one is off-limits. To gain Diana's trust, he presents a list of fake invoices for parties whom he claims have received payment for spying on her, including her household staff, her beloved Private Secretary, Patrick Jephson and, when he gets desperate after Diana wobbles, ''her own brother'', Charles Spencer. While it's undoubtedly a risky strategy, as such evidence could be disproven, Diana is a relatively gullible, hurt, already-paranoid person and his gambit pays off, as she never directly confronts any of the parties slandered.
504* ManipulativeBastard: He lacks all journalistic integrity and plays on Diana's paranoia, contriving entirely false allegations of spying to gain her trust. He even picks up on her predilection for Pakistani men, playing up his heritage with references and proverbs and even equivocating racial prejudice with Diana's treatment, when in fact he'd always, as his colleague notes, firmly presented himself as British.
505* RealLifeWritesThePlot: In 1995, Martin Bashir was a relatively unknown journalist and none of his machinations (in terms of securing his interview with Diana) were in the public sphere; following the interview, he and ''Series/{{Panorama}}'' received several awards for it, and Bashir went on to interview other famous people like Music/MichaelJackson. However, much like Prince Andrew, Bashir is given a significant HistoricalVillainUpgrade, as 25 years after the ''Panorama'' interview, his deceit was made public after he was subject to a detailed investigation and found guilty by the Supreme Court of using "deceitful methods" and breaching BBC editorial conduct to obtain the interview. Following this, the BBC actually returned the BAFTA award that ''Panorama'' had been given for Best Talk Show in 1996 (which had been awarded mainly on the back of the Diana interview).
506* SeamlessSpontaneousLie: He's an expert at spinning these, as seen when Diana's brother expresses concern that much of his "evidence" contradicts itself, and when she directly questions him, Bashir immediately asserts that Charles Spencer has been "got at" too, and is part of the great conspiracy.
507* WhamEpisode: The BBC series ''Series/{{Panorama}}'' has been going since 1953, but its most shockingly memorable episode, "An Interview with HRH The Princess of Wales", was like nothing ever seen before, with Diana no-holds-barred tearing into The Firm like no one had ''ever'' done before so publicly and explosively.
508
509[[/folder]]
510
511[[folder: John Birt]]
512!!Mr John Birt, Director-General of the BBC
513[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_birt.png]]
514
515->'''Played By:''' Nicholas Gleaves\
516
517The Director-General of the Creator/TheBBC and ultimately responsible for all programming output. 
518----
519
520* AgainstTheGrain: The BBC, as the national broadcaster, and the Crown are strongly intertwined, yet Birt exhibits strong republican leanings when arguing with BBC Chairman Marmaduke Hussey over the continuing relevance of the monarchy in 90s Britain. He also has bold plans for modernisation that are completely at odds with Hussey's wishes. 
521* IdiotBall: Birt rather dimly asks "Do you think she'll be critical of the monarchy?" prior to Diana's interview, at a time when she already had been (albeit unofficially) via the Morton book. 
522* MomentOfWeakness: Birt is uncomfortable with the concept of Martin Bashir's ''Series/{{Panorama}}'' interview with Diana, even despite his apparent anti-monarchy leanings, and his instinct is to kill it. However, after a meeting with BBC Chairman Marmaduke Hussey, the pompous treatment he receives from the exceedingly pro-monarchy Hussey spurs him into an immediate instruction to "go for it" when giving the interview his final approval, apparently out of sheer pique.
523* TeethClenchedTeamwork: His zeal for modernising clashes with BBC Chairman Duke Hussey's entrenchment to the GoodOldWays and his view of the BBC as the personification of everyone's favourite 'Auntie'. 
524* TemptingFate: Birt directly asks Martin Bashir “Look me in the eyes and tell me I’m not going to regret this?” with Bashir simply assuring him “You won’t". In RealLife, the revelations about Bashir's manipulations that occured on his watch, which surfaced twenty years later, irreparably tarnished Birt’s reputation, and turned the once-respected man into a discredited figure.
525[[/folder]]
526
527[[folder: Marmaduke Hussey]]
528!!The Right Honourable Marmaduke "Duke" Hussey, Baron Hussey of North Bradley, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC
529[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dukehussey.png]]
530
531->'''Played By:''' Richard Cordery\
532
533The Chairman of the Creator/TheBBC and the husband of Lady Susan Hussey, the Queen's LadyInWaiting. 
534----
535
536* AffectionateNickname: He's known as 'Duke' from his full name Marmaduke, and John Birt (surprisingly given the tense atmosphere between them) calls him by the further diminutive, 'Dukey' -- though possibly condescendingly.
537* ArtificialLimbs: His heavy limp is revealed to be the result of him having a prosthetic leg; Birt later explains to Bashir that he had his right leg amputated as a result of injuries sustained under fire during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII; very much TruthInTelevision.
538* FanDisservice: The series portrays the obese Dukey in full and lingering view in only his underpants in order to reveal his prosthesis, despite undoubtedly having slightly more tasteful ways of going about it.
539* {{Foreshadowing}}: After John Birt storms out after telling Duke his plans to interview Diana, Duke calls after him "You'll be on the wrong side of history!" -- his fears prove prescient, as the ''Series/{{Panorama}}'' interview is almost immediately thought to have been a step too far and, years later in RealLife, Birt's reputation took a huge hit after the revelations about Martin Bashir's lying machinations in securing the interview emerged.
540* GoodOldWays: He adores the BBC's cosy, safe, educational editorial style and image, waxing lyrical about the corporation's MoeAnthropomorphism of a beloved auntie, derived from the BBC's (real) AffectionateNickname -- 'Auntie BBC'.
541* HappilyMarried: He and Susan are a loving couple, with one of their featured scenes showing them getting ready for bed together.
542* ItsPersonal: He and his wife are ''friends'' with the Queen, so it's entirely understandable that he's absolutely incensed at the thought of the corporation he's Chairman of giving Diana a platform to damage the monarchical institution.
543* JerkassHasAPoint: He's presented as a very pompous embodiment of BritishStuffiness, and yet his absolute aversion to ''Series/{{Panorama}}'' giving Diana a platform, in sharp contrast to his reckless colleagues is, with hindsight, sensible.
544* NewMediaAreEvil: In a boardroom meeting of the BBC executive team, he pans the content of the emerging satellite and competing ad-funded channels for their low-brow output.
545* NiceJobBreakingItHero: If he hadn't treated John Birt with condescension when he came to him for approval and advice on the Diana interview, Birt may never have let it go ahead, as he was already wobbling. Birt pushes the editorial button out of apparent spite.
546* OldWindbag: He's a puffed up, puggish man and the lecture he gives to the BBC boardroom about the corporation's virtuous, MaidenAunt image is decades out of date.
547* OneDegreeOfSeparation: His wife, Lady Susan Hussey, is a long-serving LadyInWaiting to the Queen, her personal friend, and godmother to Prince William.
548* PatrioticFervor: Duke is the ultimate establishment figure, with a wife on joking terms with the Queen, and so it comes as no surprise that his idea of a suitable show to pay tribute to Her Majesty would be something to celebrate her 70th birthday -- and certainly not a mad-eyed, intense interview with her hand grenade-chucking ex-daughter-in-law.
549* TeethClenchedTeamwork: He may well be Chairman, but John Birt is in charge of programming -- a fact he concedes -- and there's nothing he can do to stop Diana's interview.
550[[/folder]]
551
552[[folder: Cherie Blair]]
553!!Mrs Cherie Blair (née Booth) QC
554[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cherieb.png]]
555
556->'''Played By:''' Lydia Leonard\
557
558 The wife of Prime Minister Tony Blair and an exhibitor of barely-concealed anti-monarchy sentiments.
559----
560* NinetiesHair: She sports a classically 90s blown-out layered bob with dangling fringes, a look that was popularised in the middle of the decade by the likes of Creator/CourteneyCox in her role as Monica on ''Series/{{Friends}}''.
561* AggressiveCategorism: Mrs Blair's anti-monarchical leanings are made abundantly clear when Diana arrives at Chequers with Prince William (then 15 years-old) and she refers to him as "the alien".
562* CheshireCatGrin: Lydia Leonard is well-cast as Ms Blair, and has her infamous rictus grin down pat.
563* ChessmasterSidekick: Cherie is a smart, highly educated woman in her own right in her capacity as a barrister. Tony, to his benefit or detriment, almost always follows her strident (often anti-monarchical) advice to the letter.
564* HappilyMarried: She's seen cuddling with her husband on the plane returning from Hong Kong, and states no one would have dared oppose her wish to marry him.
565* LadyMacbeth: As a somewhat opinionated republican, she often spurs her husband with counsel that conflicts with the desires of the Royal Family.
566[[/folder]]
567
568!!!Season 6
569
570[[folder: Mario Brenna]]
571!!Signor Mario Brenna
572[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dc87a171_70b1_4d28_8b25_0e87131a02dd.jpeg]]
573
574->'''Played By:''' Enzo Cilenti\
575
576A professional photographer turned paparazzo, hired by Al-Fayed to uncover the romance of Dodi and Diana.
577----
578
579* TheAce: He calls himself the best in the profession and is a celebrity in his own right, which is why Al-Fayed hires him. He delivers.
580* ArtisticLicenseHistory: Mario Brenna has called the plotline about Al-Fayed hiring him "[[https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2023/11/diana-paparazzo-fights-back-at-the-crown-absurd-and-completely-invented absurd]] and [[https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/17/arts/television/the-crown-mario-brenna-diana-dodi-fayed-photo.html completely invented]]" as no one leaked information about the yacht's whereabouts to him, he just was in the right place at the right time.
581* {{Foil}}: He's a hip, vigorous globe-trotting famous photographer, and his flashy work about celebrities and persona are presented as a counterpoint to the classic, dull and sober Duncan Muir in the episode "Two Photographs".
582* {{Paparazzi}}: Brenna describes the lengths he goes to to get his photos (and is seen trespassing in order to get embarrassing shots of an unnamed celebrity). He is later hired by Mohamed Fayed to take photos of Diana and Dodi making out on his yacht.
583* SmallRoleBigImpact: He's hired, does his job in just a bunch of scenes and then dissapears from the narrative. His work however causes a tremendous lasting impact, the photos unleash a world-wide phenomenon, and are so well remunerated that they trigger the media frenzy around the couple.
584* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: His job sparked the whole frenzy around Dodi and Diana that would end tragically in Paris.
585
586
587[[/folder]]
588[[folder: Duncan Muir]]
589!!Mr Duncan Muir
590[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/46cfa7d7_8346_4751_9ff6_d9ff2cffac05.jpeg]]
591
592->'''Played By:''' Forbes Masson\
593
594A professional photographer based in Aberdeen, Scotland, and long-time photographer of the royal family, who is hired to take a number of well-remembered images of Charles, William, and Harry at Balmoral just before Diana's death.
595----
596
597* CanonForeigner: His character was invented for the series.
598* {{Foil}}: A traditional, sober, humble country photographer, presented as the reverse image of Mario Brenna in "Two Photographs".
599* MarriedToTheJob: Mildly, he has a traditional, uneventful life and seems happily married, but is passionate about the royal family and his wife sometimes jokes that he loves the Queen more than her.
600
601[[/folder]]
602
603[[folder: Susie Orbach]]
604!!Ms Susie Orbach
605[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/susieorbach.png]]
606
607->'''Played By:''' Kate Cook\
608
609Diana's therapist in 1997, who originally came to prominence for her work dealing with women and body issues. Diana speaks to her during her fateful last summer.
610----
611
612* BaitAndSwitch: Diana calls her in the UK from the Fayed yacht, and at first it seems like she might be speaking to a friend and updating her about the holiday. It's then made quite clear Orbach is her therapist.
613* HopeSpot: She and Diana mention things Diana is working on like her AttentionWhore "addiction to drama", and it's possible to see Diana as really trying and eventually succeeding at dealing with some of the issues tormenting her and becoming much happier, stable, and more mature... but of course, she's killed tragically young shortly afterwards, and none of it comes to pass.
614* TheShrink: Of the Awesome Shrink variety, as far as Diana is concerned. Orbach mentions out loud that Diana does not need to be involved in the toxic Fayed family drama and questions whether the relationship with Mohamed and Dodi is really a beneficial one. Diana actually agrees, and starts taking steps to distance herself... but she is killed before being able to put the advice into action.
615
616[[/folder]]
617
618[[folder: Henri Paul]]
619!!Monsieur Henri Paul
620[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/picture_1_71.png]]
621
622->'''Played By:''' Yoann Blanc\
623
624Deputy head of security at Hôtel Ritz Paris.
625----
626
627* AlcoholInducedIdiocy: Prior to him driving Diana and Dodi across Paris from the Ritz, Henri goads the awaiting paparazzi, saying "Don't bother trying to keep up, you'll never catch us!". It's this challenging behaviour that's implied to fire up the paparazzi and increase their dangerous tactics when chasing the car.
628* DrunkDriver: Dodi unexpectedly asks Henri to shuttle them back to his apartment from the Ritz well after 11pm. A lingering shot of the multiple limoncellos that Henri has consumed at the hotel bar, and his bleary-eyed, slightly confused expression make it clear that he is in no fit state to drive. Hurtling along Pont de L'Alma at dangerously high speeds, a DiscretionShot from the point of view of a late-night dog walker, followed by the sound of the car hitting a concrete pillar, signifies the worst has happened.
629* SmallRoleBigImpact: He appears only in a few scenes, and serves as the chauffeur of the Mercedes-Benz in which Diana Spencer, Dodi Fayed and himself die.
630
631[[/folder]]
632
633[[folder: Carole Middleton]]
634!!Mrs Carole Middleton
635[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carolem.png]]
636
637->'''Played By:''' Creator/EveBest\
638
639Catherine Middleton's mother, a former air stewardess and self-made businesswoman.
640----
641
642* AsYouKnow: For the benefit of the viewer, Carole reminds Kate of their family background, including her own humble beginnings and success in launching her own business -- information Kate would unlikely need explaining back to her.
643* TheMatchmaker: When Catherine tells her that Prince William is coming to a charity fashion show she's going to be walking in, Carole's first response is to advise that she ensures William knows Catherine's "back on the market". In a wry nod to (unsubstantiated) oft-noted comparisons between Carole and ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice'''s legendary pushy-parent, Catherine quips with mild exasperation, "Mum! You're worse than Mrs Bennet!".
644* MyBelovedSmother: A relatively benign example born out of Carole’s strongly-held belief that her daughter is destined for greatness, but Kate nonetheless finds her mother’s orchestrations, in terms of getting her and William together, a little maddening.
645* RightWayWrongWayPair: With Mohamed Al-Fayed. They're both confident, successful-but-self-conscious ''arrivistes'' in the British class system who would very much like their treasured eldest children to marry into the Royal Family, but Carole is much more gentle about it, continually serves as a booster for Kate's self-esteem, makes it clear she's proud of ''many'' things Kate does and that her love isn't conditional, guides and nurtures her daughter but allows Kate to make her own decisions – and we know that ultimately, her hopes and persistence pay off and her daughter and William do find love and marry, unlike Al-Fayed, who fails at everything in the matter and loses Dodi in the process.
646* SelfMadeWoman: Carole hails from humble mining stock, and started her career as an a air stewardess, which is where she met her husband while he was working as a pilot, before they founded their own party supplies business and made a fortune.
647

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