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Josh O’Connor Says Adding A Disclaimer To ‘The Crown’ Would Be “Outrageous”

"This is not some dramatisation of a novel. It is based on the lives of real people... it certainly isn’t 'pure' fiction"

Update 12/13/20: Two British politicians have publicly pushed back against The Crown actor Josh O’Connor’s stance that adding a disclaimer to the Netflix drama would be “outrageous.”

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Former Education Secretary Damian Hinds led the fightback (who, according to the Daily Mail, is supported in his statement by Julian Knight, chairman of the powerful Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee) told the Mail on Sunday, “Mr O’Connor says Oliver Dowden’s intervention is outrageous, but what would be truly outrageous would be trying to stop our Culture Secretary holding the streaming giant to account. Oliver has every right to call for the series to carry a disclaimer.”

Addressing O’Connor’s statement about the situation directly, Hinds added, “This is not some dramatisation of a novel. It is based on the lives of real people and it relays many events people will recognise, so although it contains fiction, it certainly isn’t ‘pure’ fiction.”

The Crown
(Credit: Netflix)

Original post: The latest season of The Crown has been the drama’s most controversial yet. The fourth season, which covers, among other things, the early years of Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s tumultuous relationship, has been slammed by critics who say it’s an unfair and oftentimes misleading portrayal of the real people and events depicted. In fact, some—including the U.K. government’s Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden—have called for Netflix to add a disclaimer to the series, emphasising that it’s a work of fiction and not a faithful account of history.

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Josh O’Connor, who played Prince Charles in The Crown‘s third and fourth seasons, is firmly in the opposite camp, however.

“We were slightly let down by our culture secretary, whose job it is to encourage culture,” O’Connor said during an interview with the Los Angeles Times for The Envelope: The Podcast. “In my opinion, it’s pretty outrageous that he came out and said what he said. Particularly, in this time when he knows that the arts are struggling and they’re on their knees, I think it’s a bit of a low blow.”

O’Connor made it clear that he’s against the disclaimer proposal because he trusts The Crown‘s audience to understand that what they’re watching is a drama, not documentary.

“My personal view is that audiences understand,” he explained. “You have to show them the respect and understand that they’re intelligent enough to see it for what it is, which is pure fiction.”

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This article originally appeared on marie claire U.K.

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