Portrayed by Vanessa Kirby in The Mission XXX ImpossibleCrown's first two seasons, and now by Helena Bonham Carter in the show's just-premiered third season, the real-life Princess Margaret, who died in 2002, has an infamous legacy that includes numerous romances, shenanigans with the help of her ladies in waiting, and a general lust for life.
Princess Margaret and her sister Queen Elizabeth were purportedly very close, but due to their positions in the royal hierarchy, they led entirely different lives. Elizabeth was bound to royal duties, while Margaret was more free to live a life of her own design, complete with lots of socializing and partying (think William versus Harry).
Seemingly aware of the public's perception of her as the antithesis of her sister, Margaret has been quoted by her unauthorized biographer, Craig Brown, as saying, "if there's a good princess, there has to be a bad one." According to Brown, Margaret made a conscious decision to portray the latter.
We've pulled some of Margaret's boldest moments from Brown's unauthorized biography, Ninety Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret, and the two-part PBS documentary, Margaret: The Rebel Princess, which features commentary from Margaret's authorized biographer, Christopher Warwick, as well as Brown, many of Margaret's ladies in waiting, and others.
After serving as a pilot in World War II, Peter Townsend worked as an equerry of Margaret's father, King George VI. Townsend was at the King's side at all times, an arrangement that gave Townsend and Margaret ample opportunity to get to know each other. Because Townsend was so present in the royal family's life, he became absent from his own wife and two sons. By the time Princess Margaret and Lady Jane, one of her ladies in waiting, were teenagers, Lady Jane recalls feeling "sure that Princess Margaret and Townsend were in love."
Although the press at large reported on the rumored relationship between Margaret and Townsend outside of Britain, there was a gentleman’s agreement on Fleet Street, where many of the major British news outlets headquarters were located, not to report on the affair in the national British news. In particular, The Daily Express,a top newspaper at the time, was actively deferential to the royal family in reporting on their affairs in the 1950s. Many press outlets followed suit, working to "sustain the fairy tale" that surrounded the royal family at the time.
Everything changed when Margaret displayed the "possessive gesture" of removing a piece of lint from Townsend's clothing during Queen Elizabeth's coronation in 1953. The press saw the interaction as a public display of intimacy, and, interestingly, the first mention of Margaret's relationship with Townsend was one of denial: The Sunday People, a popular tabloid at the time, broke the story in June, 1953 by saying it was “utterly untrue.” In November of 1953, other outlets began to report on Margaret and Townsend's relationship, which had been confirmed in the months since the initial story in The Sunday People.
According to Snowden: The Biographyby Anne de Courcey, Armstrong-Jones's many affairs with other men and women "allegedly contributed to the deterioration of" his marriage with Princess Margaret.
Not only that, as detailed by Town & Country, Amstrong-Jones's daughter, Polly Fry, was born weeks after his wedding to Princess Margaret. Fry spent most of her adult life thinking she was the daughter of Jeremy Fry, a close friend of Amstrong-Jones's, until Armstrong-Jones "later acknowledged the truth."
As Stevens recalls in Margaret: The Rebel Princess, she had never driven a Rolls Royce before and had no practice. Margaret encouraged Stevens by saying "Janey, you can drive." As the pair departed the gates and were under the arch of Buckingham Palace, Stevens remembers motorcyclists crashing into the side of the Rolls Royce. Margaret responded with "drive, drive on, Janey," and told Stevens not to worry.
In Margaret:The Rebel Princess, Margaret's unauthorized biographer Craig Brown explains thatat social gatherings and parties, guests weren't allowed to eat until the royal family had left. However, when Margaret and Armstrong-Jones were attending a function with the Beatles, a 21-year-old George Harrison went up to Margaret and said (as paraphrased by Brown), "Sorry, but I'm hungry, and we're not allowed to start eating until you've left." According to Brown, the Princess retorted, "Well, in that case, we'd better be going," and left with Armstrong-Jones.
While she was married to Antony Armstrong-Jones, Princess Margaret had an affair with Roddy Llewellyn, a landscape gardener "17 years her junior." According to iNews, Margaret was introduced to Llewellyn through her friends Colin Tennant and his wife, Lady Anne Glenconner, in 1973.
The pair hid their relationship from the public until photos of them swimming together in Mustique in the West Indies (a destination Margaret frequented) were published in 1976. Harper's Bazaarreports that Margaret and Armstrong-Jones got divorced in 1978, and that Margaret and Llewellyn's relationship lasted until 1980.
According to Christopher Warwick, Margaret's authorized biographer, Queen Elizabeth quipped a remark along the lines of "What are we going to do about my sister’s guttersnipe life?” to her private secretary, Lord Martin Charteris.
However, years later, the Queen is said to have been somewhat grateful for Llewellyn. She thanked Lady Anne Glenconner, a close friend of both Margaret and the Queen, for introducing Margaret to Llewellyn. "I’d just like to say, Anne, it was rather difficult at moments, but I thank you so much [for] introducing Princess Margaret to Roddy ’cause he made her really happy," said Queen Elizabeth.
According to Christopher Warwick, Harris and Warren were Margaret's "putative" lovers.
It seems as though Princess Margaret was of the camp that neither the press nor members of the royal family should air out the royal family's dirty laundry, regardless of whether or not it was true. Princess Margaret never forgave Diana for betraying the royal family in her 1995 interview with the BBC, during which she implied Prince Charles had cheated on her with Camilla Parker-Bowles. (Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles got married in 2005.)
A similar debacle marred Duchess Sarah Ferguson's relationship with Princess Margaret. When those photos surfaced of Ferguson's affair with financial advisor John Bryan, Princess Margaret saw the entire fiasco as a huge disgrace to the royal family and explicitly told Ferguson her feelings in a strongly worded letter.
Even though Margaret's doctors forbade her from drinking, Glenconner used to "creep down... to the drink table and bring [Margaret] up a whiskey."
Brown describes Margaret as being "fond of visiting" her hairdresser, something she often did "twice in one day."
As described by Margaret's unauthorized biographer Craig Brown in Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret, Margaret's chauffeur, John Larkin, revealed that when he asked if she wanted her license plate transferred to new car, she confessed that the plate, PM 6450, referred to "an incident in [her] past best forgotten." She went on to clarify that she "wanted [a license plate] that doesn't mean anything."
Larkin himself hypothesized that "PM" stood for Princess Margaret, and that "6450" translated to April 6, 1950. On that date, Margaret would have been 19 years old, in the throes of her romance with Townsend. Many have speculated that 4/6/1950 might have been a turning point in their relationship.
Season three of The Crown is now available to stream on Netflix.
Topics Netflix
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