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The Crown S04E06 [Full Movie] [Official Release]Full EP - Full
Transcript
00:28You
00:34Bob Hawke, if you win the election next week, which all the polls predict, one of your first public acts
00:42as Prime Minister will be to welcome Prince Charles and the Princess of Wales and young Prince William.
00:47Does that prospect fill you with enthusiasm?
00:51I don't regard it as the most important thing I'm going to have to do in the first month in
00:56office.
00:59But yes, they are coming. I've had the opportunity of meeting Charles on a number of occasions. I find him
01:07a nice young bloke.
01:11Is he the sort of man you'd like to be the King of Australia?
01:14Look, I don't think we'll be talking about kings or monarchy here in Australia much longer. You know, we're past
01:21that now, aren't we? We're a bit more mature.
01:24You know my position on this. It's no secret. I respect and admire the Queen enormously.
01:33The desire is simply to have a head of state that embodies and represents Australia's values and traditions.
01:41A head of state that looks like us, sounds like us, thinks like us.
01:47As opposed to?
01:48Well, one of them, a POM.
01:51You know, an unelected non-Australian who lives on the other side of the world and for all their good
01:57intentions is a different breed.
02:00You wouldn't put a pig in charge of a herd of prime beef cattle.
02:04Even if it did look good in a Twinset and Portage.
02:11Your Majesty, the results of the Australian general election.
02:17Oh, good news or bad?
02:19Mr Hawke by a landslide.
02:21Oh dear, the one who wants us out.
02:22Prayed so.
02:23The rough, tough former trade union negotiator and the proud holder of the world record for beer drinking.
02:28A yard of ale in a sconce pot in 11 seconds.
02:30Oh, I don't know what that is. Sounds very impressive.
02:33Well, it's a lot of beer. Very quickly. Tea total now, I believe, ma'am.
02:37A great relief to everyone, I should imagine.
02:39Especially Mrs Hawke. Is there a Mrs Hawke?
02:42Yes, there is. Hazel.
02:43Ah, Hazel. Stranger, I think, to name a child after a tree.
02:46Especially a Northern Hemisphere tree.
02:49I suppose it does put the pressure on them, rather.
02:52On who, ma'am?
02:54The Prince and Princess of Wales and their forthcoming tour.
02:58Do you think they'll be all right?
02:59In fact, I know one shouldn't listen to gossip, but I had lunch with Princess Margaret the other day.
03:04There's growing concern among those who chatter at Kensington Palace.
03:08You thought we didn't listen to chatter?
03:09I listened to nothing else.
03:12About the Princess of Wales.
03:16She's struggling to cope, apparently.
03:20Wretched in the marriage.
03:24And, if rumours are to be believed, she's, uh, doing things to herself.
03:30What kind of things?
03:39People do the strangest things when they're unhappy.
03:48I heard she was insisting on taking the baby with them on the tour.
03:50What for?
03:52As a stabilising influence.
03:53Since when has a baby ever been a stabilising influence on anything?
03:58We never took the children anywhere.
04:01When we went to Australia in 1954, we left them at home for five months.
04:06And you suppose that might have had consequences?
04:09On what?
04:10The tour was a triumph.
04:17I should probably ask Charles and Diana to come and see me.
04:20This tour was too important.
04:50MUSIC CONTINUES
05:19MUSIC CONTINUES
05:48MUSIC CONTINUES
05:51Does anyone know the story of the Russian bear hunter?
05:55I'm afraid I've already told Mrs. Parker Bowles.
05:57Perhaps she could help me tell it.
05:59All right, sir.
06:04The bear hunter goes deep into the Siberian woods.
06:07Suddenly, he sees...
06:08An enormous bear.
06:10The hunter raises his gun and bang, he shoots.
06:15The bear disappears from view.
06:17Got him, he thinks.
06:19But then he feels a tap on the shoulder.
06:21He looks up to see the bear who says...
06:23No one takes a shot at me and gets away with it.
06:26Your choice.
06:28Either I can tear you to pieces and devour you now, or...
06:31Or, you can drop your trousers, bend over and let me have my way with you.
06:40The hunter pulls down his trousers and the bear does his worst.
06:45Afterwards, the hunter hobbles into town.
06:48Somewhat bow-legged.
06:50Yes.
06:51And he buys a much bigger gun and goes back into the woods.
06:54And it isn't long before he sees the bear again.
06:56He raises his gun.
06:58Bang!
06:59Farts.
07:00But when the smoke clears...
07:02The bear is nowhere to be seen.
07:05Caught him, the hunter thinks.
07:07But a moment later, he feels another tap on the shoulder.
07:10And the bear says...
07:12You know what to do.
07:15Now, after the bear's done his worst,
07:18the hunter heads back in town again and buys an even bigger gun.
07:21A bazooka?
07:21Yes.
07:22He goes back into the woods.
07:23He sees the bear.
07:24He takes aim and fires.
07:25Boom!
07:27But when the smoke clears,
07:30the hunter looks up to see the bear standing over him.
07:33And the bear says...
07:37You're not really in this for the hunting, are you?
07:39LAUGHTER
07:49I wanted to wish you both luck
07:50and asked Sir Sonny to join us today
07:53to stress again the importance of the trip.
07:55Thank you, ma'am.
07:57As you know, Australia is one of the most important
08:00and influential members of the Commonwealth.
08:03If they were to strike out and assert their independence,
08:07the worry is other countries could fall like dominoes.
08:10You're too young to remember,
08:11but we also toured Australia and New Zealand in 1954.
08:15Yes.
08:16It was long and hot and arduous.
08:19Yes.
08:20But we worked together.
08:22As a team.
08:23And in the end, I think,
08:26it wasn't only a success politically.
08:29It...
08:30It brought us very close.
08:33Yes.
08:35And as husband and wife,
08:38we would wish the same for you.
08:40Mm-hmm.
08:49It's all right.
08:49It's all right.
08:49Mummy's here.
08:50It's you, babe.
08:51We've got the door.
08:52It's all right.
08:54It's all right.
08:55It'll be all right once we get to the baby.
09:05Then on to Ayers Rock on the 23rd.
09:08Uh, Sydney on the 28th.
09:11Before, uh, Brisbane, Tasmania,
09:14and Canberra for an audience with the Prime Minister
09:16and his wife.
09:17Then the tour moves to New Zealand.
09:19There's an awful lot of moving around.
09:21A baby needs stability.
09:23And, perhaps, for that reason,
09:26the baby was never intended to be part of the trip.
09:28I always made it perfectly clear.
09:30No baby, no me.
09:31And everyone accepted that,
09:32and as I understand,
09:33has worked very hard to change plans
09:35that were set in stone.
09:37And now, instead of being separated for six weeks,
09:40it's just, uh...
09:42How long?
09:43The first two weeks.
09:44What?
09:46When the tour is at its most arduous.
09:48Well, where will William be then?
09:50Wumagama.
09:51Where?
09:51It's a sheep station in New South Wales.
09:54Whose idea was this?
09:56Mine, ma'am.
09:57Do you have children?
09:59No, ma'am.
10:00Why does that not come as a surprise?
10:02Diana!
10:03Come with me.
10:04Ma'am?
10:05Please.
10:13What do you see?
10:16Miss Royal Highness Prince William.
10:18That's a title.
10:19You can't see a title.
10:21Very well.
10:22I see a baby boy.
10:24Asleep or awake?
10:26Awake.
10:27Loud or quiet?
10:28Quiet.
10:30Angry or calm?
10:31Calm.
10:32Ugly or beautiful?
10:34It's just a question, Mr. Adee.
10:35Nothing to be frightened of.
10:37Is the child ugly?
10:39No.
10:39Then can we agree that this child is the opposite of ugly?
10:42Can we say he's a beautiful child?
10:44I'm busy, ma'am.
10:45What is your point?
10:46My point is that this child is not just beautiful.
10:49This child is perfect in every single way.
10:52So why should you expect me, as his mother, to be without him for one second, let alone two weeks?
10:57Because you married the Prince of Wales, ma'am.
11:00And that is an act of service to the Crown and to the country which you signed up to willingly
11:04and with open eyes.
11:05And you are the Princess of Wales.
11:08And the greatest act of service that I can give to the Crown as Princess is not to be some
11:14meat little wife following the great prince around like some smiling doll,
11:17but to be a living, breathing, present mother, bringing up this child in the hopes that the boy that will
11:22one day become king still has a vestige of humanity in him.
11:26Because God knows he's not going to be getting it from any of his courtiers.
11:35Mummy's here.
11:36Yeah.
11:38Yeah.
11:40Yeah.
11:41Oh.
11:43Oh.
11:46New Zealand.
11:47Yes.
11:48New Zealand.
11:48Oh.
11:51Oh.
11:52Welcome to Alice Springs.
11:53More than much rain and wish.
11:55Hello there.
11:56Come down.
11:56Charles, let me lay.
12:00Hello there.
12:01Let me see you.
12:02Oh.
12:02Oh.
12:03Oh.
12:05So let me ź°™ģ€ė°.
12:14Please stop.
12:15Come on.
12:16Hi.
12:17Die it.
12:17You have to get it.
12:23Cy illustrate...
12:31I am not currently.
12:32Oh, are we gonna have to be firefighters?
12:38I understand before we arrived, you received about a month's worth of rain in a week.
12:44Of course, in Britain, you'd call that summer.
12:50Seriously, my wife and I, we couldn't be more delighted to be here.
12:56Question for the princess. What part of the tour are you most looking forward to?
13:00Oh, gosh. There's so many. We're going to a glamorous ball in Sydney.
13:12And, um...
13:16We're going to visit the Royal Botanical Gardens in Sydney.
13:19I think we're going on a pleasure cruise on some river.
13:25Um, and then we're going to, uh, we're going to visit Ayers Dock.
13:31Rock.
13:32Ayers Rock.
13:38What about the cost of the trip at a time when Australia is experiencing extreme weather?
13:43You know, and the money could be spent on the victims.
13:45I'm afraid that's not really my department.
13:48She's good with glamorous balls.
13:54Apparently, there are protests planned for their visit to Canberra.
13:58A growing backlash about the expense of the trip.
14:04Maybe now's the moment.
14:091788, the first fleet landed at Sydney Cove.
14:13Two long centuries of subjugation by Mother Crown.
14:17And we are still unable to cut the apron strings and stand on our own two feet.
14:23Why?
14:24Because there has never been the tipping point where we finally say enough.
14:33But, uh, five will get you ten, it'll be this jug-eared bunhead that pushes us all over the edge.
14:42And Australia gets to be free.
14:45Once and for all.
14:48That's all for now.
14:49Thank you all very much.
15:03And hospitable Perth.
15:05Fresh, alert, scrubbed by the sun.
15:07City of Australia's tomorrow.
15:12Into Queensland.
15:14Named for another great queen four generations back.
15:21To Brisbane.
15:22Friendly, easy-going Brisbane.
15:32What's this?
15:34Australia, 1954.
15:35I wanted to remind myself.
15:38Ha!
15:39One of your greatest hits.
15:40Yes, I think so.
15:43How hot it was.
15:45Do you remember?
15:45Yes, one could hardly sleep at night.
15:48No.
15:49For the queen, who is here at London.
15:52Look at the size of those crowds.
15:57Head of the Commonwealth.
15:59Defender of the faithful.
16:06Sydney, over a million people turned out.
16:08To see their beautiful new queen.
16:10Now she's old and dumpy.
16:12They want to get rid of her.
16:13Not old and dumpy.
16:14Experienced and mature.
16:18Which is why you should have gone yourself.
16:20Instead of sending out the B-team.
16:23This was always designed to be Charles' tour.
16:26As Prince of Wales, he has to start sometime.
16:28Then send him to the Bahamas or Seychelles.
16:30Not Australia and New Zealand.
16:33Some countries are too important to send out the understanding.
16:38The unity of crown and people.
16:42And the nation waits.
16:52They're all hanging over here.
16:53Call the cameras, please.
16:55Maybe get in closer together, if possible.
16:58Diana, over this way.
16:58That's great, thank you.
17:01Can you do some big smiles, please?
17:02Can we get some waves for the Australians?
17:05Diana.
17:06Your Royal Highness, this way.
17:07You're going up to the top today.
17:20Charles?
17:24Charles!
17:25I can't.
17:27The heat.
17:28I feel dizzy.
17:33I think I need to go and sit down.
17:36Can't you pull this up together?
17:38You feeling all right, Diana?
17:40Princess?
17:41You all right, princess?
17:43At this point, the princess seemed to struggle.
17:45The English rose, wilting in the heat, perhaps.
17:48It's pathetic.
17:49But she's pathetic.
17:52It's so critical that you get this tour absolutely right.
17:57And yet, she's so weak and fragile.
18:02One can't rely on her for the simplest thing.
18:05Letting the side down wherever she goes.
18:08How would I get through the next six weeks without you?
18:11By ringing me every day, letting me cheer you up.
18:17You're going to be brilliant.
18:19God, I miss you, my darling.
18:21Your adulthood.
18:23If Diana had one ounce of the strength of character
18:25that you seemed to display at every turn,
18:27then perhaps we could rescue her.
18:30God, now what?
18:33It never ends.
18:35I'll call you back.
18:36We have to reorganize police, schools, couriers, military, security.
18:40I don't care.
18:41I don't care about any of that.
18:44It's intolerable.
18:45What's intolerable?
18:46Well, I don't expect you to understand.
18:47I just need him to let me go wherever it is they've taken my son.
18:51Magma, it's on the other side of the country.
18:53I explained to her, Royal Highness,
18:55we are just five days into a very important tour
18:57which has been years in the planning.
18:59We can't just change things around willy-nilly.
19:01And I told him...
19:02Yes, me.
19:02...that if people expect me to continue with this tour for another minute,
19:05then I need to see my son first.
19:09Our son.
19:48William.
19:49William.
19:50William.
19:51William.
19:52William.
19:53Thank you so much.
19:54Has he been all right?
19:55He's been home.
19:56Hi, darling.
19:57Hello.
19:58Hello.
19:59How are you?
20:00Yes.
20:01Oh.
20:02Oh, I missed you so much.
20:05Yes.
20:05No.
20:07No.
20:09No.
20:11No.
20:12No.
20:13No.
20:22No.
20:27No.
20:28No.
20:28No.
20:29No.
20:29No.
20:29No.
20:31No.
20:34It's doing quite well.
20:38There you are.
20:40Close your eyes.
21:08There you go.
21:10Gone down?
21:12Yes, finally.
21:14Exhausted after his performance.
21:17The star.
21:19Crashing and bashing into everything.
21:22The basher.
21:23The mini tornado.
21:27Will you eat?
21:28They made, somewhat unimaginatively for a sheep station, shepherd's pie.
21:37I'm not hungry.
21:59What?
22:02I wanted to talk to you.
22:04I've had some thoughts.
22:07A bias?
22:09Us.
22:11I have some things I'd like to discuss too.
22:14Would you like to go first?
22:16We'd make a nice change.
22:17What does that mean?
22:18It means you always go first.
22:20You're a poppycock.
22:21You're the Prince of Wales.
22:22You were born to go first.
22:28Are you even remotely aware of how bad things have got for me?
22:33I'm not blind.
22:35I can see how unhappy you are.
22:39How thin you've become.
22:44Trust me, you don't know the half of it.
22:45I know more than you think.
22:50People talk.
22:53The staff.
22:54And I was very saddened.
22:59Horrified by what I learned.
23:03So what do you want from me?
23:08To be heard.
23:11And I'm listening.
23:13No more than that.
23:16To be understood.
23:18Appreciated.
23:19I don't need endless flattery.
23:21No one wants that.
23:23But I am trying my hardest to please you.
23:25To live up to your standards.
23:27And I don't think you have the faintest idea of what it's like to feel this way.
23:31To be constantly overlooked.
23:33Ignored.
23:34I don't have the faintest idea.
23:35I know what being overlooked feels like better than anyone.
23:37I've spent my whole life being unthanked.
23:42Unappreciated.
23:43Uncared for.
23:43And if I've been cold or distant with you, perhaps it's because I don't feel truly understood by you.
23:50I sometimes think you see me as an old man.
23:55Or worse, a gargoyle above the church door.
23:59Gray.
24:00Made of stone.
24:02Unemotional.
24:03But I'm not.
24:05You think I don't crave the occasional well done or aren't you clever?
24:12Or even just a thank you.
24:15But I need encouragement and the occasional pat on the back too.
24:20Well, does that explain why you keep going to her?
24:24I'm not going to say her name.
24:26I'm worried if I do, I might spit.
24:28Camilla, what's she got to do with it?
24:31Well, that's what I keep asking myself.
24:33What's she got to do with anything?
24:35But obviously, she's got a lot to do with everything because you can't leave her alone.
24:39She and her husband are close friends, not just of mine, but the whole family's.
24:42You remember I found your bracelet?
24:44The one with your nicknames engraved on it, Fred and Gladys.
24:47It was just harmless fun.
24:48It was three days before our wedding you gave that to her.
24:51And on our actual honeymoon, you wore the cufflinks that she gave you.
24:55With the interlocking initials, the two Cs, interwoven and obscenely entwined like lovers.
25:01And on the same honeymoon, a photograph of her falls out of your diary.
25:05And then later in the year, I find your love letters, page after page of the passion I'm not getting
25:10from you.
25:10Because you show no interest in me.
25:13You refuse to come to Highgrove where I'm happiest.
25:15Yes, because she is there.
25:17Oh, and not just her, but the gardens and the polo and the hunts.
25:21And the boring old philosophers and father substitutes who patronize me and ignore me, but love her, presumably.
25:28Which is why the two of you are perfect for each other.
25:31So where do I fit in?
25:32You fit in because you're my wife.
25:36And...
25:39Because...
25:41I love you.
25:51I...
25:53I...
25:54I do...
25:54I do.
25:58Gosh.
26:07So...
26:09How are we going to solve it?
26:13Well, I suppose...
26:17I suppose we've got to learn to give it to each other on a more regular basis.
26:24The encouragement, I mean.
26:26And the other thing.
26:27Well, yes, that too.
26:29I still think you're gorgeous.
26:32The cleverest, handsomest man in every room.
26:35Do you really?
26:37Pathetic.
26:38But I do need that sometimes.
26:41And you look gorgeous too.
26:44Your beauty, your radiance, is a great, shining, spectacular miracle.
26:51When I see the light in people's faces when they look at you, it makes me realize that I'm the
26:55luckiest man in the world and we're the luckiest family in the world.
26:59It makes me want to ring the Queen back in London and say, hey, can you hear that, mummy?
27:03Listen to that.
27:04It's 100 decibels louder than anything you ever got.
27:06Chew on that.
27:07Choke on that.
27:11You know, I think this might be the most important conversation we've ever had.
27:16Yes.
27:16And the solution is so simple.
27:19Any time either of us feels like we're not getting what we need, we simply need to give that very
27:24thing to the other.
27:26Because if you learn anything from today, it's...
27:28We both need the same as each other.
27:31To be encouraged.
27:34To be supported.
27:37To be appreciated.
27:41To be loved.
27:44Yes.
27:47A toast.
27:48To a first start.
27:50A new beginning.
27:52Happy Easter, my darling.
28:01Oh, no, no.
28:31The first leg of the world tour has come to an end.
28:35The Princeton princesses have seen a fair slice of the Northern Territory.
28:38The royal couple have urged 2,000.
28:40The well-wishers were there to greet them.
28:41But the more formal welcome King, the Governor General and the Prime Minister.
28:45It's a sunny party.
28:47We're absolutely delighted to be here.
28:49Thank you, sir.
28:49Hours before they were due to arrive in the city, tens of thousands of people began lining the streets from
28:54the airport.
28:55By now, the place was really beginning to pick up, and so too is the public's reaction.
29:00More than five and a half thousand people cued patiently to take up the best possible position around the ropes.
29:06There was a frenzy of waving hands and flags as the Prince and Princess appeared, holding hands in the back
29:15of their Rolls Royce.
29:16The crowds were desperate to get a glimpse of the perfect couple, the Prince and Princess of Wales.
29:25Even overseas reporters who've seen it all before seemed a little taken aback by the sheer scale.
29:49Thank you, sir.
29:53Thank you, sir.
30:01I'm proud to be her wife.
30:33You'd be like heaven to touch
30:36I wanna hold you so much
30:41Ever unless love has arrived
30:44And I thank God I'm alive
30:49You're just too good to be true
30:52You take my eyes and you
30:56That's what you give me a show as hell
30:58Yeah, I know
31:14I love you, baby
31:17And if it's bright or bright
31:19I need you, baby
31:21To warm and lonely night
31:23I love you, baby
31:25Trust in me when I say
31:30Oh, pretty baby
31:32Don't bring me down, I pray
31:35Oh, pretty baby
31:36Know that I've found you safe
31:39And let me love you, baby
31:42Let me love you
31:45What do you see?
31:48What do you love me?
32:23Good morning, Your Royal Highness
32:26Thank you
32:31A phone call
32:33From Mrs. Parker Bowles
32:36Would you like to return it?
32:41No
32:43No, I wouldn't
32:47Thank you, Edward
32:48That'd be all
32:51You had fun together at the ball
32:52Oh, we did
32:53I could have danced all night
32:55So, has that been the highlight?
32:57Well, that's hard to say
32:59We greatly enjoyed seeing Sydney Harbour
33:02And Charles tried body surfing on Bondi Beach
33:05But, um, I suppose the greatest highlight has been, well
33:11Meeting all of you, the people of Australia
33:14You've made us feel so welcome, so at home
33:17Well, perhaps because you've been so refreshing
33:21You're not what we expect from royalty
33:23Well, that's because I don't think of myself as royalty
33:26You know, first and foremost, I'm a wife and a mother
33:30That's what's most important to me
33:32I mean, she really is a wonderful mother
33:35And how's William getting along?
33:38He's having a magical time here
33:39So he likes Australia?
33:40Well, let's put it like this
33:42His favourite cuddly toy used to be a whale
33:44Since coming here, it's been firmly supplanted by a koala
33:48Ten thousand people were waiting to catch sight of the prince and princess
33:52Along the way, the princess was overwhelmed with posies and small gifts
33:56From equally small children
33:57No, he's very busy at the moment and cannot comment
34:00Mr. Hawke will not be answering any questions about this at present
34:14They're!"
34:15It's very sad
34:18You can find on me
34:18Yeah, yeah
34:20Yeah, yeah
34:21That's it
34:21It's very odd
34:24We can find you
34:26It's very odd
34:28We can find you
34:28I know
34:28What?
34:28Oh my God
34:32I know
34:33Oh, my God!
34:35Oh, my God!
34:37Why don't I take one of you?
34:39Oh, my God!
34:41Cheese!
34:44Okay.
34:48Smile!
34:53Hello!
34:54This is George's.
34:58What do you think of prison?
35:01Oh, my God!
35:02Let's climb!
35:03Oh, my God!
35:10You're so rich!
35:11We need to go!
35:13Oh, my God!
35:16You're so rich!
35:16I like this!
35:17Oh, my God!
35:18Oh, my God!
35:19Oh, my God!
35:20Oh, my God!
35:23Oh, my God!
36:25There they go. Some even bigger, I'm told, than those you got back in the 18th century, or whenever you
36:30went.
36:321954. And I very much liked it.
36:34Along with raves in all the newspapers for Diana's beauty and charm, and most of all, her motherhood.
36:43I heard she'd been hysterical, clinging to the poor baby like a life raft.
36:47Evidently, that clinging is what the Australians have responded to.
36:51What a natural mother she is.
36:54How physical.
36:56And caring.
36:58Anyway, why is all this a problem?
36:59You and I both know how much Charles craves reassurance, and attention, and praise.
37:05This tour of Australia and New Zealand was supposed to be his grand debut, his moment in the sun, his
37:12future king.
37:15Just saying.
37:20Hello. Thank you.
37:22Hello.
37:23Thank you for coming.
37:25Hello.
37:26Where's Princess Di?
37:28She's busy working on with me.
37:29She's having to put up with me.
37:33We only need a day to see, Lady Di.
37:37Are you going in for a swim, Matt?
37:39Don't think so.
37:41Which one do you fancy giving you the kiss of life?
37:43Let's hope it doesn't come to that.
37:46How about it, boys? Any volunteers?
37:49I think you've got some admirers.
37:50Can we get you guys all closer?
37:52Just remember, no touching, no looking.
37:55To me or them.
37:59That was picked up nicely there by his royal mum.
38:02So, and off it goes.
38:03Number five is in there, trying to cut him off.
38:07Prince Charles here, Prince of Wales.
38:09He's playing on a borrowed pony called Apollo.
38:13A strong hit from number two there.
38:15And here comes Prince Charles, swooping from his position at the back.
38:19Everybody ready?
38:22Get set, go!
38:40Are you a real princess?
38:43What do you put me in five hours?
38:46That was...
38:47As they move from Queensland to Tasmania,
38:50the royal tour is going from strength to strength.
38:53And whilst it's been a great personal victory for Prince Charles,
38:58no one can deny it's the Princess of Wales
39:01who's truly captured the heart of a nation.
39:05Well, she's not stuffy like the rest of the world.
39:07Right.
39:07You get a sense of her being a real person?
39:10Yes.
39:10You've got to love her, haven't you?
39:12Do you love Charles as much as you love Diana?
39:14Yeah, she loves him.
39:15He must have something, wasn't he?
39:16She's so...
39:17And what do you think of the princess?
39:19She's amazing.
39:20She's just like her.
39:21Is she?
39:22Do you think you can have a cup of tea with her or something?
39:24Oh, please.
39:25She's really down to that side.
39:31Oh, my goodness.
39:34I'm going to start having it out.
39:35Go ahead, please.
39:36This way, please.
39:37I don't love to meet you.
39:39I don't love to meet you.
39:40I don't love to meet you.
39:41Good evening, Mr. Kirby.
39:42I don't love to meet you.
39:43Come around, please.
39:44This is great.
39:45Come around, please.
39:47Go around, this way, please.
40:00It's a great pleasure to be able to come to Tasmania to receive such an enthusiastic
40:05and heartwarming welcome.
40:07The last time I was here was two years ago, 1981, shortly before we were married.
40:13At that time, everybody was saying, good luck, and hope everything goes well, and how lucky
40:20you are to be engaged as such a lovely lady.
40:24And my goodness, I am lucky enough to be married to her.
40:34Well, that's the thing about ladies, you never quite know what they get up to when your
40:39back's turned.
40:44It's the final straw, honestly.
40:46Pulling faces, horsing around while I'm trying to do my job.
40:49I was blushing, blushing at your compliments.
40:51But people were laughing at me, laughing in my face at the end of a week in which half
40:55of Australia has also been booing me.
40:57I don't deserve this.
40:59This was supposed to be my tour.
41:01My tour as Prince of Wales to shore up one of the key countries in the Commonwealth at
41:05a very delicate moment politically, and thanks to you.
41:07Thanks to me, people have shown up.
41:09Thanks to me, people are interested.
41:11No, thanks to you, people are laughing in my face.
41:14Booing the heir to the throne.
41:16Booing the crown.
41:18Oh, come on.
41:19Oh, don't do this.
41:22Please.
41:23Please.
41:23Open the door.
41:27Charles.
41:30We still have ten days in New Zealand to get through.
41:50Welcome, Your Royal Highness.
41:52Prime Minister.
41:53Given our different perspectives, our different views on the appropriate governance of this
42:00nation, I never thought I'd find myself commiserating with you.
42:03But let's face it.
42:06She's made us both look like chumps.
42:09I don't understand.
42:14Terra Nullius.
42:17That's what her ancestor, King George III, called us when the Brits first arrived.
42:25Nobody's country.
42:28Well, by God, we were somebody's country then, and we're our own country now.
42:37When you arrived, I thought you visit might inspire Australia to finally throw off the shackles
42:46and stand on our own two feet.
42:48And no offence, but if it had just been you, you know, I might have got my wishes.
42:58But then, you know, she comes along.
43:04The perfect wife, the perfect princess, and the whole place goes nuts.
43:11To the power of fairy tales.
43:17That superstar may have just set back the cause of republicanism in Australia for the foreseeable
43:24future.
43:36That's the prize.
43:54Oh
44:07Let's go.
44:39I don't know.
45:11Hi, Groove.
45:15Kensington Palace.
45:35It's the Princess of Wales.
45:37I was hoping the Queen might see me.
46:32You said I should always call you that.
46:34Of course.
46:40please thank you Nigel
46:48I've come because I don't know who to turn to anymore
46:53I'm struggling struggling I do to set a triumph
46:59I don't consider it a triumph if at the end of it my husband and I are wretchedly unhappy
47:05look at these pictures of you both everywhere are you really telling me
47:09that's unhappiness well not in that moment no in that moment it's perfect
47:16happiness but then behind closed doors it's a different story he resents me
47:21resents the attention I get and why is that I don't know I was hoping you could
47:30tell me he's your son because I've been a terrible mother is that what you've come
47:34here to tell me no or the Duke of Edinburgh a terrible father course not I
47:38struggle to understand Charles sometimes too I think that's no secret but us
47:43sitting here sticking knives into him isn't helpful either and is it also
47:47possible that there is a part of you that is enjoying your own success rather too
47:50much what is too much a smile a moment's happiness overstepping the mark is too
47:57much I think we do all know when we've played to the gallery excessively we know
48:06all right yes it does feel good sometimes to be cheered it can be a comfort because
48:16since I've joined this family it's not been easy I've been given no help no
48:21support just thrown in the deep end and I think that people out there can sense that
48:24I've suffered but I'm undervalued ignored you get some mistake to assume that
48:28people are feeling any sympathy for us at all and I think it's a mistake to
48:32assume they don't you've seen how the crowd responded to me in Australia here too
48:39and instead of resenting me for it I assure you no one resents you Charles
48:43resents me and resents me and is it possible that you resent me too all I want is
48:49to play for the team you're the princess of Wales so of course you're part of the
48:53team and show me this whole thing it starts and stops with you you're the
49:00captain of the team if you show me love approval and acceptance everyone else
49:06will follow I think we've gone as far as we can and now we can continue another
49:11attack I don't dismiss me please don't push me away what mama
49:34that's all I want
49:38it's all any of us want from you is it too much to ask
49:59a hug yes what kind of hug a tight rather desperate hug sick yes but is it possible that
50:13she has a point we are rather a tough bunch in this family we don't give out
50:19much praise or love or thanks perhaps someone like Diana is best placed to hug
50:24everyone else to connect with the modern world and isn't that how the crown
50:30survives and stays relevant by changing with the times Diana is an immature little
50:40girl who in time will give up her struggles give up her fight and bend as Philip did as
50:48they all do and when she bends she will fit and if she doesn't bend what then she will break
50:59him
51:02he's a good man
51:03yeah
51:07yeah
51:08yeah
51:08yeah
51:09yeah
51:09yeah
51:10yeah
51:12yeah
51:17yeah
51:36You're just too good to be true
51:41Can't take my eyes off the view
51:44You'd be like heaven to touch
51:48I wanna hold you so much
51:52As long as love has arrived
51:55And I thank God I'm alive
51:59You're just too good to be true
52:04Can't take my eyes off the view
52:17I love you baby
52:20And if it's quite alright
52:22And is your baby
52:24To warm the lonely night
52:26I love you baby
52:28Trust in me when I say
52:33Oh pretty baby
52:36Don't bring me down I pray
52:38Oh pretty baby
52:40Now that I found you safe
52:42And let me love you baby
52:45Let me love you
53:18I love you baby
53:26But I love you
53:29Let me love you
53:29I love you
53:29As long as love
53:33Why you
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