- Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Watching “The Crown” in the reign of Trump is a trip into British nostalgia, leaving an American viewer with mixed feelings about the monarchy, the institution Americans loathed and left behind with a revolution of arms. Nevertheless, the democracy that followed is suffering at the moment from an over-reaching populism, with a president, trying to fake out a “fake media,” and might benefit from a few lessons in nuance and understatement.

“The Crown” is a sophisticated television soap opera that runs against the grain of our troubled time. We watch Queen Elizabeth II grow as a sympathetic figurehead who uses her celebrity without flaunting it, doing what comes naturally through careful tutoring and artful tuning, showing a flair for British understatement and profound personal self-discipline that contrasts vividly with the current style of in-your-face leadership in America.

Nobody elected Queen Elizabeth, and though her duties emerge more from the rules of decorum and tradition than from democratic custom and usage, those duties are circumscribed and limited by the law of the land as applied to a constitutional monarch. She’s the most famous woman in the world today (Hillary, eat your heart out), inheriting her claim to the throne through her father because her uncle, a weakling for a king who served only for a mercifully short time, gave up all for love.

“The Crown,” in its second season on Netflix, feeds us with a silver spoon more about culture and character than about government, drawing deeply on the costs of the decadence of King Edward VIII, as we watch him move toward lust and love from obligation and duty, which inevitably leads him to nothing less than betrayal of his country after the abdication, exposing his nasty appreciation of the Nazi leadership in Germany.

There was no pre-determined line for Edward’s descent into disgrace, but inheres in the character of a weak leader, carried away by passion. One critic compares his abdication to expulsion from the Garden of Eden, but the abdicator in this account is both the one expelled and the snake in the grass.

The Netflix series runs through a spectrum of criticism from right to left, described as the jewel in the crown of  conservatism by Kyle Smith in The National Review, where Elizabeth is a royal servant of the people, taking on the family obligation of patriotism and idealism. Jonathan Freedland in The New York Review of Books sees her as a child trapped in a narrative lifted from “The Godfather” movies, where Elizabeth is a young Michael Corleone who wanted to break free from his own powerful family dynasty to create a new and different path, but could not achieve escape velocity.

So there’s something here for everybody, a needed reminder that celebrity and power mean different things, dependent upon where, when and why they’re thrust upon the one chosen to serve. The early episodes, depicting a simpler earlier era, seem to move in slow motion compared to the hyper, high-tech networked world we now uneasily inhabit.

American viewers of 21st century television can observe these dramatic figures as sort of an updated Rorschach inkblot test, seeing in them what we want to see, given various personal and political perspectives. The queen’s virtues — adhering to standards of faith, duty and traditional morality in a time when nothing is revered — make her an unfashionable heroine, stuffy and strong. But she is virtue rewarded compared to her sister’s snobbish indulgences as a free spirit who turns to alcohol when she finds nothing else within.

The queen, like the institution she embodies, cannot afford compassion and leniency toward her sister when she wants to marry a divorced man (Britain has a difficult history with royalty and divorce), but she is a tough and thoughtful upholder of Burkean conservatism, educated in the risks and dangers on the slippery slope of ethical relativism.

Barack Obama, in an irony of our time, chose to grant a rare interview to Prince Harry on the BBC, who many of our cousins suggest was angling for an invitation to a royal wedding. If the former president exposed an American weakness for persons royal, the new president might be said to prefer queens in the beauty contests he once sponsored. The British tabloids warned Prince Harry that he dare not invite Barack Obama and snub Donald Trump. Royalty may be sheltered from politics, but the prime minister is not.

“The Crown” is neither history nor a fairy tale about a princess who marries a handsome prince and becomes the queen. It’s about moral choices in a life where the queen is confronted with contrasting opportunities and burdens, both personal and public, in an imperfect world where tradition and rebellion collide. Pop-culture popcorn becomes food for thought.

• Suzanne Fields is a columnist for The Washington Times and is nationally syndicated.

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