Double the Drama, Double the Majesty: The Crown’s Grand Finale Splits into Two Parts!
Netflix has set a date for the sixth and final season of “The Crown” to start, but it won’t all start at once. Several shows in the last year and a half have been split into two parts by the streaming service. The Crown’s last season will be no different. Part two, with six episodes, will start four weeks later, on December 14.
The first four shows will air on November 16. The latest seasons of Stranger Things, You, and The Witcher have also been split up on Netflix. These are some of the most popular shows on the service, like The Crown.
It looks back at the life of Queen Elizabeth II, who was played by Claire Foy and Olivia Colman in earlier seasons, before settling on Imelda Staunton as the current queen. Being queen “is not a choice; it is a duty,” Colman says in the recording. Then Staunton’s voice asks, “But what about the life I put aside?”
From 1997 to 2005 will be covered in the last season of the show. Part one will show how Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki) and Dodi Fayed (Khalid Abdalla) knew each other and the Paris car accident that killed them in 1997. Part two will be about Charles’ boys, William (Ed McVey) and Harry (Luther Ford), as well as the wedding of Prince Charles (Dominic West) and Camilla Parker Bowles (Olivia Williams).
“This last season makes me so proud of myself.” I believe it is some of our finest work, said Suzanne Mackie, the show’s executive producer, to The Hollywood Reporter in August. “Imelda is truly amazing as the queen. I don’t want to give away the ending, but it’s really beautiful and, I think, pretty deep. It feels like the end of a very long trip.
The Crown has won 21 Emmys over the course of its five seasons, including a prize for best drama series in season four. Peter Morgan, who created the series, is one of the executive producers along with Mackie, Andy Harries, Stephen Daldry, Matthew Byam Shaw, and Robert Fox.
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