It’s a bit tricky keeping track of all the Edwards, Henrys and Elizabeths around the time of the Wars of the Roses. “So many people have the same names in this period of history!” says Emma Frost, writer and executive producer of The White Princess. “We call her Lizzie to distinguish her from her mother.” She means, of course, Elizabeth of York, eldest daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, the girl whose marriage to newly crowned King Henry VII was meant to “be the peace that ends the Cousins’ War.” This Lizzie, however, still loves the slain Richard III and was his lover before Henry’s army killed him at the Battle of Bosworth. Her younger brother, the rightful ruler—one of the “Princes in the Tower” everyone believes dead—was actually hidden away by their mother, leaving Lizzie with dangerously divided loyalties. “How big a price should a human being pay personally for the greater good?” asks Frost. Based on the historical novel by bestselling author and historian Philippa Gregory, Princess picks up just where the 2013 miniseries The White Queen left off—with the first Tudor king, from a remote branch of the Lancastrian family tree, winning the crown—and Elizabeth of York’s hand in marriage, though he doesn’t want it. “They have good reasons to be enemies,” adds Frost. She spoke to BHT about historical accuracy, “excavating” the lives of women and one of the most dangerously complicated arranged marriages ever.
Daisy Goodwin is a famed British writer. Join us for a chat!
Stephen Daldry directed and produced The Crown. Have you read our interview with the award winning director?
In the second season of the hit Starz drama, the Outlander lovers try to save Highlander clan culture by changing time itself–and in the process, provide an extraordinary history lesson on the Jacobite Rebellion and Scotland in the 1740s (for more of that history, read Dana Huntley’s Jacobite overview). The show–and the book series on which it’s based–is a mix of action, romance and, of course, period drama. World War II nurse Claire, along with the audience, steps back into a dangerous, captivating past, an era that’s been beautifully reconstructed through meticulous research. “It’s just a taste for detail, I suppose,” says author Diana Gabaldon humbly. Here, she talks to British Heritage Travel about seeing her novels adapted, her new favorite scenes and how the Battle of Culloden is like the Death Star.