Queen Victoria's Letters: A Monarch Unveiled (TV Mini Series 2014– ) Poster

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7/10
An insight
Prismark106 August 2015
Renowned writer A N Wilson who authored the biography of 'Victoria: A Life' goes through exclusive archives to construct a touching portrait of Queen Victoria.

With readings from actress Anna Chancellor, Wilson goes through Queen Victoria's private writings and journals to guide us through every stage of the monarch's extraordinary life from a fatherless girl wanting emotional and physical closeness to a passionate wife thrown into widowhood and then as a widow revelling in new found freedoms. We even get to hear about the numerous attempts made on her life and how the Queen would defy any threats to herself.

Her relationship with her Prime Ministers and the Empire which bestowed the tile of Empress of India is examined even though she never went to India although she would later acquire male servants one of whom seemed to act in a remarkably familiar way. However she was a frequent visitor to Germany and enjoyed spending time there.

Some of the letters were destroyed by her descendants to maintain her image of purity and shield questions away from some of her male friendships such as John Brown.

Wilson as always is authoritative and engaging who makes what could had been a dusty programme interesting and shows us someone who was more strong, passionate and frivolous.
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7/10
Clearly The Queen Was Someone Who Could Be Readily Amused
l_rawjalaurence21 December 2014
Presented by novelist A. N. Wilson with readings from Queen Victoria's journals by Anna Chancellor, this two-part miniseries presents a very different portrait of the monarch from the one that has been handed down through the years. We might know her catchphrase ("We are not amused!"(: it is Wilson's contention that she was quite ready to be amused, especially after the death of Prince Albert in 1861.

During her married life Victoria was quite willing to cede all authority to her husband; she consulted him on everything, even on which dresses she might wear. Her journals are full of love and longing for a man she thoroughly respected as well as loved. When he passed away, she was initially devastated; but as time elapsed, so she recovered and developed a new facet of her character - a capacity for free-thinking. Wilson argues with some justification that Victoria could be seen as an ancestor of Princess Diana in her refusal to bow to the strictures either of her family or her government. She repeatedly quarreled with her Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone, and refused to adopt the demure exterior customarily expected of a monarch. She had a series of male companions, including her servant John Brown and future PM Benjamin Disraeli, as well as an Indian companion towards the end of her life who taught her to speak Hindu. Some of these associations caused a scandal during her lifetime - especially that with John Brown, who was suspected of being her lover - but the Queen had both the moral and physical strength to endure them.

In the end, however, the Establishment had its way, as some of the Queen's descendants systematically destroyed any of her letters that might have seemed incriminating. They were more concerned with sustaining the image of purity and dominance rather than giving future historians the chance to obtain an insight into her true character. Nonetheless there remains a sufficient body of material for us to understand just how radical a monarch Victoria was. She proved beyond doubt that, if one possessed sufficient strength, it was possible to assert oneself even in the most conservative of societies. In light of this discovery, it's a real pity that Princess Diana was denied the opportunity to pursue a similar course of action.
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