For Matt Smith, playing Prince Philip in âThe Crownâ has deepened his fascination with the royal family
When Matt Smith heard there was a television series in the works that was devoted to poring over the British royal family, two words came to mind: âWho cares?â
For so long, at least for this English actor, they were just that stuffy family that lived in those opulent âold housesâ that heâd visited on school trips as a young boy or whizzed past in his car as an adult.
ââWe know what happens, we know the story, weâve seen the movies,ââ Smith recalls thinking â dusting off his initial eye roll â during a recent trip to Los Angeles. But like a good chap, he read all 10 first season scripts of âThe Crownâ crafted by Peter Morgan, best known for writing the historical films and plays âThe Queenâ and âFrost/Nixon.â
âIt turns out, well, actually I care about the royal family,â he says with a smirk that capsulizes his eventual decision to step into the shoes of young Prince Philip, husband to Queen Elizabeth II, in the Netflix drama.
A tall order, sure â the Duke of Edinburgh is a living historical figure and the patriarch of one of the worldâs most cherished families. But Smith is used to tall orders and cherished characters. The actor, whose early work consisted mostly of theater and run-of-the-mill TV roles, was thrust into the vortex of global fandoms at age 26 when he was cast as the Eleventh Doctor in the long-running âDoctor Whoâ franchise â he played the role of the alien time traveler from 2010 through 2014.
âItâs been quite nice to play a towering figure in a more naturalistic world,â Smith, now 35, says.
Not that Prince Philip isnât a bit of an outsider in his own right.
âThe Crown,â which is unapologetically female-driven, follows Elizabethâs long and storied reign, with each season covering roughly a decade of the Queenâs rule while highlighting the push and pull of her private and public roles. In doing so, viewers also glimpse a man wrestling with living in the shadows of his powerful wife â a depiction that, when viewed through the lens of the current political and cultural climate, gains an added layer of poignancy.
âHeâs torn between the duty to his wife and a duty to himself,â Smith says. âAnd I found that conflict very interesting to explore and play because heâs pulled in two different directions constantly. No other man in that period would kneel before his wife or walk two feet behind her. That was very difficult for him.â
Much of the first season, mapping 1947 through 1955, chronicled the strains on a marriage upended early on when Elizabeth ascended to the throne following her fatherâs death. The second season, now streaming on Netflix, opens in 1956 and runs through 1963 and further explores the marital tensions now heightened by the rumors of Philipâs infidelities.
Heâs torn between the duty to his wife and a duty to himself.
â Matt Smith, who stars as Prince Philip in "The Crown"
Philip isnât shown philandering on-screen; instead, the series hints at his wandering eye and viewers can reach their own conclusions.
âWhatâs your opinion: do you think he had an affair?â Smith asks this reporter, leaning in and eager to assess how an outsider perceives it.
Heâs seated in a shaded nook at the rooftop cafe of a West Hollywood hotel, wearing a very un-Philip outfit consisting of slim-fitting shorts and a white tank top to better bear the hardship of an unforgivably hot October day. When the question is punted back to him, he leans back in his seat.
âIt's an interesting question, isn't it?â he says. âI think Peter thinks he did. I have my thoughts but I think itâs best to leave it open.â But he remains curious: âDid you forgive him in that last episode or did you think, âyou swine!â?â
Itâs clear Smith is interested in viewersâ perceptions. Him? Heâs âcompletely fascinatedâ by Philip.
To prepare for the role, Smith says he read all the books he could and watched archival footage of the Prince.
âThe more I researched him, the more I found there were a lot of misconceptions about him or, rather, preconceptions about him,â Smith offers.
Season 2 works to better acquaint viewers with the back story of the complicated and often overlooked figure. Morgan delves into Philipâs brutal childhood â his motherâs mental health issues, his fatherâs money troubles, his Nazi-sympathizing sisters, his schooling, his alienation â and examines the father-son relationship between Philip and heir-to-be Prince Charles.
A standout moment from this season, if you ask Morgan, that demonstrates Philipâs complexity and Smithâs ability to inhabit it involves a scene in Episode 9, in which Philip is giving a young Charles (played by Julian Baring) a lecture about toughening up, all within the tight space of an aircraft cockpit.
âAll of Philipâs contradictions â his strength, his weakness, his pride, his aspirations, his self-loathing of his own perceived failures â come tumbling out of him at once, directed at the most vulnerable person in his life, his thirteen-year-old son,â Morgan said by email. âMatt renders the moment in all its horror and power. Itâs a loss of control from a man who prizes self-control above everything, and itâs immensely revealing.â
Exploring the royal familyâs private turmoil in âThe Crownâ has made Smith contemplate the changing nature of fame and the scrutiny that comes with it.
âThe type of fame they have, I wouldnât wish it on anyone,â he starts. âYou think Kim Kardashian has a tough life? Try being the queen in the â50s and â60s â 100,000 people would turn up to see her catch a train. They really were, and still are, the most iconic people in the world.â
He continued: âLook, I respect what Kim Kardashian has done. Sheâs created an empire. But weâre talking about monarchs. Elizabeth has seen 12 prime ministers come and go. Sheâs navigated her way through invasions of other countries and has gone through tough times and still remained popular. If Kim Kardashian is still doing that when sheâs 90 years old, then sheâs done very well.â
Notoriety and fame â and all the trappings â were not something Smith considered much while growing up in the country town of Northampton.
A back injury in his teens thwarted Smithâs ambitions to become a professional soccer player. A teacher suggested he consider the National Youth Theatre, an arts organization in Britain.
âIn many ways there are a lot of parallels between being a sportsman and being an artist,â Smith considers. âThereâs a sense of practice and preparation and playing and performing to a certain degree. So in many ways, being in football was quite good preparation for me.â
Let Foy describe what itâs like working with Smith and sheâll tell you heâs a perfectionist.
âWeâre very different,â she says when reached by telephone. âHe likes improvising, heâs spontaneous and he likes changing everything and taking it to new directions and Iâm like, âCome on with it. Letâs go home.â I really value that part of him. Heâs always looking for a new way of doing it. He never stops. Heâs the most indecisive person â his indecisiveness knows no bounds. He can be indecisive about having a Kit Kat or going to the toilet. He is ridiculous. But he thinks about the angle of everything â things people donât even think about.â
Steven Moffat, who was the showrunner on âDoctor Whoâ during much of Smithâs tenure, echoes the sentiments about Smithâs work ethic.
âWhen heâs working, and all those years he was working savagely hard on âDoctor Who,â you couldn't get him out for a coffee in the evening, let alone a drink,â Moffat says by phone. âHeâs terribly serious about it. If you met him at a party, then you think heâs just a really fun guy. You wouldnât know how focused and single-minded he is when heâs working.â
[Matt] thinks about the angle of everything â things people donât even think about.
â Claire Foy, who plays Queen Elizabeth II in "The Crown"
As an actor who has now inhabited two very notable figures, Smith makes an effort to shake things up. After wrapping his run on âDoctor Who,â Smith took part in a musical version of âAmerican Psycho,â directed by Rupert Goold, in London. And with Morganâs plan to replace key cast members on âThe Crownâ as the characters age, Smithâs stint as Prince Philip ends with Season 2. To cleanse his palate, Smith took on the lead role in the upcoming biopic about controversial photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.
Thatâs not to say his newfound appreciation and fascination with the royal family has expired. In a follow-up meeting weeks after the October sit-down, just a few days have passed since news of Prince Harryâs engagement to American actress Meghan Markle. Smith admits he hasnât watched the âcouchâ video interview that circulated shortly after the announcement, but thatâs no matter. Heâs absorbed in thinking about the magnitude of the life change Markle is stepping into.
âHer life will never be the same,â he says. âShe walks anywhere now, people will know where she is. I canât even imagine ⌠and I played it.â
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