The Spanish Princess

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The Spanish Princess
The Spanish Princess (Title Card).jpg
Genre
Based onThe King's Curse & The Constant Princess
by Philippa Gregory
Developed by
Starring
Composers
Country of originUnited States
United Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes16 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Emma Frost
  • Matthew Graham
  • Colin Callender
  • Scott Huff
  • Charlie Hampton
  • Charlie Pattinson
Producers
  • Andrea Dewsbery
  • Pat Tookey-Dickson
Cinematography
  • Maja Zamojda
  • Stefan Ciupek
  • Ian Moss
  • Joel Devlin
Editors
  • Jo Smyth
  • Caroline Bleakley
  • David Yardley
  • Nikki McChristie
  • Mark Trend
  • Gez Morris
  • Josh Cunliffe
  • Catherine Creed
Running time54–60 minutes
Production companies
  • All3 Media’s New Pictures
  • Playground
  • Giddy Ink
  • Jumping Joseph
Release
Original networkStarz
Original releaseMay 5, 2019 (2019-05-05) –
November 29, 2020 (2020-11-29)
Chronology
Preceded byThe White Queen
The White Princess
External links
Website
Production website

The Spanish Princess is a historical drama television limited series developed by Emma Frost and Matthew Graham for Starz. Based on the novels The Constant Princess (2005) and The King's Curse (2014) by Philippa Gregory, it is a sequel to the miniseries The White Queen and The White Princess. It centres around Catherine of Aragon (Charlotte Hope), the eponymous Spanish princess who became Queen of England as the first wife of King Henry VIII (Ruairi O'Connor).

Designed as a 16-part limited series, the first eight episodes premiered on May 5, 2019. On June 3, 2019, Starz ordered the remaining eight episodes, which premiered on October 11, 2020. The series finale aired on November 29, 2020.

Premise[]

Teenaged princess Catherine of Aragon, daughter of Spanish rulers Isabella and Ferdinand, finally travels to England, to meet her husband by proxy, Arthur, Prince of Wales, heir apparent of Henry VII of England, to whom she has been betrothed since she was a child. Unwelcome by some, she and her diverse court, including her lady-in-waiting Lina, who is of Moorish ancestry, struggle to adapt to English customs. Catherine is horrified to learn that Arthur's younger brother, the arrogant Henry, Duke of York, is the author of the romantic correspondence she has received. When Arthur dies suddenly, her destiny as the one who will bring peace between Spain and England seems in doubt, until she sets her sights on Prince Henry.

Cast[]

Main[]

Recurring[]

Guests[]

Episodes[]

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateU.S. viewers
(millions)
Part 1[a]
1"The New World"Birgitte StærmoseEmma Frost & Matthew GrahamMay 5, 2019 (2019-05-05)0.393[1]
October – November 1501. Princess Catherine of Spain arrives in England. When she meets Arthur, Prince of Wales, Catherine is disappointed that he is not as romantic in person as he was in his letters. She later learns it was Arthur's younger brother, Harry, who exchanged letters with her. Elizabeth, the queen, tells Catherine that the brother of her cousin, Maggie Pole, was beheaded because Catherine's mother, Queen Isabella of Castile, would only pledge Catherine's hand in marriage if there were no other claimants to England's throne. As Harry walks Catherine to the altar on her wedding day, he admits that he initially exchanged letters with her to hurt Arthur, but later found that her letters excited him.
2"Fever Dream"Birgitte StærmoseMatthew GrahamMay 12, 2019 (2019-05-12)0.398[2]
November 1501 – April 1502. After the wedding, Arthur and Catherine stay in his father King Henry VII's household for a short time. Arthur and Harry's sister Meg learn that Henry has offered her hand in marriage to James IV of Scotland to form another alliance for England. Catherine begs Maggie Pole's forgiveness for being the reason Maggie's brother was murdered. Arthur and Catherine set off for Ludlow Castle, to set-up their own household, and become closer as they learn more about each other. Maggie Pole and her family accompany them. Arthur becomes gravely ill. Henry and Elizabeth race to Ludlow, but arrive too late. Henry informs Catherine she will return to London and stay in the royal household until they know if she is with child.
3"An Audacious Plan"Daina ReidHelen ChildressMay 19, 2019 (2019-05-19)0.456[3]
April 1502 – February 1503. Catherine learns that Isabella is arranging another alliance marriage. Catherine hides her true condition to bide her time in England, which would solve many problems for her, her maid, Lina, and her guard, Oviedo. Catherine tells Lina, and later Harry, that her marriage to Arthur was never consummated. Harry proposes and asks Henry to request a papal dispensation so he and Catherine can marry. Elizabeth goes into labor. After the difficult stillbirth, she has a vision that the Tudor line will end if Harry and Catherine marry and begs Henry to prevent the marriage. As Catherine writes to Isabella for her blessing to marry Harry, mourning bells peal for Elizabeth.
4"The Battle for Harry"Daina ReidNicki RennaMay 26, 2019 (2019-05-26)0.500[4]
March 1503. Edmund de la Pole, the leading Yorkist claimant to the throne and a cousin of both the late queen and Maggie Pole, is plotting to overthrow Henry. Henry tells his mother Margaret that Harry wants to marry Catherine. She confronts Catherine about her alleged virginity then orders her out of the palace. Margaret bans Maggie from court when Maggie states Catherine may be telling the truth. Henry learns Maximilian I is protecting Edmund de la Pole. Henry sets his grief aside to see Meg off as she departs for Scotland to marry. He hosts a feast to celebrate the future and invites Catherine. Henry makes an announcement that indirectly fulfills the late queen's dying wish: a royal marriage between himself and Catherine.
5"Heart Versus Duty"Lisa ClarkeAndrea Thornton BoldenJune 2, 2019 (2019-06-02)0.546[5]
August 1503 – December 1505. Catherine is torn between her duty to marry Henry and her desire to marry Harry. Meg arrives in Scotland and is pleasantly surprised by her betrothed. Harry tells Margaret, and later Catherine, that if Catherine wants to marry him instead of Henry, he will fight for her. Catherine fears her fate should she reject Henry and crush his pride, but decides to follow her heart. She convinces Henry that the alliance with Spain will be weakened when Harry becomes king if she is Henry's widow instead of Harry's wife. Henry withdraws his intentions, but reminds Catherine and Harry that they can only marry if the Pope grants a dispensation and if Spain pays the remainder of Catherine's dowry. Maggie's husband dies unexpectedly.
6"A Polite Kidnapping"Lisa ClarkeEmma FrostJune 9, 2019 (2019-06-09)0.493[6]
January – April 1506. Catherine learns that her mother has died, her sister Joanna is queen of Castile, and her father will not pay her dowry. Joanna and her husband Philip are stranded in England. Henry, hoping Philip's father, Maximilian I, will turn over Edmund de la Pole, secretly delays repairs to their ship. Maggie is destitute. To extract a forced confession about Catherine's virginity, Margaret offers assistance to Maggie, which she refuses. In exchange for her dowry, Catherine tells Joanna how she can escape England: Joanna will persuade Maximilian to turn de la Pole over to Henry or lose trade with Castile, if Henry takes an oath to spare de la Pole's life. Rather than pay Catherine's dowry, Joanna forms a new alliance with England at the suggestion of Margaret: betrothing Joanna's son Charles to Harry's younger sister, Mary.
7"All is Lost"Stephen WoolfendenHelen ChildressJune 16, 2019 (2019-06-16)0.509[7]
September 1506 – 1508. Catherine learns there is to be a double wedding in Spain: Mary to her nephew King Charles, and Harry to her niece Eleanor. Oviedo proposes to Lina and tells her he is working for Margaret. Harry is torn between his duty to marry Eleanor and his desire to marry Catherine. Maggie seeks shelter with Catherine and Lina. Catherine's father King Ferdinand writes that Joanna's husband has died and Joanna is not fit to rule Castile. Ferdinand is now guardian to Joanna's children and Castile's regent. He makes Catherine the Aragonese ambassador to England and promises her dowry. Catherine's new status allows her and Lina to move back into the palace. Oviedo provides Margaret with the names of de la Pole's co-conspirators, which now include Maggie and her eldest son. He later protects Maggie's son during a raid.
8"Destiny"Stephen WoolfendenEmma Frost & Matthew GrahamJune 23, 2019 (2019-06-23)0.528[8]
April 1509 – June 1509. Henry VII dies. New king Harry reaffirms his desire to marry Catherine. Margaret accuses Edmund Dudley of treason for her own illegal activities and he is beheaded. Harry pardons Maggie and her children and they return to court. Margaret extracts a forced confession from Lina about Catherine's virginity by accusing Oviedo of theft and demanding his hanging. Lina and Oviedo marry before his hanging. Harry and Catherine arrive in time to save Oviedo's life. Harry learns the Pope granted a dispensation sometime before Henry's death. Margaret dies. On their wedding day, Catherine receives a letter from Ferdinand stating Harry slept with Joanna. Harry denies it, and Catherine again denies that she ever slept with Arthur.
Part 2[a]
9"Camelot"Chanya ButtonEmma Frost & Matthew GrahamOctober 11, 2020 (October 11, 2020)0.252[9]
Spring and Summer 1511. Catherine's father Ferdinand comes to England to make an alliance against France. Edward Stafford is injured in a joust, losing his right eye. Lina conceives Oviedo's child. Oviedo, General Howard and Stafford take an army to a pre-arranged meeting point in Spain, only to be betrayed by Ferdinand, who uses the English as a distraction to take Navarre for himself. Prince Harry, six-month-old son of Catherine and Harry, dies, while Catherine beseeches God to forgive her vanity. Furious with Spain and heartbroken at the loss of her son, Catherine receives a gloating letter from her father and reaffirms to the English people that she is English first and she will give another son to England. She affirms to Harry that they will invade France without Spain's help.
10"Flodden"Chanya ButtonSimon Tyrrell & Matthew GrahamOctober 18, 2020 (October 18, 2020)0.173[10]
Late 1511 – October 1513. King Harry invades France, leaving a pregnant Catherine to defend England from the Scottish King James IV at the Battle of Flodden.
11"Grief"Chanya ButtonRita KalnejaisOctober 25, 2020 (2020-10-25)0.180[11]
Late 1513 – Late 1514. While Catherine fights to restore her marriage after another tragedy, Meg too must find a way to restore Scotland after the bloody Battle of Flodden.
12"The Other Woman"Lisa ClarkeKate Verghese & Emma FrostNovember 1, 2020 (2020-11-01)0.233[12]
Early 1515 – February 1516. While Meg risks all for love, Catherine struggles with the nauseating possibility Harry is cheating on her with Anne Boleyn.
13"Plague"Lisa ClarkeKate O'Riordan & Emma FrostNovember 8, 2020 (2020-11-08)0.221[13]
1517 – June 1519. When the plague hits London, the court flees to Hampton Court, but Maggie and Thomas More remain in an empty and surprisingly romantic palace.
14"Field of Cloth of Gold"Lisa ClarkeKelly JonesNovember 15, 2020 (2020-11-15)0.234[14]
June 1520. A great gathering in France is the backdrop to a political stand-off between Catherine and Cardinal Wolsey, while in London, riots happen.
15"Faith"Rebecca GatwardSimon Tyrrell & Matthew GrahamNovember 22, 2020 (2020-11-22)0.290[15]
Early 1521 – 17 May 1521. A new religion is rising, as is tension in court. Catherine must stop Harry's dangerous paranoia from turning friends into enemies.
16"Peace"Rebecca GatwardEmma Frost & Matthew GrahamNovember 29, 2020 (2020-11-29)0.315[16]
1521 – 1525. As Harry loses himself to madness, the stakes have never been higher for Catherine. Her husband has become a threat to her very life.
  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Some sources refer to the two parts of the limited series as seasons.

Production[]

Development[]

On March 15, 2018, it was announced that Starz had greenlit the production. Emma Frost and Matthew Graham were set to serve as showrunners in addition to executive producing alongside Colin Callender, Scott Huff, Charlie Pattinson, and Charlie Hampton. Production companies All3 Media's New Pictures and Playground were expected to be involved.[17]

On May 17, 2018, it was reported that the first two episodes would be directed by Birgitte Stærmose and that most episodes in the series would be directed by women.[18]

On June 3, 2019, Starz announced that the series would return for another eight episodes and that Graham and Frost "always intended for The Spanish Princess to span 16 episodes, but they wrote a natural stopping place after the first eight just in case."[19] Part two would be broadcast in 2020, with stars Charlotte Hope and Ruairi O'Connor returning to the show as Catherine and Henry,[20] "along with other key cast."[21] It was confirmed on June 9, 2019, by showrunner Emma Frost, that both Georgie Henley and Olly Rix, who portray Meg Tudor and Edward Stafford, would return for the next eight episodes and that Meg's role would be "huge in the back eight" and that "we are totally with her story, we're up in Scotland, we're sort of Spanish Princess meets Outlander" and that Stafford would get some "redemption."[22] Richard Pepper's agent confirmed, on May 8, 2020, that he would return as Thomas Boleyn, Earl of Wiltshire.[23] Jordan Renzo's return as Charles Brandon was confirmed by the part two teaser trailer on May 7, 2020 and Laura Carmichael's return was confirmed in an interview done by Emma Frost and Matthew Graham; the same interview confirmed that part two would "move around from France to England to Scotland a lot more and tell three interconnected stories."[24]

Casting[]

Alongside the directing announcement, it was confirmed that Charlotte Hope, Stephanie Levi-John, Angus Imrie, Harriet Walter, Laura Carmichael, Ruairi O'Connor, Georgie Henley, Elliot Cowan, Alexandra Moen, Philip Cumbus, Nadia Parkes, Aaron Cobham, Alan McKenna, Richard Pepper, Olly Rix, Jordan Renzo, Daniel Cerqueira, and Alicia Borrachero had been cast in the series.[18]

Filming[]

Principal photography for the series commenced on May 15, 2018, at Wells Cathedral in Wells, Somerset.[25]

Principal photography for part two commenced on September 26, 2019[26] and finished on March 11, 2020,[27] one day before lockdown due to COVID-19. Some filming took place at Mendip Hills, which doubled for Flodden Field.[citation needed]

Release[]

On December 20, 2018, a "first look" still image from the series was released.[28] On January 25, 2019, a teaser trailer for the series was released.[29]

On March 7, 2019, the series was given a May 5, 2019, premiere date.[30] On September 10, 2020, the trailer for part two was released; the eight-episode installment premiered on October 11, 2020.[31]

Reception[]

Critical response[]

The series received mixed to positive reviews in the United States. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, part one of the series has an approval rating of 75% based on 12 reviews, with an average rating of 7.13/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "The Spanish Princess blends soapy melodrama with beautifully rendered historical set-pieces to paint a rounder — if still not fully realized — portrait of an often overlooked queen."[32] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 73 out of 100 based on six critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[33]

In Spain, the series caused curiosity upon release, but later received a combination of hard criticisms and tired indifference. It was accused of "wild historical inaccuracy", and has been described by various media as "insulting", "offensive", and "as full of stereotyping as sadly expected". The newspaper ABC wrote that it "invents and humiliates [Catherine's] history."[34] The newspaper 20minutos and the TV guide by eldiario.es both call it "one of the worst shows about Spanish history."[35][36]

Ratings[]

Viewership and ratings per episode of The Spanish Princess
No. Title Air date Rating
(18–49)
Viewers
(millions)
DVR viewers
(millions)
Total viewers
(millions)
1 "The New World" May 5, 2019 0.05 0.393[1] N/A N/A
2 "Fever Dream" May 12, 2019 0.05 0.398[2] 0.464 0.862[37]
3 "An Audacious Plan" May 19, 2019 0.07 0.456[3] 0.503 0.959[38]
4 "The Battle for Harry" May 26, 2019 0.07 0.500[4] 0.556 1.056[39]
5 "Heart Versus Duty" June 2, 2019 0.06 0.546[5] 0.512 1.058[40]
6 "A Polite Kidnapping" June 9, 2019 0.06 0.493[6] N/A N/A
7 "All is Lost" June 16, 2019 0.06 0.509[7] 0.560 1.069[41]
8 "Destiny" June 23, 2019 0.05 0.528[8] 0.481 1.010[42]
9 "Camelot" October 11, 2020 0.04 0.252[9] N/A N/A
10 "Flodden" October 18, 2020 0.02 0.173[10] N/A N/A
11 "Grief" October 25, 2020 0.03 0.180[11] N/A N/A
12 "The Other Woman" November 1, 2020 0.02 0.233[12] N/A N/A
13 "Plague" November 8, 2020 0.03 0.221[13] N/A N/A
14 "Field of Cloth of Gold" November 15, 2020 0.03 0.234[14] N/A N/A
15 "Faith" November 22, 2020 0.04 0.290[15] N/A N/A
16 "Peace" November 29, 2020 0.02 0.315[16] N/A N/A

Home media release[]

Volume(s) DVD release date Blu-ray release date
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4 Region A Region B
Part 1 August 13, 2019[43] August 12, 2019[44] N/A August 13, 2019[45] N/A
Part 2 July 20, 2021[46] N/A N/A N/A N/A

References[]

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External links[]

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