The highly anticipated Netflix documentary series about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle is set to premiere this year.
Deadline Reports on Monday claimed the show would be delayed until 2023 amid backlash over the next season of Netflix hit “The Crown.”
“They’ve been rattling with Netflix and decided to blink first and put the documentary on hold,” a source told the outlet.
But despite everything, the show is said to go on. The issues surrounding the documentation have nothing to do with the fifth season of ‘The Crown’.
As previously revealed, Netflix sources have said there has been trouble between the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Netflix, making accusatory comments about Queen Charles III, Queen Camilla Parker Bowles, Prince William, Kate Middleton and the Princess. said he wanted to remove the of Wales.
The couple were the ones who wanted to postpone the show until next year.
But one industry insider told Page Six:
Netflix has yet to announce an official release date, and insiders said there were still issues with the documentation.Harry and Markle made comments that contradicted what he wrote in his upcoming memoir.
Representatives for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Netflix did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment.
The new season of modern-day royal fiction ‘The Crown’ has been widely criticized for its release just weeks after the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
The scene reportedly features the new Prince Charles, played by Dominic West, in a meeting with former British Prime Minister John Major against his mother, now played by Imedra Stanton, when he was Prince of Wales. It shows how to attempt a coup.
This prompted the Major to tell the Mail on Sunday that the meeting never happened, dubbing the scene “Barrel Road of Malicious Nonsense”.
It is also believed that there will be many scenes in which Princess Diana, played by Elizabeth Debicki, tragically dies in a car accident in a tunnel in Paris.
A source on the show told The Sun that crew members were reportedly talking about the portrayal of her death on-screen.
“Going back to Paris and turning Diana’s final days and hours into a drama feels very uncomfortable. Finally, some crew members are pushing back,” they said.