Lord Mountbatten admitted he and wife Edwina ‘spent their lives in other people’s beds’
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Mountbatten is the Queen’s third cousin, Prince Philip’s uncle and Prince Charles’ mentor. The Crown highlights his key role in the Royal Family and his significant influence over both Philip and Charles. In season four of the Netflix drama, released last month, Prince Charles alludes to Mountbatten’s own infidelity when discussing his liaison with Camilla Parker Bowles.
During a telephone call in episode one, Mountbatten says: “Oh Charles, you’re not still seeing her are you? You know what the family thinks.”
Charles quips: “Yes, I’m perfectly aware of what the family thinks.”
Mountbatten presses: “And what I think too?”
Charles replies: “Yes, and the richness of that is not lost on me either.
“The idea that you of all people should lecture me about the sanctity of marriage and affairs of the heart needing to be conventional, because you and Edwina hardly blazed a trail in that department.
“At least when Camilla and I commit adultery there aren’t national security implications involved.”
While The Crown is a fictionalised drama about the Royal Family, there is significant evidence that Mountbatten and his wife did not limit their relationship to just inside the marriage.
According to Philip Ziegler’s 1985 book ‘Mountbatten: The Official Biography’, Mountbatten once admitted: “Edwina and I spent all our married lives getting into other people’s beds.”
According to his daughter Pamela Hicks in her 2012 book ‘Daughter of Empire: Life as a Mounbatten’, he maintained an affair for several years with Yola Letellier, the wife of Henri Letellier, publisher of Le Journal and mayor of Deauville.
The French socialite is widely credited as being the inspiration for the main character in Colette’s 1944 novella Gigi, as well as the 1949 film based on the literary work, the 1951 stage adaptation and the 1958 musical film.
Meanwhile, Edwina ‒ who was a wealthy heiress and daughter of a Conservative MP ‒ also had affairs and did little to hide them from her husband.
He was aware of her lovers, accepted them and even developed friendships with some of them, making them “part of the family”.
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Ms Hicks described her mother as “a man eater” and her mother’s many lovers as succession of “uncles” throughout her childhood.
Edwina’s affair with Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India, both during and after their post-war service was particularly notable.
She also reportedly had an affair with Grenadian jazz singer Leslie Hutchinson.
After Edwina’s death in 1960, Mounbatten was involved in relationships with young women, according to his daughter Patricia, his secretary John Barratt, his valet Bill Evans and William Stadiem, an employee of Madame Claude.
In episode one of The Crown season four, not long after the conversation quoted above, Mountbatten is murdered.
This is based on the real-life assassination of the Earl by the IRA in 1979.
Mountbatten had been out fishing with his family when a bomb, which had been planted on the boat, was detonated by IRA paramilitaries.
The explosion killed not only Mounbatten himself, but his 14-year-old grandson Nicholas Knatchbull, a 15-year-old schoolboy who was helping out as a boat boy, and the 83-year-old Dowager Lady Brabourne.
Nicholas’ twin brother, mother and father survived with serious injuries
The terror attack, which took place on August 27, was coordinated with a simultaneous attack on Warrenpoint, which resulted in 18 spiders dying and one civilian.
The Crown depicts the Royal Family struggling with the grief of losing Mountbatten, especially Prince Charles who viewed him as a surrogate father, due to his strained relationship with his actual father Philip.
It also suggests that Charles’ decision to propose to Diana was in part down to his last conversation with Mountbatten, as well as a letter he received from him, which he wrote shortly before his death.
However, Andrew Lownie, author of the book ‘The Mountbattens: Their Lives and Loves’, told Express.co.uk that Mountbatten would never have lectured Charles about his affair with Camilla.
He said Mountbatten and Charles “remained very matey” right until the end.
The expert added: “He did lecture him about his behaviour, but only as a result of him being selfish going away for a holiday in the Bahamas in the spring, but there was no lecture about Camilla or any of those things.”
Indeed, Mountbatten was of the opinion that, like himself, Charles could marry a respectable woman but continue having mistresses alongside that.
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