Meghan Markle ‘should have learned’ from Wallis Simpson’s tell-all interview, expert warns
Meghan Markle: Commentator discusses upcoming interview
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Meghan Markle and Prince Harry will feature in an explosive interview covering their departure from royal life in the US tonight, with millions of viewers eagerly awaiting the show. However, the Royal Family are on tenterhooks as to what the couple will divulge, as several trailer clips have suggested the interview could portray the royals in a negative light.
The interview, which ITV will air at 9pm on Monday, was pre-recorded in February.
Royal author Anna Pasternak, who has written about Wallis Simpson in detail, has claimed Meghan should have taken inspiration from the American.
Mrs Simpson, the American divorcee who fell in love with the Duke of Windsor, is said to have given a “relaxed and “self-deprecating” interview that was tactful and mindful of offending the Palace.
Ms Pasternak is referring to the exiled Duke and Duchess of Windsor’s tell-all interivew they gave in March 1970 – over 30 years on from the royal’s calamitous abdication.
Writing in a column for the Daily Telegraph, Ms Pasternak noted how the 1970 interview with BBC journalist Kenneth Harris “seemed equally electrifying and scurrilous at the time, making headlines on both sides of the Atlantic”.
However, while the author drew comparisons between the two women’s experiences, the commentator noted Meghan and Wallis’ approaches and circumstances were very different.
For starters, she notes the Duke and Duchess of Windsor were forced to exile to France, while Meghan and Harry chose to quit the Royal Family and move to the US.
Secondly, Ms Pasternak said Wallis seemed determined to “build bridges” in her interview, while Meghan “appears to want to up the ante against her in-laws”.
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She said: “When the Windors spoke to Kenneth Harris from the silvery grey drawing room of their Parisian home, given the myriad of falsehoods that the Royal family had levelled against the Duchess for the previous 34 years, you might have imagined that Wallis would seize the opportunity to settle scores against her frosty in-laws.
“Or that the Duke would finally get his deep-seated grievances against his family off his chest.”
But Ms Pasternak notes the Windsor’s were “unstintgly generous” in their responses and did not throw shade on the Royal Family once.
Instead, she said: “There is no hint of bitterness, rather a sanguine acceptance of what must have seemed her own unsurvivable moments, when, during the abdication crisis, she became the most hated woman in the world.”
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The author added: “Watching this poignant interview now, through the prism of the Sussexes’ explosive offering, which even Oprah concludes is ‘shocking,’ the Windsors could not seem sweeter, or their stance more quaint.
“The saddest thing is that Wallis and Edward, despite being banished, were dutiful and patriotic to the end.
“The Duke, who died two years later, never once succumbed to public carping about his family.
“What a pity that from the teasers we’ve seen, Meghan and Harry, who took it upon themselves to leave Britain, seem unlikely to display similar loyalty to the Crown on Oprah tonight.”
American broadcaster’s CBS will air the Sussexes’ interview later this evening.
Teasers from the sit-down chat have already been released, where Meghan tells the journalist she is finding it “liberating” to be able to make decisions for herself after stepping down as senior royal.
In a separate clip, the Duchess accused “the firm” of playing an active role in “perpetuating falsehoods” about her and Harry.
Oprah With Meghan and Harry is on ITV at 9pm on Monday March 8. You can watch the full interview afterwards on the ITV hub.
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