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The White Princess (miniseries)

The White Princess is a historical drama television miniseries developed for Starz. It is based on Philippa Gregory's 2013 novel of the same name and, to a lesser extent, its 2014 sequel The King's Curse. It is a sequel to the 2013 miniseries The White Queen, which adapted three of Gregory's previous novels, and begins immediately where The White Queen finished.

The White Princess

  • United States
  • United Kingdom

English

8

  • Emma Frost
  • Jamie Payne
  • Colin Callender
  • Scott Huff
  • Michele Buck

  • Lachlan MacKinnon
  • Rashida Acharya

Chris Seager

  • St. John O'Rorke
  • Anne Sopel
  • Jamie Trevill

60 minutes

16 April (2017-04-16) –
4 June 2017 (2017-06-04)

In the eight-episode series, the marriage of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York effectively ends the Wars of the Roses by uniting the houses of Lancaster and York. However, their mutual enmity and distrust, as well as the political plots of their mothers, threaten to tear both the marriage and the kingdom apart.

as Elizabeth "Lizzie" of York, the Queen of England

Jodie Comer

as Henry VII, the King of England, Elizabeth's husband

Jacob Collins-Levy

as Margaret Beaufort, the King's mother

Michelle Fairley

as Margaret "Maggie" Plantagenet, the Queen's paternal cousin, sister of Teddy

Rebecca Benson

as Bishop (later Cardinal) John Morton, a confidant of the King's mother

Kenneth Cranham

as Dowager Queen Elizabeth Woodville, the Queen's mother

Essie Davis

as Isabella I of Castile, the Queen of Castile

Rossy de Palma

as Thomas Stanley, Margaret Beaufort's husband

Richard Dillane

as Francis Lovell, a Yorkist supporter

Anthony Flanagan

as Perkin Warbeck, a pretender to the English crown who claims to be Richard of York.

Patrick Gibson

as Cecily Neville, Duchess of York, the Queen's paternal grandmother. Goodall was the only actor to appear in both The White Queen and The White Princess.

Caroline Goodall

as Catherine "Cathy" Gordon, wife of Perkin Warbeck

Amy Manson

as John de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, husband of Eliza de la Pole

Adrian Rawlins

as Jasper Tudor, the King's uncle

Vincent Regan

as Cecily of York, the Queen's sister

Suki Waterhouse

as Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy, the Queen's paternal aunt

Joanne Whalley

as Sir Richard Pole, husband of Maggie Plantagenet

Andrew Whipp

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

The 10-part 2013 television series The White Queen adapted Gregory's previous novels The White Queen (2009), The Red Queen (2010) and The Kingmaker's Daughter (2012).[13] The series was broadcast on BBC One in the United Kingdom and on Starz in the United States, and features Freya Mavor as a young Elizabeth of York.[13] Despite initial plans for a second series, on 20 August 2013 the BBC announced they were not commissioning one, possibly because of the lukewarm reception the series received.[14]


However, in October 2013, The Telegraph reported that Starz was planning to develop a sequel miniseries called The White Princess, based on Gregory's novel.[15] Starz CEO Chris Albrecht announced in January 2014 that the network was working with White Queen screenwriter Emma Frost on the project.[16] Starz would produce the White Princess miniseries without involvement from the BBC.[16] Gregory confirmed that the project was underway in August 2015.[17] On 7 February 2016, Gregory announced on Facebook that the sequel was officially confirmed to be in production, with the scripts being written.[18] The series was confirmed to be eight episodes in May 2016.[19][20]


Jamie Payne, who directed three episodes of The White Queen, directed episodes 1, 2, 3, 7, and 8. Frost was the showrunner and executive producer. Lachlan MacKinnon is served as producer, with Gregory as executive producer. Playground's Colin Callender and Scott Huff also executive produced with Company Pictures' Michele Buck.[21]

Casting[edit]

Jodie Comer was cast in the title role of Elizabeth of York in April 2016,[22] with Michelle Fairley added as Margaret Beaufort in May.[19] In June 2016, Starz announced the casting of Essie Davis as Dowager Queen Elizabeth, Jacob Collins-Levy as Henry VII, Suki Waterhouse as Cecily of York, Rebecca Benson as Margaret Plantagenet, and Joanne Whalley as Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy.[23] The remaining cast includes Caroline Goodall as Duchess Cecily, Kenneth Cranham as Bishop Morton, Vincent Regan as Jasper Tudor and Rhys Connah as Teddy Plantagenet.[24]

Filming[edit]

Principal photography began in June 2016,[23][24] with locations including Bradford on Avon,[25] Bristol,[21] Berkeley Castle, Gloucester Cathedral,[26] Lacock,[27] Salisbury Cathedral,[28] and Wells.[29]

Release[edit]

In early January 2017, the producers released a video clip from the series as a teaser trailer.[30] In February 2017, Starz announced that The White Princess would premiere on 16 April 2017.[31] In the UK the series began its satellite and terrestrial broadcasts on the Drama channel on 18 November 2017.

Reception[edit]

The miniseries received generally favorable reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 76% based on reviews from 17 critics, with an average rating of 6.95/10. The website's critics consensus indicated the series was "well-acted and enlivened by its fresh perspective" and "delivers more than enough intrigue to satisfy fans of period British royal court drama."[32] On Metacritic, the show has a weighted average score of 71 based on reviews from 9 critics.[33]

Continuation[edit]

On 15 March 2018, Starz announced that it will create a continuation of The White Queen and The White Princess to be titled The Spanish Princess, which will be based on Gregory's novels The Constant Princess and The King's Curse and center on Catherine of Aragon.[34]

Official website

at IMDb

The White Princess