“Political murder” best way to describe Anne’s death
@wenthulk843911 ай бұрын
Indeed
@velouris769 ай бұрын
To be honest, a better term would be “gross miscarriage of justice”, but that kind of thing didn’t exist under Henry VIII…
@Trebor748 ай бұрын
Henry needed a son. The country needed a prince,or risk descending into the chaos of civil war. The wars of the roses were not that long ago and featured some of the bloodiest battles on English soil
@L-mo7 ай бұрын
Diana's too.
@sashaflip74507 ай бұрын
I think Henry got bored of her and was ready to move on
@catherinetaylor2333 Жыл бұрын
One thing no-one ever comments on - the lazy stereotype of Catherine being dark haired/eyed because she was Spanish. In fact, she had golden hair and blue eyes.
@cherrytraveller59158 ай бұрын
I thought she was strawberry blonde?? Definitely blue eyed. All her portraits show that
@catherinetaylor23338 ай бұрын
@@cherrytraveller5915 yes, could be, she was described as 'golden haired', but that could cover strawberry blonde
@florallyclover8 ай бұрын
she was described as having red-gold hair, which I think we see in a lot of her portraits. I think the casting of Charlotte Hope as Catherine in the Spanish Princess was really perfect, although slightly darker red, not sure if you've seen it so I'll link it here- really so beautiful i.pinimg.com/originals/8a/fd/5e/8afd5ecc41c9b84f43c54724920e49ad.jpg
@ee1ena7 ай бұрын
Spanish princess got it right
@McCarthy00007 ай бұрын
The two Spanish princesses now, Lenore and Sophia, are both blonde hair blue eyes, pale milky skin
@shadowthoughts79592 жыл бұрын
I like this historian’s attitude better than most. So many just get angry, but HER attitude is more cheery and playful with the issues.
@Weirdkauz2 жыл бұрын
I understand the anger, though. I habe been researching into Caroline Weldon, a political activist of the 19th century, who was dismissed by her temporaries as a nutter bc she thought the American Indians should not only be kept alive, but left alone, to practise and choose their own culture. Even though, the powers that be slowly came around to her view during the next century, Weldon was almost completely forgotten by history. Only to emerge as a perversely warped and silly version of a damsel in distress in "Woman walking Ahead", a film that made me experience true hatred... because of the real damage done to the cause of equality amongst all sexes (and, by the way, races) such a portrayal does. It's really a betrayal, and done by a female director as well. That said: I really love this historians attitude, and think it does much more to help lighten the dark recesses of history than anger can. Wish I could be like her!
@Mark-nh7zg2 жыл бұрын
Uhhh, none of them get angry. And you do know the experts are instructed to be as technical and critical as they can, right? They're not like this in normal conversations
@ladyethyme2 жыл бұрын
She’s representing Penguin books so…..yeah.
@antmagor2 жыл бұрын
I would describe it as a very puritanical attitude. Sometimes it’s warranted (I.e. Rein) sometimes it’s like come on, we give Shakespeare a pass for embellishing but we don’t let modern-day folks do it. Also some of the historians disregard the fact that some of these films are Adapted from historical fiction novels. And as is the way with Hollywood they don’t stay true to the source material. Anyway the whole point of historical fiction is the F word, fiction. It’s not supposed to be a minute by minute account. It’s supposed to be a dramatization of what might have happened explored through the arts rather than through the historical record. And in my opinion it helps inspire people to actually do research and see what the films got wrong. Which is important because you want people to have an imagination and enthusiasm when learning about history, because it makes the subject stimulating.
@BlainEnoch2 жыл бұрын
And much more INFORMATIVE and EDUCATIONAL. All these stuck ups who get angry might have a very good reason, but they seem to think that anger itself is sufficient as a pedagogical tool. It isn't. She takes the time to calmly lay out absolute facts, estimated facts, slight variations that have some historical backing, and complete nonsensical blunders. She also mentions the sources and logic to what she finds more or less reasonable. This is how you teach, folks.
@green10wine2 жыл бұрын
10:34 "If she wanted to have children, she could have married and had children" 100% on point! I hate that part about Mary Queen of Scotts movie. Not every woman's goal in life is to be a mother. I'd expect better from a 2018 movie.
@coreyboggs20112 жыл бұрын
She was very generous to the Mary Queen of Scots movie
@justicevanpool90252 жыл бұрын
The queen is not every woman, for sure. But grafting current values onto women of that time is one of the steps that the story writers could have taken to make it more palatable to some. Conversely, I think they portrayed her in this way to make it seem more "hisorically authentic".
@stadot14272 жыл бұрын
I don't know...I've yet to meet a woman her age who didn't at some point struggle with the idea of motherhood - especially if they were single but wanted to be married. And this in a society that often values career over motherhood! If Elizabeth felt she could not marry and keep her throne, I'd find it very hard to believe she wouldn't struggle at some point with wanting that which she could not have - even if she only wanted it because she could not have it. Men probably only experience it less because marriage and parenthood is not as restrictive historically nor biologically as it is for women. They've generally had less to lose.
@mzk14892 жыл бұрын
In what century? But perhaps she was afraid to marry because of her position but missed motherhood.
@EM2theBee2 жыл бұрын
@@justicevanpool9025 I agree. So many times, people today, want to superimpose today's values on historical figures. We see these women as extraordinary for their times, anomalies, but few survived those character traits Anne Boleyn is one of those who did not.
@andreaweber80592 жыл бұрын
"The other Boleyn girl" may be really inaccurate, but it did make me understand the difference in rank and power between Anna Boleyn and Catherine of Aragon as no more accurate movie ever did. You really see Anne as an upstart who relies almost solely on the favour of the king (which makes for a catastrophic outcome for her once he is displeased with her) while at the same time Catherine is depicted as long-time royalty in her own right, someone who lived all the rules and rights of this class and was a formidable opponent for Henry. He did get rid of her, but it cost him considerably more than it did to get rid of Anne.
@jenniferbrewer53702 жыл бұрын
But at least we got to see David Morrissey in tights.
@HK-gm8pe2 жыл бұрын
their outfits were also more accurate than in other movies/shows but overall I hatethat movie :D
@Queen_G_5132 жыл бұрын
Lol I loved this movie! Even though I now know how inaccurate it is, it is damn entertaining!
@cinnow2 жыл бұрын
So what? In the end he tossed them both aside. Katherine for Anne, Anne for Jane.
@katherineamelia982 жыл бұрын
@@cinnow catherine was still a beloved queen of england by the people of england for the rest of her life after the divorce, whereas anne bolelyn was demonised and mocked by the public after her execution. you can’t say catherine’s royal status did not give her privilege
@dalestreeter3412 жыл бұрын
It seems unlikely that Mary of Scotland had a Scots accent since she had been raised in France since she was a small child. If she only spoke English with Scots natives then I suppose it's possible, but it seems intended to show she was Scots not English.
@johnkilmartin51012 жыл бұрын
There is a letter from Mary to Elizabeth in which she for her bad English and definitely conforms to Scots pronunciation. The letter appears in Antonia Fraser's biography of Mary.
@IrishCinnsealach2 жыл бұрын
Interestingly her being brought up in France and the French language not having the letter W is why the name Stewart became Stuart
@Ms.Histrology2 жыл бұрын
Yup, she grew up in France, so likely used French a lot. She could also fluently speak Scots.
@corayye40992 жыл бұрын
It’s for a contemporary audience. The English wouldn’t have been dropping their Rs at that time either.
@TheLiteralLatest2 жыл бұрын
I read that MQS spokes scots but not English fluently, she had Scottish tutors in France to keep her aligned (poorly lol imo) with scotland. so Mary would have had a scots accent if she was speaking to her Scottish subjects.
@0308frank2 жыл бұрын
23:16 "So everbody in this room ends up executed. It's a bad room to be in." This historian is hilarious. Very witty and entertaining without taking herself too seriously. I'd like to hear her comments on some older Tudor movies like "Young Bess" and "Anne of the thousand days".
@dancekeb1308 Жыл бұрын
Her comment is WRONG. Mary Boleyn wasn't executed. She was banished from court for marrying without permission, and died in her early forties.
@amandac98947 ай бұрын
Exactly, I absolutely love Anne of the Thousand Days so her take on that movie should be very good.
@501Blonde-dq1ui7 ай бұрын
Yes, agree with all of this!
@LordofFullmetal Жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing out that Anne was probably innocent! She's always depicted as this evil seductress, but like, we really have no proof she ever did anything wrong. More likely, she was murdered because Henry remembered how sucky getting a divorce was last time, and that it wouldn't go over well if he divorced the woman he tore the country apart to marry. He NEEDED her to have done something wrong, so he could justify getting rid of her.
@HBOMAXtvmoviesyoutube Жыл бұрын
Anne's death was very political as she pointed out. Anne was very progressive and she wanted the reformation to put the interests of woman and the poor at it's forefront which made her many enemies who started accusing Anne of all those charges.
@kyarden797110 ай бұрын
Yes, but let’s not forget their marriage was annulled 2 days before Anne’s execution, i.e. Anne was not his legal wife then. In the end his only legitimate (from law point of view) were Jane Seymour (who died after childbirth) and Catherine Parr (who survived him), the other four - Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Anne of Cleves and Catherine Howard’s marriages to Henry were all annulled- not divorced, annulled - meaning legally they were never married. That is why Mary and Elizabeth were regarded as illegitimate after the downfall of their mothers.
@oiooi64607 ай бұрын
She spoke of her husband's death which - especially for a queen- was high treason.
@victoriaandrzejewska72962 жыл бұрын
just stumbled across this and Joanne was one of my lecturers at university, she was great lol
@theesweetie23ca912 жыл бұрын
Did she do a fake accent at school too?
@segamai2 жыл бұрын
So I’m not going crazy! Her American accent sounds like a put-on, but I don’t know why she’d need to do that, especially as someone who gives lectures about *British* history
@ninaschust36942 жыл бұрын
I can imagine. She knows her facts and she is funny. Great qualities in a teacher.
@alyssarh2 жыл бұрын
Why are people accusing her of doing a fake accent? She's literally just talking. It doesn't sound like she's putting on an accent or pretending in how she speaks
@mormshaw2 жыл бұрын
@@theesweetie23ca91 she’s Canadian. I went to school with her.
@Chulpichochos2 жыл бұрын
Shes probably an awesome lecturer! Very relatable while also insightful and precise.
@gogreen77942 жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing out that the second Cate Blanchett as Elizabeth film completely ignored Robert Dudley, but then they had to do that since they falsely portrayed him as betraying Elizabeth in the first movie.
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
Yes - one of the many inaccuracies in those movies.
@steffikaysince19962 жыл бұрын
Thye clearly got him mixed up with his step-son, Robert Earl of Essex, who betrayed her and was excecuted. Plebs...
@jomc74252 жыл бұрын
And at the end of the first movie, it says that Elizabeth never saw Dudley in private again after the fictional betrayal.
@isthatrubble Жыл бұрын
such a weird choice to make in the first movie, I understand why they made some of the choices they made in that movie but the dudley thing was just unnecessary. not to mention lots of people who don't know that much about tudor history have heard of their relationship and might have known it wasn't true
@PandaMonium92827 Жыл бұрын
Yeah when she literally had 2 other boyfriends who actually DID betray her. And the last one who did it cost him his head. The writers had plenty to work with and just gave us garbage
@stormyk244 Жыл бұрын
I know The Tudors has a slew of accuracy issues, but the way they filmed the season 2 finale gets me every time. The music, the flashbacks, Natalie Dormer’s performance. It was so impactful.
@bretttait55062 жыл бұрын
I love this person's attitude to history and film SO much. Please can we have her back for other videos!?
@Krystal1092 жыл бұрын
I like her... she clearly is well educated on Tudor history, but still can enjoy films about British history without being like "NO THIS IS ALL WRONG!" Let's face it, there is a lot that is unknown for sure because it involves royalty, so records and people portraying them in a harsh light didn't last long... so you might as well enjoy the speculation for entertainment.
@midnightmarauder22392 жыл бұрын
I've been studying Tudor history for a while (certainly not nearly as well versed as she is) but, I don't mind the historical inaccuracies. In a way, it gives you more perspective
@aegonthedragon73032 жыл бұрын
My schtick, even as a history major, is as long as the facts are told correctly, I don’t entirely mind if the costumes are wrong or the actors don’t look like the surviving paintings we have. Getting the story wrong is what grinds my gears, because it leads to incorrect information being spread.
@shenanigans37102 жыл бұрын
@@aegonthedragon7303 Plus, the real stories are usually more interesting than the made up ones
@B-rian9372 жыл бұрын
Agreed. These are films, meant to be enjoyed as entertainment. If I wanted historical accuracy I would watch a documentary or attend a lecture.
@violettbellerose11732 жыл бұрын
So we don't have accurate records of royalty because they were too sensitive and needed to be portrayed in a good light, and we don't have accurate accounts about the poor because they couldn't tell their own stories and the people who could have weren't interested? It must be hard to be a historian
@nd4610 Жыл бұрын
Natalie Dormer was the best Anne Boleyn in my opinion. She was fantastic in that role. And I know Henry was supposed to be a red head but Reyes-Myers brought Henry to life! Great break down :)
@barbarapaige Жыл бұрын
I agree that Natalie Dormer was the best Anne Boleyn - I understand she has a degree in history - but I thought Rys-Myers was miscast. Not tall or imposing enough, and in the later episodes made no attempt to look like Henry.
@missyouwish8811 ай бұрын
@@barbarapaigethe later seasons they did. My guess is that they got a bigger budget for their wardrobe department (& a lot of flack for the inaccuracy)
@missyouwish8811 ай бұрын
Jonathan didn't have the physical representation, but he more than made up for it with his mad acting skills. You don't have to be a 6ft buff red-head to make people say "Oh sh*t, don't mess with this guy" & he played that to a T. - JRM = the best Henry VIII - Natalie Dormer = the best Anne Boleyn. - Cate Blanchett = the best Elizabeth - and Judi Dench is the best older Elizabeth (sorry Helen Mirran!). After all, how many people can win an Oscar for being on screen for 14 minutes? 😅
@Geo_Babe11 ай бұрын
I’m a Tudor historian and I couldn’t agree more!!!
@fyreflye10010 ай бұрын
Natalie was great, but in my book Genvieve Bujold was the best Anne Boleyn.
@sherryb63512 жыл бұрын
I'm dying at her reactions to The Other Boleyn Girl--spot on but also super genuine and funny.
@cweb2342 жыл бұрын
Lol when she went “oh, spiderman!”
@morley3642 жыл бұрын
I also liked "go back to your rat hole!" ....."Spain is a very nice place"
@pedrosalles92732 жыл бұрын
I ADORE this historian. She is one of those cases of "She was born to do this", like, look how excited she is about Elizabeth I !! Got me excited and I haven't watched any of those movies or had any interest in the Tudors.
@Sarmatae12 жыл бұрын
The Tudors got most of it right. The thing with the sister ground my gears, because nothing about it was correct. And the age/aesthetic of Henry was so far off as to be ridiculous. Despite that, I think Jonathan Rhys Meyer gave a fairly accurate portrayal of Henry and his steady decline. Best I've seen since Richard Burton. And I like to think Natalie Dormer nailed Anne Boleyn. Neither villainous gold-digger, nor hapless pawn; Miss Dormer struck the perfect note between the two and gave us a picture of Anne that was multi-dimensional and complex, as real women often are.
@philbecker46762 жыл бұрын
The Tudors was just terrified that any teenagers watching would get bored so it had to throw in some tits every 15 minutes.
@ladyethyme2 жыл бұрын
Dormer was lovely….everything else in that show was……not accurate.
@elizabethm71632 жыл бұрын
Fell in love with Natalie because of that show! And Henry Cavill. 😍
@SeanCSHConsulting Жыл бұрын
They got most of it wrong, sorry.
@Sarmatae1 Жыл бұрын
@@SeanCSHConsulting Nothing to apologise for. My doctorate would disagree with you. They took creative license with a lot because the Wars of the Roses was unbelievably complicated. Everything Henry VIII did was the result of the tumultuous time in which he was raised with zero expectation of being King. Showtime's "Tudors" doesn't go into all that, so they had to take a certain amount of cavalier approach to make it make sense to those who didn't know the history of the era. It was designed for entertainment. With the exception of a handful of minor inaccuracies and only two really glaring ones...they kept it on point with history. No, Henry didn't look like Jonathan Rhys Meyers, but it's entertainment. When you look at the history as compared to Hollywood films, I think the answer to who Henry was falls somewhere between Richard Burton, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, and yes...Charles Laughton in 1933's "The Private Life of Henry VIII". With regards to Queens Catalina de Aragón y Castilla and Anne Boleyn...I still think the most historically accurate portrayal of Catalina de Aragón was Irene Papas in "Anne of the Thousand Days". The look was wrong, but the portrayal was appropriate for the era. Anna Bolina for me will always be almost perfectly portrayed by Natalie Dormer. Whatever else can be said about The Tudors...Natalie did her homework. She refused scenes she thought would be out of character for Anne. She did her research in order to make a connection with Anne, and stood up for who she thought Anne was. The question will always linger...did she or didn't she, really? Until new evidence presents itself, we can only debate. Debate, however, requires education and in-depth knowledge. If you don't have that...don't try to correct people who do. It makes you look like a monkey.
@RoxanneM-o3t Жыл бұрын
There was a letter by, I believe, the Venetian ambassador, that describes him seeing Anne remonstrating with an angry-seeming Henry while holding Elizabeth not long before her downfall. He was looking at them from a window, so did not know what was said. So, this scene in the Tudors is more accurate than we might think.
@butIwantpewee2 жыл бұрын
I can't believe we didn't get a Blackadder II clip in here, I'm sure Queenie and Nursie are pretty much spot on for historical authenticity.
@maribeld842 жыл бұрын
Lol I'd have also liked a scene from the show Upstart Crow
@tommypickles2182 жыл бұрын
You can't convince me that Lord FlashHeart wasn't a historical figure
@PPikes2 жыл бұрын
Yes I loved that 🤣🤣😍
@BlainEnoch2 жыл бұрын
So it's settled. We must have a sequel.
@merchantfan5 ай бұрын
Apparently Elizabeth did give her subordinates insulting nicknames ala G.W. Bush
@OcarinaSapphr-2 жыл бұрын
I did read somewhere that Marie de Guise write to her daughter’s governess, to ensure that she ‘not lose her Scots’ tongue’ - which might imply she actually spoke Scots, but possibly with a French accent (which wouldn’t surprise me; a fair part of the Scottish Court were part-French, to a greater or lesser degree at this time)
@woudgy2 жыл бұрын
That's super interesting. It's very hard to imagine Scots with a French accent!
@SalznPfeffer6582 жыл бұрын
People code switch to accommodate the linguistic, cultural and social niceties in every language so it's actually more likely that she was raised with Scot and French as her mother tongues and distinguished each with their specific inflections etc. Considering that her position required her to be cognizant of her obligations, she would've worked on maintaining her "scottishness" i.e Scottish accent whilst speaking Scots.;-)
@melefth2 жыл бұрын
@@SalznPfeffer658 I thought Scots was Scottish-flavoured and inflected English; I think they said Gallic when they meant the gaelic tongue. Correct me if I'm wrong!
@nugsefaqmamscandphdstudent84462 жыл бұрын
Actually, most of the letters between Mary and Elizabeth were in French. She spoke French (both)- Marie de Guise was French she would have spoken to her child in French. Remember Mary's father died when she was a baby. She was bethroed and sent to France at a young age.
@danaglabeman69192 жыл бұрын
@@SalznPfeffer658 Mary did not speak Gaelic. Gaelic and Scots are different languages. Old Scots is a dialect of English so full of slang, Gaelic, Welsh, Scandinavian and French influence so as to be almost unintelligible to an English speaker of English. The Highland Scots were Irish who invaded amd settled in Pictish lands. Scottish Gaelic is what happened to Irish after being separated from Ireland for hundreds of years.
@ShallowApple222 жыл бұрын
Thank you another woman who is shedding the lies cast over Anne Boleyn for been nothing more than a woman in a pit of vipers. Anne’s ONLY fault was the failure to produce a living son and to divide factions in court. The fact that Thomas Cranmer was beyond Shocked at the accusations thrown against her and was told to accept them or else his final statement on her was of good character
@myheartiswriting2 жыл бұрын
I mean, for the most part the only fault any of Henry's wives commited was that none of them produced sons (emphasis on the plural, Henry technically got one son but one isn't enough) needed multiple).. And, assuming King Henry wasn't the villian in his own story, is that the only thing he did wrong was to fail in marrying a woman who could bore those sons. Eveything else was within his Divine Rights as King.
@RubyBlueUwU2 жыл бұрын
It is also said she was quite headstrong and spoke her mind a lot, which I absolutely do not see as a flaw but is important context for her situation. Their “faults” were more their inability to bend to Henry’s every whim and will at a moments notice, including bearing a living male heir, remember that Anne of Cleves not only kept her life but was rewarded greatly and lived fairly comfortably for the rest of her life because she bent immediately to his will and did not fight or argue with him at any point during the process. Henry was a minefield of a man, any foot out of line and he didn’t hesitate, and his wives suffered as a result of not being willing or able to give him his way at all times. Saying it was about sons is oversimplification, he wanted his way and felt he was more than justified to kill for it.
@Tina-ig3be2 жыл бұрын
@@myheartiswriting Well, you could also argue that HE didn't produce the sons he needed as Catherine had multiple children/miscarriages that were male. But the fact that NONE of his wives could give him the children he wanted (either they didn't get pregnant or the children didn't survive) point to a possible disease on his side. To me it's highly unlikely that five women (Ann of Cleves doesn't count) couldn't produce the heir(s) he wanted that it was his "fault".
@myheartiswriting2 жыл бұрын
@@Tina-ig3be Dude, chill. We are in agreement. I fully acknowledged that I was writing from King Henry's perspective with the note of "assuming Hnery wasn't the villian in his own story," But let me expand on that. It was absolutely Henry's fault that he didn't have any sons. Modern science says it is the sperm that determines the gender of the child. If a man doesn't have boys swimming in his pond, he's gonna get stuck with girl. Like you said, all those miscarriages, someone should have figured that out back in the 1500s. Plus with all of those sport injuries like his jousting horse crushing him as a young adult, the countless head injuries, the weight and the rotting leg who knows what those physcial injuries could have had on his genetic outcomes. Yet! In the 1500s doctors and scientists literally believed a womans parts were inverted male gentials. They believed it was the woman's anatomy that determined gender, so although it was Henry who had the longer list of bad genes, the woman got the blame. Plus, because he was King, he had another unfair element. The Divine Rights of Kings. Basically he was God's chosen one, specifically selected by god to be king and everything he did was ordained by god. That meant he couldn't possibly have weak sperm, because then God had weak sperm. Reproduction was not a choice, it was an obligation. That's not even including needing an heir so the crown doesn't fall to imbecile. As much as I agree that it was his "fault" for not being able to have sons, that's not how anyone saw it back then. In that context, it was the wives "fault". Not because it was, but because it being Henry's "fault" wasn't an option.
@TheMoonRabbit272 жыл бұрын
Totally agree. I mean, Anne Boleyn wasn’t stupid. She had many enemies at court, her only true ally was Henry himself. She wasn’t about to do anything as stupid as betray him.
@steveniswho92542 жыл бұрын
I loved Natalie Domer's performance as Anne Boleyn in the Tudors. Some of the things they did were ridiculous, the thing I hate the most was they switched his sisters names, and had her marry the King of Portugal instead of Louis XII. I would've been fine if they left out Margaret Tudor, but completely fumbling it? Ridiculous.
@AnSoBri2 жыл бұрын
C'est pour pouvoir montrer la romance entre le Duc de Suffolk et la soeur de Henry, c'est très télégénique, c'est cool à raconter, mais les dates ne correspondaient pas à la période décrite par le show. Comme cela se passe à l'époque de François 1er (et que Louis 12 était mort depuis longtemps), ils ont créé cette "astuce". Je le comprends, ça aurait été dommage de rater cette histoire "d'amour" et de désobéissance envers le roi (de toutes façons "Les Tudors" contiennent beaucoup d'erreurs historiques).
@leeannasloan22922 жыл бұрын
Or her ridiculous killing of the king...Mary got a long as best she could eith her husband and by all accounts she enjoyed being the queen of France and all the attention she got from that and her looks..but Gabrielle Anwar is a good actress and could have pulled off both enjoying her station as queen and showing respect to her king husband while still pinning for the duke of Suffolk at the same time.
@steveniswho92542 жыл бұрын
@@leeannasloan2292 I know right, King Louis XII was old but very respectable, its unfathomable to think she would try to do anything like that.
@leeannasloan22922 жыл бұрын
@@steveniswho9254 I know right? Like she's going to really kill the Kong with a pillow and not one of his physicians question it..or be in the next room spying...it just makes no sense and so that whole plot annoyed me...and the show warped things so much that they didn't want to include Louis because of the timeline they had going with France in general..so they made up she married the king of Portugal..why do all that? I don't mind when shoes take liberties with some things, I get that, but to make up this whole plot for it to be so far fetched, it almost seems like an insult to the audience..Michael Hurst is no dummy either, he knows his history.
@steveniswho92542 жыл бұрын
@@leeannasloan2292 I know right!!! It is an insult to the audience, they basically called us all stupid. The only think I really liked about the Tudor's was Natalie Dormer's performance, I think she was one of the best Anne Boleyn performances. I like Portman but Dormer was so much better. She should've won an Award.
@patmc29162 жыл бұрын
I LOVE the enthusiasm and freshness of Dr. Joanne Paul to explain to us, the context of the scenes of these movies is so fluid, her explanations are a delight!
@mariemakesstuff2 жыл бұрын
I love that Dr. Paul's reaction to watching Cate Blanchett go on a tirade about Spain is the same exact reaction I have watching it.
@Bollywoodlover1002 жыл бұрын
love when the other boleyn girls gets called out for the garbage it is! philippa gregory is going to hell for doing so many iconic tudor women dirty! also kudos to historian for giving natalie props she deserves all the love letters she in my opinion managed to give us the most multi faceted and human version of anne even though she was working with a pretty weak writing
@cherrysubmarine2 жыл бұрын
oh shit i thought philippa gregory's books were fairly historically accurate! do you have any better suggestions? i'd like to read more about tudor history in a non-textbook kinda way
@Bollywoodlover1002 жыл бұрын
@@cherrysubmarine not at all! she is notorious for not giving a fuck about accuracy or facts. not to mention she is a raging misogynist. I would love to help but alas i don’t like historical fiction and most of the books i read are kind of textbooky but if u like anne boleyn theres a really good book called the creation of anne boleyn that talks about her life, legacy, misconceptions, and portrayals in the media.
@OverDramaticPumpkins2 жыл бұрын
@@cherrysubmarine I really enjoy Alison Weir's novels. She's covered almost every wife of Henry VIII, with Katherine Parr's book coming soon. There are still inaccuracies (that I could spot), but overall, good reads!
@KateeAngel2 жыл бұрын
@@cherrysubmarine read real history
@yuhyuhariana80642 жыл бұрын
The book was good, the movie was…. uhm
@BaronessErsatz2 жыл бұрын
When pressed to name her heir, Elizabeth reminded her interlocutor of the state of disorder that darkened England at the time of her half-sister Mary's final days, adding that she herself refused to be blinded by a winding-sheet covering her eyes. Argue all you may about her personal life, she was a shrewd leader.
@Heresjonnyagain2 жыл бұрын
Wolf Hall reached a standard of convincing portrayal I’d always wanted from medieval/renaissance period drama and never had
@joshberkin55672 жыл бұрын
Game of thrones
@Heresjonnyagain2 жыл бұрын
@@joshberkin5567 what about it?
@joshberkin55672 жыл бұрын
@@Heresjonnyagain convincing portrayal of medieval period
@Heresjonnyagain2 жыл бұрын
@@joshberkin5567 I’m sorry to greatly disagree. Game of Thrones was a fantasy series that I would say frankly did more to affirm popular misconceptions about the medieval period than portraying it. Everything is dark and grimy. Clothing, coiffure, and props are fantastical in appearance. The language and manners are something out of a modern Renaissance affaire. I cannot think of anything particularly medieval about it aside from some loose plot inspiration from 15th century events.
@joshberkin55672 жыл бұрын
@@Heresjonnyagain oh. well i liked the show
@Raven55632 жыл бұрын
Loved Mark Rylance as Thomas Cromwell in Wolf Hall! Fabulous performances all around. The whole show felt very realistic and immersive; I think a lot of that was the quality of the natural lighting, particularly in outdoor scenes. People forget just how dark it can be in something like extremely rural surroundings.
@utubefreshie2 жыл бұрын
YES! Mark Rylance! I know this video is more about the accuracy of the portrayal of Elizabeth I and Anne Boleyn but Mark Rylance in Wolf Hall was fantastic! I loved his very nuanced and subtle portrayal of Cromwell who's always been seen as an evil scheming master manipulator. Mark Rylance's performance gave him a more sympathetic human side. I can only imagine the impossible task of the real person. He not only had to gain power but in order to keep it, had to survive the court of a madan which he eventually he didn't.
@ShoujoJo-us3py6 ай бұрын
I’m a linguist and hearing her talk is fascinating to me! She sounds like she has an American accent but also has a bit of either British or Irish intonation and slight pronunciation, so cool!
@Summysun624 Жыл бұрын
I love that this historian has complete knowledge of the entire films and not just the parts clipped, and of the actors and their representations. Also very refreshing to see someone challenging the representation of historical women such as Anne Boleyn and Elizabeth I in TV and film!
@jamesbutler39602 жыл бұрын
Let’s be clear at 9:18, Elizabeth would have never allowed herself to be called inferior by another monarch, or anyone else for that matter with out using her razor sharp tongue to give that person a verbal royal and savage beat down lithe likes of which they had never seen or experienced before.
@jilldesruisseau Жыл бұрын
Speaking of historical inaccuracies... I love how every historian despises the Other Boylen Girl. This was a lot of fun :)
@QueSara11112 ай бұрын
I despised it too... I stopped it about half way through from memory. I never looked into it, but I am so glad this is a shared opinion. I'm also an Historian, but in Australian history. So, while I am woefully unqualified in Tudor history, the Historian in me cringes every time that movie is mentioned. Television series and movies do have to take some liberties to hold the audience's attention, but you can do that without completely compromising the actual story. It scares me how many people see movies like this and think it is an accurate representation.
@kamoshi.9331 Жыл бұрын
A pet peeve of mine, too, is making Mary, Queen of Scots have a Scottish accent. She was raised in France and yet, every movie or show seems to make her sound Scottish.
@gogreen77946 ай бұрын
Vanessa Redgrave used her natural speaking voice. No Scottish or French accent. If you haven't seen it, go find the 1971 movie, "Mary, Queen of Scots." Glenda Jackson is once again portraying Elizabeth I.
@misssmith72259 ай бұрын
Oh my! Thank you for having Dr Joanne. She is new to me and I am so happy with her high level of knowledge of the subject. She spares nothing, and it is still in the video! This is so wonderful to watch.
@maudquilici73092 жыл бұрын
this woman is enjoying herself so much talking about all this and it shows, it's really nice to watch and definitely makes the topic of the video even more interesting
@jackieelizabeth86142 жыл бұрын
I think the tudors holds up well generally. Of course it's not accurate most of the time but it's great at telling the whole story and the politic side of henry's rule.
@juliall2552 жыл бұрын
Oh please its just Sex and STDs galore while demonising most of his wives by painting them as either useless, insipid or just straight up sluts
@someonerandom85522 жыл бұрын
I quite like it. Though I made the mistake of watching it with my older cousin who just so happens to be a history teacher. Very educational experience let’s just say lmao
@Bollywoodlover1002 жыл бұрын
as a history major i agree i could tell they really did their research because they would often include things I have seen in primary and secondary sources and small details many wouldn’t know about. unfortunately when they didn’t stick to the sources like making henry sisters into one it was a disaster!
@dreamydonno Жыл бұрын
I know the historians hate The Other Boleyn Girl but it was the first movie that even got me into the historical movies and dramas and stuff. 😅It also gave me a love of anything to do with Anne Boleyn and the Tudor/York time. 🖤
@julietalozano-ramsay85112 жыл бұрын
I know it's not a film, but I'd love to see her take on the Six musical! Obviously very imagined but I wonder how accurately they nailed the spirits of the historical figures. Also she's funny I enjoyed this video, maybe just my Canadian sense of humour.
@meginmd2 жыл бұрын
Yeah Six is terrible when it comes to historical accuracy.
@LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac2 жыл бұрын
I love Six… when I first heard it I want to say it was the video of their performance at the Olivier awards, so I saw the costumes and choreography etc. I went from “This is the cringiest thing I have ever seen in my life!!” to adding the whole soundtrack to my YT library in about 10 seconds. 😆 But I can’t help thinking what a missed opportunity when Jane Seymour says “my son had to grow up without his mother” and Anne Boleyn says something about her body without her head. I know it’s comedy…. But damn, her daughter HAD TO GROW UP WITHOUT HER MOTHER!
@monkeytennis8861 Жыл бұрын
"Canadian sense of humour" Huh??
@albuszx2 жыл бұрын
Dr Joanne Paul is such a delight to watch, she's fun, informative and makes amazing commentary! I also love that this video is long and covered many portrayals, definitely worth saving to rewatch
@Mungoteazer115812 жыл бұрын
I love that she acknowledges that sometimes scenes that surely did not have happened are important for the plot of a movie. Because only letters are kinda boring. 😁 And I really liked the Tudors back than so I love that they get more points than The other Boleyn girl 😄
@Kermitthebadger2 жыл бұрын
I get shivers every time I watch that Cate Blanchett scene, incredible
@jnnyschndr2 жыл бұрын
that first execution scene lives in my head rent free. I first saw it as a child and was so horrified
@pardonmfrench7 ай бұрын
What a brillant way to promote a book. Props to the author and Penguin UK. Enjoyed every single second of it. 🥳
@itsamonkieplanet93672 жыл бұрын
I could watch this historian review anything . She’s very charismatic and genuine . Love her I imagine she would be a great teacher.
@891Henry Жыл бұрын
Nothing beats Keith Michell as Henry VIII or Glenda Jackson as Elizabeth I. Those were the roles of a lifetime for each. A lot of great actors in those series.
@susanmarie22312 жыл бұрын
Man For All Seasons (1966.) The best Tudor era film ever.
@gchecosse2 жыл бұрын
Would like to have seen more on Wolf Hall, particularly on the accuracy of Cromwell and More themselves. I particularly enjoyed the Elizabeth Barton storyline.
@mortyjames58972 жыл бұрын
One of the best TV series ever produced imo. I heard they're considering making a sequal now that the new book is out, I hope they do.
@merrymachiavelli20412 жыл бұрын
I think she was a bit harsh on Wolf Hall, given she didn't actually point out any inaccuracies other than Clare Foy being too pale (which I think she might have over-egged, Anne was entirely of English descent going back at least 3 generations, and had a pale daughter, so I find it hard to believe she was _that_ much darker than Clare Foy, unless she had bizarre-for-the-period habit of sun-tanning).
@danaglabeman69192 жыл бұрын
@@merrymachiavelli2041 I totally agree with you that harping on skin tone when Wolf Hall is so amazing is very petty. But Anne was not of pure English descent three generations back. Her great grandfather was the Earl of Ormonde, introducing an Irish component. Many people of Celtic and Briton blood can be surprisingly dark, and Anne was referred to as of olive complexion even by her sympathizers. Skin tone genes are weird. In my own family, the only more olive skinned people we know of are a great grandmother of my fathers and a great-great grandfather of my mom's, but my sister gets asked often if she's Hispanic or Italian; she just came out darker. Totally possible Anne got a darker gene that got expressed in her that got pushed out of the way by Henry's pale genes in Elizabeth.
@merrymachiavelli20412 жыл бұрын
@@danaglabeman6919 Hmm, I grant you the Earl of Ormond wasn't English per se, although one great-grandfather is only 12.5% of a person's DNA. Also, Thomas Butler is perhaps better described as 'Hiberno-Norman' rather than Irish in the modern sense of the term, given that the Butlers of Ireland started off as Norman in the 12th century and married other Hiberno-Norman or British nobility almost exclusively thereafter. Although, the Normans were debatably French, so that doesn't support my original point about skin tone! Also, I'm always a bit sceptical of suggestion that there are major genetic differences between Irish/Scottish/English people - for all the Anglo-Saxon migrations changed culture and language, Anglo-Saxons only contributed around 30% of the English genome, and Northwest Europeans were relatively similar in the period to begin with.
@catherinetaylor2333 Жыл бұрын
I liked a video by an art expert, commenting on Holstein's portraits of Cromwell and More - made me realise that he regarded More as a good man - Cromwell - not. Of course, both had bad faults, and good sides, but Cromwell plotted the death of a Queen, and profited hugely from the destructions of the monasteries, while More died rather than betray his faith
@bartwilliams38912 жыл бұрын
Shakespeare in Love was filmed in a purpose built model of the Rose theatre, and is currently in storage, having been gifted to Judi Dench. It is still looking for a home. The Church used was St. Bartholomew's.
@mlady65649 ай бұрын
I love The Tudors, not for the historical accuracy, but the acting, the music, and the drama.
@tlpricescope77722 жыл бұрын
Wish you would review “Elizabeth R” with Glenda Jackson, the greatest person to ever portray her, and the most historically accurate of any Tudor production.
@hk194782 жыл бұрын
YES! My favourite portrayal of Elizabeth I.
@maldenom2 жыл бұрын
Agree 100%!
@josephinpdx Жыл бұрын
YES!!!
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
It is interesting that there is this idea Elizabeth was pockmarked after her bout with smallpox, but no one mentions Mary QOS’s bout with smallpox. Mary also had smallpox as a child. From what I have read from biographies of both women, neither was left with significant scarring.
@danaglabeman69192 жыл бұрын
You're right, but it's difficult to tell so many years later if an omission of unflattering facts about one's ruler is because they just weren't true or because it was smart politics not to mention it. Also, it doesn't take as long for lead to destroy the skin as we think. If Elizabeth was left with temporary marks that would have healed in time, and covered them up with lead makeup while they were healing, it could have been enough time for the lead to pit and blister her skin.
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@danaglabeman6919 Except she did not use lead based makeup when she caught smallpox. She may have used lead based makeup when she was older, but the evidence suggests no lead in her makeup when she was in her 20s. Also no one depicts MQOS with lead based makeup- despite it being the fashion for all women at the time. Also a lot of information we have about Elizabeth and her looks come from ambassadors to her court, not her courtiers. I can assure you had she been concealing scars the ambassadors would have mentioned it. They paid her maids to find out about her menstrual cycles so they could write back to their masters about her child bearing capacity. So I am sure they would have found out about scars etc when she was on the marriage market.
@nelled62402 жыл бұрын
It was Henry's decision not to have a child with Anne outside of marriage because he was so desperate to have a son to prove that he was the rightful king. Nobody manipulated Henry. He was in charge. He always got his own way.
@tacitus77972 жыл бұрын
Some comments - I suspect Mary Queen of Scotts probably would not have had a pronounced Scottish accent (she lived in France from the age of 4 until she returned to Scotland as an adult.) Also, she was ultimately executed for conspiring to kill Elizabeth.
@KPC-1232 жыл бұрын
Whereas it is true that she did agree with a plot to kill 'Lizzy', isn't it also true that the plot was a setup/trap by Walsingham?
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@KPC-123 The plot was monitored by Walsingham, but I am not sure he set it up. It was more he a double agent planted, and he waited for a conspiracy.
@lamoinette232 жыл бұрын
Yes, didn't they wish to remove any doubt to legitimacy on the throne? Mary could not be allowed to live or threaten Elizabeth's reign.
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@lamoinette23 I think it was far more complex than that. Elizabeth kept Mary alive but under lock and key for nearly 19 years. She would have killed Mary far sooner if it was just about removing a threat to Elizabeth’s throne.
@danaglabeman69192 жыл бұрын
Mary spoke French and Scots as a child. She didn't learn English until later, from Scottish people. Randolph, the English ambassador to the Scottish court, said in his dispatches that she spoke bad English with a Scottish accent. Her English in the film is not accented wrongly, but it is far too fluent.
@lizc63932 жыл бұрын
Mary Queen of Scots was a shockingly bad movie from a historical perspective... Saoirse Ronan is a revelation though, as an actor.
@suswik36822 жыл бұрын
I got through 10 minutes...Katherine Hepburn version is better...lol
@cathryncampbell85552 жыл бұрын
@@suswik3682 And the Katherine Hepburn version is *ghastly*. But at least the costume designer for Hepburn didn't dress her in denim....
@Shan_Dalamani2 жыл бұрын
@@cathryncampbell8555 The absolute worst depiction of Tudor costuming is in the TV series "Reign."
@cathryncampbell85552 жыл бұрын
@@Shan_Dalamani I absolutely agree with you! But then, *Everything* about "Reign" was insanely off-kilter. The irony is that Mary Queen of Scots had a wildly exotic & strange real backstory. Had that reality been told, her story would make a fascinating film. It has yet to be done.
@Shan_Dalamani2 жыл бұрын
@@cathryncampbell8555 I spent 12 years in the Society for Creative Anachronism, learning about medieval/Renaissance history, famous people, daily life, and how much of most period drama is either fudged or outright just made-up crap. About the only parts of Reign that were accurate are that Mary, Elizabeth, Louis, and Catherine d' Medici were real people. The rest of the series is utter bullshit, from the characters to the costumes to how, in the dancing scenes, absolutely _nobody_ is dancing in time to the music, which wasn't accurate either. The only reason I watched as much as I did is because of Megan Follows, who played Queen Catherine. In my view, she's one of the best actresses Canada has ever produced (she's best known for the Anne of Green Gables movies that co-starred Colleen Dewhurst as Marilla).
@melissarose74882 жыл бұрын
I would love to watch this professor's lectures voluntarily, for fun, in my free time. Such interesting commentary, analysis, and funny!! wish I went to University of Sussex now, but international school would be $$ :/
@Paulasland4 ай бұрын
The the Tudors episode where Anne Boleyn dies I cried A LOT, Natalie was great showing the pain of abandoned and used by men that wanted power, I felt so sad.
@scottweber83482 жыл бұрын
Wolf Hall is a masterpiece, criminally underrated
@monkeytennis88617 ай бұрын
Not remotely underrated. Ridiculous comment
@jomc74252 жыл бұрын
In regards to delays of Anne Boleyn's execution: She was convicted on May 15 and executed on May 19. The swordsman may have been delayed crossing the Channel. However, it would have taken longer than 4 days for the message to be sent from London to Calais asking the swordsman to come to England and for him to return so the message was sent to him before Anne was convicted. Not surprising - her arrest warrant was her death sentence.
@katiebecker7683 Жыл бұрын
As far as Elizabeth and her grieving or jealous over motherhood, I feel that is very plausible as a possibility. Her not wanting to be married because she doesn't want to be controlled or pushed out as well as wanting children and grieving lack of motherhood can both be true at the same time. She sacrificed motherhood for the crown. There could very much be sense of lack and longing.
@syncmonism6 ай бұрын
The acting and overall production quality of Wolf Hall is incredible
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
There is a source of a man telling Elizabeth much later that he remembered a scene where Anne is standing at a window with Elizabeth. She tries to get Henry’s attention by holding Elizabeth and having her wave to her father. Henry ignores them. I think the scene from the Tudors is referring to that.
@kenna1632 жыл бұрын
Yes but it was disproven
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@kenna163 What was disproven- that a older man told Elizabeth this? Also in history things can’t be proved or disproved. Normally we would say stories are probably not true if the first time it emerges is well after all contemporaneous sources have died.
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@kenna163 I have checked the source for the story. It is indeed from a contemporary source. The Calendar of State Papers from 1558 contain a letter from a Protestant refugee to Elizabeth, sent to her on her accession. He told her the story of Anne carrying Elizabeth in her arms. She was in a courtyard at Greenwich Palace, holding Elizabeth as a little baby and entreating Henry. Henry was standing in an open window looking down. Although Henry concealed it, the writer thought from his body language Henry was angry. Elizabeth Jenkins: Elizabeth the Great Panther Books London 1958 p11 So I got the details of who was in the courtyard and who was in the window around the wrong way. Of course the refugee may not have been telling the truth and just trying to curry favour. But in absence of further evidence the story appears to be based on fact.
@danaglabeman69192 жыл бұрын
@@brontewcat If I remember what I've read correctly, I think they say it's disproven because court expense records show Elizabeth was at a totally different residence miles away from Henry and Anne when the gentleman who told this to Elizabeth said it happened. But he would have been very old, and memory will confuse things that happened a long time ago. Elizabeth was often at court when she was little before Anne's death (Henry loved to show her off) and Anne and Henry did quarrel quite a bit even when they were "happy". He could absolutely have witnessed such a scene, and as an elderly man many decades later, not perfectly remembered the date or circumstances.
@brontewcat2 жыл бұрын
@@danaglabeman6919 That is the most likely explanation. People often mix up the dates and specifics of incidents, and they do not need to be elderly to do so.
@bernig2 жыл бұрын
This like my favorite video right now. Love this lady. Let’s make this a series ♥️
@nicklepickle6662 жыл бұрын
Loved this, very entertaining and informative. I always enjoy seeing ‘The Other Boleyn Girl’ being roasted, and so eloquently too!
@c292r89dvbh2 жыл бұрын
She seems pretty generous with her ratings...there's no way I would've given Mary Queen of Scots a 5.5, and that movie was very aware it was not being historical
@floraposteschild41842 жыл бұрын
Too bad many of the viewers don't know it's not historical.
@denafisher9817 ай бұрын
I LOVE that every reviewer loathes The Other Boleyn Girl as much as I do.
@kellyfarrar66392 жыл бұрын
I love the way she cheers on the strong Tudor women. It makes my heart smile. I just love this
@lorie76yt Жыл бұрын
King Henry is visually such an iconic character. They made a really weird choice with the guy who plays him in the Tudors. It’s one of those choices, because Henry is so well known, that just throws me right out of the story from the jump.
@Pinky-kc8go2 ай бұрын
I LOVE this lady! Her attitude is great. She's so sweet and well-spoken
@spencerluster49082 жыл бұрын
Watching how absolutely fed up with The Other Boleyn Girl she is before it even begins is hilarious!
@dvictoriadudley2 жыл бұрын
My husband's last name is Dudley and we have paperwork saying he is a descendant of Robert Dudley. We found them after his father passed. Never looked into if the papers are correct or not.
@elizabethmcleod2462 жыл бұрын
How very cool is that!? I’d check to see if they are legitimate.
@marianap.h3961 Жыл бұрын
I love her attitude to the horror that is The Other Boleyn
@zyxw20005 ай бұрын
Judi Dench won an Oscar for that one short scene in "Shakespeare in Love." She should win one for each of her films.
@kenna1632 жыл бұрын
Literally agreed with all of the points she made and we have the same haircut and hair colour. Wild!
@emilyrosesparkes81232 жыл бұрын
Dr Joanne Paul is absolutely splendid In this video ! her gorgeous personality shines through
@karawigley6231 Жыл бұрын
I wish I could travel back in time & see what these historical figures really looked like.
@Kefka.10 ай бұрын
For Wolf Hall, the period authenticity is incredible. Frockflicks raved about this film as one of the best representations of the time period.
@SCX2k2 жыл бұрын
The Wolf Hall is one of the best shows I have ever seen. Well made all around. Felt authentic and quite accurate. Kinda sad that the historian seems to not really know the show.
@emmaknitty8748Ай бұрын
How do you know she doesn't know the show?
@mythal0620 Жыл бұрын
The period of the Wars of the Roses has fascinated me since I read the first volume of Rebecca Gablé s Waringham epic. But Joanne Paul made this journey here a special pleasure - many thanks for the competent and entertaining commentary on the "Tudor films"!
@Sarmatae12 жыл бұрын
It's not hard to explain at all. At that point, Cromwell was a in a position where it was her or him. Only 3 years after the Catherine of Aragon debacle, he knew very well that Henry couldn't divorce a second time, head of the Church or not. The charges he brought against Anne had to be so shocking, so repulsive, that the King could not do anything BUT have her executed or risk looking as though he'd lost control of his Queen, or his mind. Cromwell backed it all up with the extraneous charge of witchcraft to cover the prosecution in case Henry DID try to change his mind. If he kept Anne, everyone would believe he had been bewitched. I don't necessarily think of Thomas Cromwell as a bad guy to this day, and thought Mark Rylance did the best job portraying him in Wolf Hall. But he was not a stupid man, and he recognised then what we recognise now. Either he was going to have her head, or she was going to have his. Anne was cocky and Cromwell got the jump on her. And it was brilliant. Tragic, but brilliant.
@BlainEnoch2 жыл бұрын
God, that was fun. EDIT: Alright, Penguin. Listen up. This video was so good that I went on to watch almost every other movies review that you made. Many of them were rubbish. The experts didn't really understand what they were supposed to do. They either talked about the artistic quality of the film instead of its accuracy, showed two seconds and then started an endless monologue about their general feelings towards the film as a whole, or elaborated on elements which they claimed were accurate (mostly details that are commonly well-known anyway) but said nothing about the mistakes other than stating "that's wrong". Next time you do one of these videos, please show this one to the expert beforehand and tell them to do exactly what she's doing. 10 out of 10! (Other excellent experts: Judge and Palaeontologist. Good job.)
@Maazzzo2 жыл бұрын
Please bring Dr Paul back, she's lovely and interesting.
@lucykendall62125 ай бұрын
I would watch this historian's show. She's fantastic. Informative, concise and entertaining
@islaubiles6602 жыл бұрын
god i love this historian PLEASE bring her back
@SH-sl7lc5 ай бұрын
This is fabulous! What a great historian and presenter.
@Bantam19802 жыл бұрын
What about "Elizabeth I" with Helen Mirren as Elizabeth, Jeremy Irons as Leicester, and Toby Jones as Cecil? Best depiction of the era I've seen, by a long shot. Love her rendering of Elizabeth's Tilbury speech!
@Miss_Camel2 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this, especially the anecdote about the title of Lord of Essex and the connection to “Shakespeare in love”, that’s so cute and funny! I had no idea
@clayschwartzwalter3822 жыл бұрын
Very interesting subject and a great expert! Please bring her back!
@wanderinglizzy2 жыл бұрын
"I could write a love letter to Natalie Dormer" same dude.
@hgodvilla002 жыл бұрын
Why did you guys ignore Keith Mitchell who is best known for his television and film portrayals of King Henry VIII? He played that role perfectly and is still the archetypal actor to portray Henry Tudor at multiple stages throughout his life. Also, where is the film 'A Man For All Seasons' from 1966? Where is the film 'Henry VIII and his Six Wives' from 1972? You can go further and include the older television programme from the early 1970's, as well as those two films.
@qbasicmichael Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested in seeing your thoughts on "the virgin queen" (2005), "a man for all seasons" (1966), "lady jane" (1986), and perhaps "the white queen" (2013) and its sequels. "The virgin queen" (2005) in particular does feature robert dudley.
@maureengriffin85362 жыл бұрын
This was great. I absolutely would subcribe to a series of videos where you watched the entire movie with asides. I live in the US, but bought your book from book depository because I didn't want to wait for it.
@ellieplantagenet912127 күн бұрын
"History Science Theater 3000"!
@thevictoryoverhimself72982 жыл бұрын
"The never said anything like that but i dont care" Always the mark of a good historian. Thats why we got you in on this video.
@Sishel2 жыл бұрын
I deeply share her enthusiasm for Cate Blanchett, my Queen!
@blindbookworm801911 ай бұрын
I have this woman’s book on audible. I’m going to read it soon. Other stuff just got in the way, but I do love reading, and reviewing books on my channel about this time. That’s how I felt in love with history.
@deborahmazza81232 жыл бұрын
I just stumbled across this video. This was awesome! Loved your presentation! Now I will have to read your book, and look for other videos you have made.
@cindyphillips255111 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to have found you! This was VERY interesting and I loved the humor you brought to your scene break down. Cheers!
@slicksalmon69482 жыл бұрын
She obviously didn't watch all of Wolf Hall. If she had, she would have seen all of her comments addressed, including the fate of the dog. Wolf Hall is unique in that it takes facts we know and weaves a different narrative thru those facts. It also directly addresses the fact that what we think we know about that period comes from Thomas More, whose personal reflections on his fate have been perpetuated by the Church as truth. Certain details presented in the show may been altered to accommodate a visual medium, but Wolf Hall is as factual a recounting of that story as has ever been told.
@aleksstosich Жыл бұрын
3:36 "Spiderman is in this" is fantastic. (Now I have to rewatch Wolf Hall!)