Charles: In His Own Words (2023)

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Charles: In His Own Words (2023)

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MAN: A few moments ago,

Buckingham Palace

announced the death of

Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

The Queen d*ed

peacefully at Balmoral.

CHARLES: My life will,

of course, change as I take up

my new responsibilities.

I, Charles, do become

your liege man of life and limb.

REPORTER: The British

press often casts him

as weak and a bit weird.

CHARLES: Now where

have you all come from?

CREW MEMBER: Were

the Australian crew.

CHARLES: Bloody hell!

INTERVIEWER: Are there many

contenders at the moment...

CHARLES: Contenders for what?

INTERVIEWER: For your

hand in marriage.

CHARLES: No, no.

(clapperboard claps).

(crowd cheering)

WILLIAM: Lord Mountbatten

helped him by providing a

secure weekend house

for courting purposes.

CHARLES: I suppose I

lead a fairly sheltered life.

I was chucked into a pond,

and I either sank or I swam.

Were not

reacting quickly enough.

INGRID: We have an

unwritten constitution;

he cant meddle in politics;

he has to be above politics.

INTERVIEWER: Some people

have accused you of meddling.

CHARLES: Really?

You don't say.

It's not so bad for me,

it's much worse for the girl

concerned because she's

not used to dealing

with the press, at all.

Please, no, it's too...

(Harry laughs).

CHARLES: I shall endeavor

to serve you as I have

throughout my life.



CHARLES: Oh, God,

I hate this pen.

CAMILLA: Oh, look

its going everywhere.

CHARLES: I cant

bear this bloody thing!

What they do,

every stinking time.



MAN (over film): So,

to the picture for which

the world has been waiting:

the first official film

record of the infant prince,

Charles of Edinburgh.

And now were privileged

to show you the very latest

picture of young

Prince Charming on

his second birthday.

MICHAEL: Theyre not the same

as any other family, because

theyre one of that

very small group of families

that whatever they do is news

and is subject to

public scrutiny.

INTERVIEWER: When did you

first realize as a little boy

that you were heir to

the throne and not just

an ordinary chap?

CHARLES: Um, I didnt

suddenly wake up in my pram

one day and say,

Yippee! you know.

I think it just dawns on you,

you know, slowly,

that you get the idea

that you have a certain

duty and responsibility.

I went to a hotel

to have a meal.

And while we were

waiting for the meal,

a lot of people were

looking in the windows

from other windows.

And so, I thought,

I can't bear this anymore

and went off somewhere else.

And the only other

place was the bar.

Having never been

into a bar before,

first thing I thought of doing

was having a drink, of course,

seemed the most sensible thing.

And being terrified,

not knowing what to do,

I said the first drink

that came into my head,

which happened to

be cherry brandy.

And hardly had I taken a sip

when the whole world exploded

around my ears.



(overlapping chatter)

MAN: Let the pictures

be taken, sergeant.

Youve got to let

the pictures be done.

They cant sh**t through you.

INTERVIEWER: What about

the Australian press?

Were they kind to you?

Did they leave you alone?

CHARLES: We treated them in

such a way that, you know,

one helped, one gave them the

facility to take photographs.

And if one treated them

normally and respectfully,

they went away very

happily, saying,

Thank you very much.

Which I think is

easier than, you know,

getting angry with

them to begin with.

(camera shutters click)

(camera shutters click)

CHARLES: Now where

have you all come from?

CREW MEMBER: Were

the Australian crew.

CHARLES: Australia?

What next?

Bloody hell!

I'm not very good at

being a performing monkey.

I think that I am quite

a sort of private person.

I'm not prepared to

just perform whenever they

want me to perform.

REPORTER: Will he pose for you?

PHOTOGRAPHER:

Well, he says he wont,

but I know that he does.

CHARLES: If I appear annoyed

and fed up, its because I am.

REPORTER: We understand.

In fact, the story's

on a respite and

we, we dont want

to appear to be harassing you.

(groans).

CHARLES: Im sorry, its just,

it really does, you know,

theres a limit, I find,

to how long ones

patience can last.

I always think there's

a camera now, always.

Wherever you are, there's

somebody hiding behind

something somewhere.

And with these immense

cameras now with these

huge lenses and magnification,

and you can sit a

mile away and photograph

through windows

and everything else.

And they do.



It's clearly much

easier to invent all this and

say that it's all come from

some close friend or some member

of the staff or some,

you know, and it's all rubbish.

It's simply not true.

I've learnt over the years,

you know, to try

and ignore it by,

by just not reading most of it.

Otherwise, you go bananas.



(crowd cheering)

(WOMAN over PA):

Ladies and gentlemen,

his Royal Highness,

the Prince of Wales.

(g*nsh*t).

ANCHORWOMAN:

Prime Minister Keating has

expressed his

disgust over an att*ck on

Prince Charles tonight.

REPORTER: A man ran out,

f*ring whats believed to be

a starter p*stol.

(g*nsh*t)

The prince held his ground.

The gunman was dragged away,

the prince resumed his

seat and the concert continued.

WOMAN: Great pleasure in

welcoming his Royal Highness

the Price of Whales.

ROBIN: The reports

coming back from London are that

this has provided

you with a new image,

a very approving sort of image.

I would...

CHARLES: Why do you

listen to all this rubbish

that these people say?

It's not done for my image,

for goodness sake!

What I don't understand is

you're all gotta have some

angle on everything all the

time instead of just treating

something as a part of life.

I mean, if you actually

do things in public,

occasionally these

things happen.

But I do see that if you

are trying to produce a

rolling 24 hour news program

every damn day of the week,

that you've gotta try and

think of something to make

the news more exciting!

MICHAEL: You think what

you would feel like if you

lived under the sort of

glare that they live under.

It does create an awful strain.





TIM: Prince Philip's upbringing

was in a sense, difficult.

His mother suffered a nervous

breakdown when he was in his

early teens and his father

went off to Monte Carlo and

he never saw him again.

So, he didn't have any

serious role models as far as

parenting was concerned.

You know, this later came

to be a bit of a handicap when

it came to bringing up

Prince Charles.

SUSANNA: Gordonstoun,

ghastly place.

It was all about being

healthy and sportive and,

and it was awful.

JOHNNY: I actually saw

one particular incident where

he was att*cked

playing rugby in the scrum.

And scrums are

rough places anyway,

but I could see that

they were pulling his ears,

and he got punched.

But the interesting thing is,

and it left a strong impression

on me even at the time,

was that he was very stoic.

He never complained.

He didn't whinge, he didn't cry.

He didn't do anything that

other people might have done

in the circumstances.

He just got on with it.



CHARLES: I think probably

my time in Australia,

funny enough, when I went for

six months to school there,

had a profound effect

on me because, I was,

I mean it may

sound silly to you,

but I was chucked into a pond,

and I either sank or I swam.

I was determined I

wasn't gonna sink.



CHARLES: It was a

very rigorous life.

It was tougher than Gordonstoun.

You had to go on expeditions

every weekend into the bush and

you had two cross

countries a week.

The first ones I

had when I got there

were absolutely horrifying.

I mean, it was 90 degrees in

the shade and flies everywhere.

Dust.

And you sort of ran around

bunches of kangaroos and things.

I remember when I was at

Timbertop having to go and

switch the lights out

in the dormitories and

all I got were cries

of Pommy bastard!

(crowd laughs and applauds).

WILLIAM: People in Australia

as people in Britain did too,

acknowledged that the period

out here had done him an

enormous power of good in

terms of self-confidence.

CHARLES: It made me

grow up very quickly.

I just happen to be one of

those people who believes in

challenges because I

think that through them,

you gain a sense of achievement.

JOHNNY: When he came back

after he'd been in Australia,

you know, he did

remarkably well.

And he ended up as head

boy of Gordonstoun,

and then he went to Cambridge.

So, I think in some ways

the Australian experience

really helped him,

and he found

himself in Australia.



PROTESTER: When is it time

to get our country back?

To get independence and

freedom for our people?

When is it?

When is it ever

going to be right?

(cheering and jeering)

(overlapping chatter)

CHARLES: It is rather

anachronistic and out of place

in this world which is

perhaps somewhat cynical.

But I think it can mean

quite a lot if one goes about

it in the right way.

To me, its a way of officially

dedicating ones life,

or part of ones life, to Wales.

PETER: There are those

that feel very strongly the

investiture of Prince Charles

was an imposition on this

country of an English-born

prince and taking the title of

Prince of Wales,

which of course,

hadn't been held by a Welshman

since the 13th century.

PROTESTOR: If

you want something you have

to protest for it, dont you?

This is nothing but a waste

of money for this town.



GEORGE: And he said to me,

Who are they?

Oh, they're protesters,

I said.

He said, I'm going

to talk to them.

Very unwise, I said,

I don't think you ought to.

I'm going to talk to them.

So all I said was,

Well, I'm coming with you.

You know, he showed

remarkable courage.

He wasn't 20 then.

He wasnt 20.

He crossed the road

started to chat with them.

They were laughing

before he left them.

He's got a very great

gift for disarming people.

Its a marvelous gift for

anyone in public life.

(crowd cheering)

CHARLES: And I think if

Ive learned anything during

the last eight weeks,

its been about

Wales in particular,

and its problems,

and what these

people feel about Wales.

You see, I think they feel

so strongly about Wales as a

nation and it means

something to them and

theyre depressed by, you know,

what might happen

to it if they dont try and

preserve the language and

the culture which is very

unique and special to Wales.

And if somethings

unique and special I see

its well worth preserving.

I, Charles, Prince of Wales,

do become your liege man

of life and limb and of

earthly worship,

and faith and truth I

will bear unto thee,

to live and die against

all manner of folks.

IFOR: Its now,

after 550 years,

that were getting a

prince who can speak to us

in our own language.

CHARLES (over PA):

The words of your address have

certainly touched me deeply,

and I can assure you I

have taken note of the hopes

expressed in them.

(crowd cheering)

CHARLES (over PA):

My Lord Mayor,

thank you very much indeed,

for the very kind welcome.

I apologize for keeping

you all waiting.

EDWARDES: Well, Ive

spent my life like this and

I enjoy it so much.

CHARLES: Do you?

EDWARDES: Oh, I do.

Every minute.

CHARLES: You dont want to

make money necessarily but

just enjoy yourself.

EDWARDES: No.

So long as I get enough to get

food and the pleasures I want,

Ill be quite happy.

Quite.

CHARLES: The people in the

18th century and so used to

plant a lot of trees,

didnt they?

EDWARDES: Yes.

CHARLES: I mean, trees do

beautify the environment.

EDWARDES: Oh, they do.



(helicopter rotors)

(helicopter rotors)

CHARLES: I like to see if

I can challenge myself to do

something which is

potentially hazardous,

just to see whether

mentally I can accept that

challenge and carry it out.

I do think that a period in

the armed forces is of enormous

value and benefit.

It certainly was to me.

Understanding people,

human relations,

being responsible for

other people's welfare.

And I learned an enormous

amount from that.

McGREGOR: As long as he

makes a good touchdown,

we've got it...

Beautiful, beautiful!



CHARLES: And here I am

showing just how adaptable a

sports commentator can be.

I love imitating and mimicking

and I enjoyed it enormously at

school and university,

the actual business of acting.

And I mean, I enjoy making

people laugh if I can.

Hello, hello, hello, I

empty dust bins by taking the

lids off and lifting them

into this cart.

"Ah, those trumpets.

I cannot stand those trumpets!"

If you're making a speech,

it's extremely useful if

you can use acting techniques.

I mean, timing and

double entendre and everything

is enormously helpful.

CHARLES (over PA):

While in Florida recently,

I read in the newspapers,

it must be true...

(audience laughs)

PENNY: Hes got involved with

architecture, with education,

with urban regeneration,

with rural regeneration,

with the environment,

with conservation.

CHARLES: Do they make

you go down pot holes and

things like that?

TEENS: Yes.

CHARLES: Rather you than me.

I couldnt keep...

DAVID: The Prince of Wales

has launched many initiatives,

but none more far reaching

than the Princes Trust.

CHARLES: I felt the most

important thing was to find a

way of getting through all the

red tape and the bureaucracy

and reacting quickly

to these people.

Are you learning something?

TEENAGER:

Yeah. Quite a lot.

CHARLES: Like what?

TEENAGER: Business admin.

CHARLES: Are you?

Youre going to be able

to start your own business,

are you?

TEENAGER: Yeah.

CHARLES: I don't know about you,

but I want to see

Britain great again.

(audience applause)

I do belong to a system of

constitutional monarchy,

which does not take

stands on controversial

or political issues.

INTERVIEWER: The system

would override the conscience?

CHARLES: Well, now that's

a very difficult question.

CHARLES: I have to

think carefully before

I say something.

Because as you know,

if I say something

about a particular subject,

it could be possibly

headlines the next day.

You have, ladies and gentlemen,

to give this much to

the Luftwaffe.

When it knocked down

our buildings, it didn't replace

them with anything

more offensive than rubble.

We did that.

We cannot be anything less than

courageous and revolutionary in

our approach to

tackling climate change.

ANCHORWOMAN: Well, we

now turn to a story thats

getting a good bit of

attention here in the UK,

some secret letters

Prince Charles wrote to

government ministers

several years ago are now

being made public

after a long legal battle.

REPORTER: Over the years,

the Black Spider Memos

have developed

an air of mystery, so-called

because of Prince Charles'

sprawling handwriting.

NEWS EXPERT: Critics

believe that this could be

Prince Charles

lobbying behind the scenes,

secretly influencing

government policy in ways

that he will not be

held accountable for.

ROSE: The letters

have some asking if the prince

is overstepping his bounds.



INGRID: I think its a big

indication that Charles is not

going to shut up

when he becomes king.

But we have an

unwritten constitution;

he cant meddle in politics;

he has to be above politics.

INTERVIEWER: Some people

have accused you of meddling.

CHARLES: Really?

You don't say.

But I always wonder

what meddling is.

I mean, I always

thought it was motivating.

But I've always been

intrigued if it's meddling to

worry about the inner

cities as I did 40 years ago and

what was happening

or not happening there,

the conditions in which

people were living.

If that's meddling,

I'm very proud of it.





REPORTER: You allow the

public to get very close to you.

And in fact, two women have

got particularly close to you.

Have you been offended

by those kisses?

CHARLES: Come on, would you be?

CHARLES: I thought

it was marvelous. Im delighted.

Id much rather have them

kiss me, than slap my face.

MAN: Talking about the media,

Do you find yourself in a

position where you need to

warn the girl about

this before going out?

CHARLES: Yes.

They get used to it, of course,

that's another thing.

Everybody does get used

to things if they're

exposed to it enough.

But it may encourage, of course,

the wrong type of girl

to, to rush forward.

Do you know what I mean?



COUNTESS MOUNTBATTEN: The

pressure on Prince Charles to

find a bride came from within

him as much as anywhere because

he would realize

as the future king,

that he had to get married and

produce heirs for the throne.



WILLIAM: The Prince of Wales

had this relationship so close

with Mountbatten that it made

his father rather jealous.

Lord Mountbatten was supposed

to have helped him by providing

a secure weekend house

for courting purposes,

suggesting to the

Prince of Wales that he

might well sow his wild oats

before he was married,

but then what you had

to look for in the way

of a bride in his

position was this

virginal, perfect, unblemished,

wife who would be a

good bearer of children.

INTERVIEWER: Obviously, a lot of interest

in the young ladies you escort.

Does it become a question

of balance with you,

about the interest

that the media takes?

CHARLES: Yes.

The only problem, of course,

is its not so bad for me;

its much worse for the girl

concerned because shes not

used to dealing

with press at all.

INTERVIEWER: Would you like

to kiss Prince Charles?

WOMAN: Oh, yes. Definitely.

WOMAN: No, not really.

INTERVIEWER: Why not?

WOMAN: Well, hes about

old enough to be my father

I would say.

NIGEL: Hes not been able

to develop relationships as

you and I have.

He has to romance a girl in

strict confines, you know,

take her pheasant sh**ting

or up in his helicopter.

And theyve got to fall in love

with him and be able to enjoy

his life in a very,

very strict level.

They cant go to the

cinema and neck in the back row

or the front row.

They cant do wild things

in Hyde Park on dark nights.

WILLIAM: Every time he

was appearing in public

with some young woman,

it was an immediate pounce

by the media,

thinking that they might

have discovered the next

queen of Britain.

And so his courtship, I think,

was extremely difficult,

poor boy.

INTERVIEWER: Are there many

contenders at the moment or is

there any one special

girl and do you have,

CHARLES: Contenders for what?

INTERVIEWER: For

your hand in marriage.

(laughs).

CHARLES: No, no.

Theres no one special

one at the moment, no.

Contrary to what the

press in England think.

ROBERT: Every single

girlfriend that Prince Charles

started going out

with was promptly examined by

the newspapers in

really the most prurient way

to discover whether

shed had a real boyfriend,

meaning a boyfriend

shed been to bed with.





CHRISTOPHER: Its said

that Camilla's opening gambit

was My great-grandmother and

your great-great-grandfather

were lovers...

So how about it?

Who could resist

such an invitation?

ANNA: Camilla was the

love of Prince Charles' life.

Most people would agree that,

you know, they are soulmates.

ROBERT: Poor Camilla's

problem was sort of

Catch 22, and when

she met Prince Charles,

she fell in love.

They went to bed together,

but that sort of automatically

ruled her out as a future queen.

We told Prince Charles,

Sorry, mate, you

cant marry Camilla because

shes been to bed with you.

It sounds ridiculous.

It sounds primitive.

And it was.



ROBERT: Unfortunately,

of course, for both of them,

Charles and Camilla, the

emotional attachment remained.

And so, their love

affair continued.

INGRID: A lot of his

girlfriends had a past.

And we, the press,

knew that Prince Charles

had to find, at that time,

definitely, find

someone who had no past.



CHARLES: Im amazed that shes

been brave enough to take me on.

INTERVIEWER: And

I suppose in love?

DIANA: Of course.

CHARLES: Whatever

in love means.

DIANA: Yes.

INTERVIEWER: And

I suppose in love?

DIANA: Of course.

CHARLES: Whatever

"in love" means.

DIANA: Yes.

CHARLES: Put your own

interpretation...

INTERVIEWER: Well it obviously

means too very happy people.

Well, from us, congratulations.

DIANA: Thank you very much.

CHARLES: Youre very kind.



CHARLES: People

keep telling me,

now that Im

about to get married,

that the most successful

marriages are the ones where

you have to make an effort.

And you cant expect the

whole thing to be lovely and

rosy and successful

unless you do work at it.



LORD CHARTERIS: I look back

on the marriage of the

Prince and Princess of Wales

as one of the greatest things

Ive ever seen.

It was a tremendous feeling

of excitement about it.

And it looked perfect.

I saw no clouds on the horizon.

I saw nothing but

sunshine and happiness.

HUGO: They were, for a time,

really completely a dream team.

They could have gone

anywhere and done anything.

It seemed ideal.

And its very unfortunate

that it all went wrong.





DAVID: He told me both

about the television program.

And you know, as he told me,

every warning bell

was sounding in my ears.

And I said, Look, I really

would seriously question

whether this was

the right thing to do.

It brought everything

absolutely out into the open

so that there

could be no pretense.

There was no

curtain to be drawn,

and I think that had

consequences for everybody

involved in it.

RICHARD: The most damaging

charge that is made in relation

to your marriage

is that you were,

because of your relationship

with Camilla Parker Bowles from

the beginning, persistently

unfaithful to your wife and

thus caused the breakdown.

What is your response to

that persistent criticism?

CHARLES: There is no truth

in so much of this speculation.

Mrs. Parker Bowles is

a great friend of mine.

And she has been a friend

for a very long time, and,

along with a lot

of other friends,

and will continue to be a

friend for a very long time.

JONATHAN: Did you

try to be faithful and honorable

to your wife when you

took on the vow of marriage?

CHARLES: Yes, absolutely.

JONATHAN: And you were?

CHARLES: Yes.

Until it became

irretrievably broken down.



JONATHAN: I think

that by telling the truth,

in that very precise

and narrow way that he did,

lanced a large and growing boil.

Just imagine what it

would be like if the

speculation had continued,

story upon story,

lie upon lie, piling up.

I think he got it out the way.

It was painful for

everyone involved, I mean,

it must have been awful for him.

However, I think it was

a courageous and honest

thing to do.

REPORTER: The wedding comes

35 years after they first met.

And following a

relationship that helped

destroy the Princes

first marriage to Diana,

Princess of Wales.

Reaction has been mixed.





CHARLES: Brilliant.

I'd like to think I'd be the

sort of parent who will not

tell my children that

you ought to go there,

and you ought to do that,

and what I wanna do is discuss,

I hope with my children,

the pros and cons of things.

What is marvelous is to see

them develop and, you know,

start to get good

at certain things,

develop interests and all that.

You know,

it gives me enormous pleasure

and satisfaction and pride.

As they get older, there are

more things that perhaps they,

being boys, they can

do with their father.

But I've always, you know,

mucked around with

them a great deal.

I remember when

William was tiny,

I used to, you know,

muck around with him as

much as I possibly could.

(church bell tolls).

(somber music).

JEFFREY: I remember

Diana saying to me once, uh,

pointedly, she said

what a good father he was and...

what a very

dedicated man he was...

and how much she admired him.

INTERVIEWER: Around

what time period was that?

JEFFREY: Six months

before she d*ed.

CHARLES: I'm unbelievably

proud of the children,

William and Harry.

They've been quite remarkable.

And I think they've handled an

extraordinary difficult time,

as I'm sure all of

you can imagine,

with quite enormous courage and

the greatest possible dignity.

INGRID: As soon as

the funeral was over,

nobody watched television,

nobody read any newspapers,

they just did things

with dad, you know.

And suddenly the world

could see that actually

they love their father,

which they always did,

but it was always this

feeling that maybe he wasn't

a very good father,

but he always was a good father.

And then he took Harry

with him to South Africa.

And I think that was a

turning point for Charles when

the press were on the plane,

and they suddenly thought,

you know, here is a

grieving father who is like

any other grieving father.



PRINCE HARRY: There's a lot

of stuff that I read and

there's a lot of stuff

that obviously irritates me

and my brother and

my father most as well,

as he is someone who tries

to do his best the whole time.

But always has been continually

criticized for all sorts.

You just get on with it,

you can't really deal with it.

There is no way of

dealing with it.

You just hope that the next

day that it isn't in the papers.





ANNA: Over the years,

he's always said that,

you know, on becoming king,

he would very much

step into his mother's shoes

and absolutely understand

the limitations of his position

as constitutional monarch.

JONATHON:

Dont look for guarantees.

Hes his own man with

extremely strong convictions,

and he wont stop short of

letting the politicians know

what they are.

CHARLES: The idea somehow

that I'm gonna go on exactly

the same way if I have to

succeed is complete nonsense.

Because the two situations

are completely different.

I do realize that it

is a separate exercise,

being sovereign, so of course,

you know, I understand entirely

how that should operate.

TOM: His challenge is enormous.

I think he will rise to the

challenge because hes been

preparing for it for 70 years.

This is his moment; this is

when he can prove himself.

OFFICER (over PA): Three cheers

for His Majesty the King!

Hip-hip!

SOLDIERS: Hurray!

OFFICER (over PA): Hip-hip!

SOLDIERS: Hurray!

OFFICER (over PA): Hip-hip!

SOLDIERS: Hurray!

(overlapping chatter)



CHARLES: May I say what an

enormous pleasure it is to see

so many familiar faces

gathered in this room.

Being here today is rather

like asking a pheasant to award

the prizes to the best sh*t.

(crowd laughter).

Speaking as a pheasant,

youve been wonderfully

sporting sh*ts,

because I've only got

a few pellets in my backside,

and you haven't

yet brought me down.

(audience applause)
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