The Crown (season 3) WATCH On Netflix
The Crown | |
---|---|
Season 3 | |
Starring | |
Country of origin | |
No. of episodes | 10 |
Release | |
Original network | Netflix |
Original release | 17 November 2019 |
Season chronology | |
Premise[edit]
SEASON 1
SEASON 2
Cast[edit]
Main[edit]
- Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II[16]
- Tobias Menzies as Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Elizabeth's husband[17]
- Helena Bonham Carter as Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, Elizabeth's younger sister[18]
- Ben Daniels as Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon, known as Lord Snowdon; Princess Margaret's husband[19]
- Jason Watkins as Harold Wilson, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[18]
- Marion Bailey as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, King George VI's widow and Elizabeth II's mother
- Erin Doherty as Princess Anne, Elizabeth, and Philip's second child and only daughter[20]
- Charles Dance as Lord Mountbatten, Philip's ambitious uncle and brother of Princess Alice of Battenberg[21]
- Josh O'Connor as Charles, Prince of Wales, Elizabeth and Philip's eldest child and the heir apparent[22]
Featured[edit]
The following actors are credited in the opening titles of up to two episodes:
- John Lithgow as Sir Winston Churchill, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[23]
- Clancy Brown as Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th President of the United States[24]
- Jane Lapotaire as Princess Alice, Philip's mother[23]
- Mark Lewis Jones as Edward Millward, Prince Charles's Welsh Teacher [25]
- Tim McMullan as Robin Woods, Dean of Windsor[25]
- Derek Jacobi as Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII, who abdicated
- Geraldine Chaplin as Wallis, Duchess of Windsor, the Duke of Windsor's American wife[26]
- Michael Maloney as Edward Heath, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[25]
- Emerald Fennell as Camilla Shand, Charles's love interest[27]
- Andrew Buchan as Andrew Parker Bowles, Anne's love interest; later Camilla's husband[25]
- Harry Treadaway as Roddy Llewellyn, Margaret's lover[28]
Recurring[edit]
- David Rintoul as Sir Michael Adeane, Private Secretary to the Queen[25]
- Charles Edwards as Sir Martin Charteris, Assistant Private Secretary to the Queen; later Private Secretary to the Queen[25]
- Michael Thomas as Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, Elizabeth's paternal uncle
- Penny Downie as Alice, Duchess of Gloucester, Elizabeth's paternal aunt by marriage
- Alan Gill as Winkie
- Pippa Winslow as Blinkie
- Mark Dexter as Tony Benn, Postmaster General; later Minister of Technology[25]
- Lorraine Ashbourne as Barbara Castle, Minister for Overseas Development; later Secretary of State for Transport and Secretary of State for Employment[25]
- Aden Gillett as Richard Crossman, Ministry of Housing and Local Government; later Leader of the House of Commons
- Sam Phillips as the Queen's equerry
- Sinéad Matthews as Marcia Williams, Harold Wilson's private secretary[25]
- David Charles as George Thomas, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department; later Secretary of State for Wales
- Stuart McQuarrie as George Thomson, Minister without portfolio
- Patrick Ryecart as The Duke of Norfolk, Earl Marshal
- Connie M'Gadzah as Sydney Johnson, the Duke of Windsor's valet/footman
Notable guests[edit]
- Samuel West as Sir Anthony Blunt, Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures[23]
- Angus Wright as Sir Martin Furnival Jones, Director-General of MI5[25]
- Paul Hilton as Michael Straight, American magazine publisher, novelist, patron of the arts, and a confessed spy for the KGB
- Teresa Banham as Mary Wilson, wife of Prime Minister Harold Wilson
- Anthony Brophy as James Jesus Angleton, chief of CIA Counterintelligence
- Michael Simkins as Sir Patrick Dean, British Ambassador to the United States
- Martin McDougall as W. Marvin Watson, advisor to US president Lyndon B. Johnson
- Suzanne Kopser as Lady Bird Johnson, First Lady of the United States
- Pip Torrens as Sir Tommy Lascelles, Private Secretary to King George VI (in flashbacks)[25]
- Verity Russell as young Elizabeth
- Beau Godson as young Margaret
- Richard Harrington as Fred Phillips[25]
- Gwyneth Keyworth as Gwen Edwards
- Colin Morgan as John Armstrong, a Guardian journalist[25]
- Miltos Yerolemou as Chronos
- Nigel Whitmey as Marquis Childs, American journalist, syndicated columnist, and author
- Colin Stinton as Lawrence E. Spivak, American publisher, and journalist
- Finn Elliot as young Philip
- Leonie Benesch as Princess Cecilie, Philip's third sister (in flashback)
- John Hollingworth as Lord Porchester, nicknamed Porchey, Horse Racing Manager to the Queen [28]
- Rupert Vansittart as Cecil Harmsworth King, newspaper publisher[25]
- Julian Glover as Cecil Boyd-Rochfort, Irish thoroughbred racehorse trainer
- Philippe Smolikowski as Alec Head, French horse trainer, and breeder
- John Finn as Arthur "Bull" Hancock, owner of thoroughbred racehorses at Claiborne Farm
- Nia Roberts as Silvia Millward, Edward Millward's wife [25]
- David Summer as Thomas Parry, Principal of the University College of Wales Aberystwyth
- Henry Dimbleby as Richard Dimbleby, BBC broadcaster[25]
- Alan David as Ben Bowen Thomas, President of the University College of Wales Aberystwyth
- Henry Pettigrew as Neil Armstrong, the Astronaut [25]
- Felix Scott as Buzz Aldrin, the Astronaut [25]
- Andrew-Lee Potts as Michael Collins the Astronaut [25]
- Sidney Jackson as Prince Edward, Elizabeth, and Philip's youngest child
- Marlo Woolley as Prince Andrew, Elizabeth, and Philip's second son
- Fred Broom as Cliff Michelmore, English television presenter and producer
- Daniel Beales as Patrick Moore, English amateur astronomer
- Kevin Eldon as Priest Michael
- Matthew Baldwin as Kenneth Harris, The journalist who conducted The Duke and Duchess of Windsor in conversation with Kenneth Harris
- Togo Igawa as Emperor Hirohito, Emperor of Japan[25]
- David Wilmot as Arthur Scargill, president of the Yorkshire branch of the National Union of Mineworkers[25]
- Stephen Riddle as Derek Parker Bowles, Andrew Parker Bowles's father
- Judith Alexander as Ann Parker Bowles, Andrew Parker Bowles's mother
- Robert Benedetti-Hall as Major Bruce Shand, Camilla Shand's father
- Nesba Crenshaw as Rosalind Shand, Camilla Shand's mother
- Louis Zegrean as young Edward "Ted" Heath
- Richard Walsh as Joe Gormley, president of the National Union of Mineworkers
- Jessica De Gouw as Lucy Lindsay-Hogg, girlfriend of Lord Snowdon; later Lucy, Countess of Snowdon[25]
- Nancy Carroll as Lady Anne Tennant, lady-in-waiting to Princess Margaret and wife of Colin Tennant[25]
- Richard Teverson as Colin Tennant, husband of Lady Anne Tennant
- Martin Wimbush as Sir Ronald Bodley Scott, English hematologist and expert on therapy for leukemia and lymphoma
- Dan Skinner as Alastair Burnet, British journalist, and broadcaster
- Tim Bentinck as Sir John Betjeman, Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom
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