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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,081 --> 00:00:03,241 In January 1901, 2 00:00:03,241 --> 00:00:07,281 Britain and the Empire mourned the passing of an era. 3 00:00:10,481 --> 00:00:12,641 For more than six decades, 4 00:00:12,641 --> 00:00:15,721 Queen Victoria had stamped her presence on the throne 5 00:00:15,721 --> 00:00:17,961 with a dignified and sober authority. 6 00:00:17,961 --> 00:00:21,361 Now, few could imagine life without her. 7 00:00:22,921 --> 00:00:26,761 People were dreading the death of Queen Victoria. 8 00:00:26,761 --> 00:00:30,481 Partly because she was a fixture of everybody's lives, 9 00:00:30,481 --> 00:00:32,961 but also because they were rather worried 10 00:00:32,961 --> 00:00:35,442 about the kind of king her son would make. 11 00:00:35,442 --> 00:00:38,642 You know, would this man be a worthy successor? 12 00:00:38,642 --> 00:00:42,802 There had been very little evidence that he would. 13 00:00:42,802 --> 00:00:45,802 There was a very strong feeling that he wasn't up to much. 14 00:00:45,802 --> 00:00:50,042 He was nicknamed Edward the Caresser as opposed to Edward the Confessor. 15 00:00:50,042 --> 00:00:53,762 There was a lot of talk that he was a vulgar philistine 16 00:00:53,762 --> 00:00:59,322 and he would be quite incapable of the gravitas and the mastery 17 00:00:59,322 --> 00:01:01,922 that you needed to be king. 18 00:01:01,922 --> 00:01:05,802 King Edward VII, known to the family as Bertie, 19 00:01:05,802 --> 00:01:09,642 couldn't have had a more different public image from that of his mother. 20 00:01:11,882 --> 00:01:17,522 Fat, 59 years old, and with a reputation for frivolity, 21 00:01:17,522 --> 00:01:20,042 Bertie had been pursued by scandal 22 00:01:20,042 --> 00:01:22,522 and written off as an idle, playboy Prince. 23 00:01:23,522 --> 00:01:28,002 Basically, nobody thought he was going to be a good king. 24 00:01:28,002 --> 00:01:29,922 Not even Bertie, actually - 25 00:01:29,922 --> 00:01:34,522 it's widely attested that he was depressed at the time he became king, 26 00:01:34,522 --> 00:01:38,722 because he thought nobody would respect him and he wasn't going to manage. 27 00:01:38,722 --> 00:01:41,322 So it was a very inauspicious start. 28 00:01:41,322 --> 00:01:46,202 Before he'd even been crowned, it seemed the new king was on the verge of a nervous breakdown. 29 00:01:46,202 --> 00:01:51,323 But Edward VII's popular touch would turn out to be his secret weapon. 30 00:01:51,323 --> 00:01:53,763 The man of whom many predicted disaster 31 00:01:53,763 --> 00:01:56,683 turned out to be the king who reinvented monarchy 32 00:01:56,683 --> 00:01:58,603 for the modern age. 33 00:02:15,403 --> 00:02:19,563 In the 1840s, Queen Victoria and her consort Prince Albert 34 00:02:19,563 --> 00:02:21,123 embarked on a mission. 35 00:02:22,483 --> 00:02:24,603 Under the reign of their predecessors, 36 00:02:24,603 --> 00:02:26,483 the high-living Hanoverians, 37 00:02:26,483 --> 00:02:30,523 the monarchy had become a byword for corruption and immorality. 38 00:02:32,563 --> 00:02:37,923 Victoria and Albert believed that if it was to survive in an era of revolution, 39 00:02:37,923 --> 00:02:43,843 the Royal Family must become a model of public duty and immaculate private morality. 40 00:02:45,363 --> 00:02:51,163 Albert and Victoria were very aware of this sort of Hanoverian hangover, 41 00:02:51,163 --> 00:02:55,323 this moral legacy from the Regency days. 42 00:02:55,323 --> 00:02:59,404 The irony was, Victoria was a highly sexed individual 43 00:02:59,404 --> 00:03:00,924 and enjoyed her sex life, 44 00:03:00,924 --> 00:03:05,804 and revelled in it and explored it and wrote about it. 45 00:03:05,804 --> 00:03:08,804 But they knew that the symbol of monarchy 46 00:03:08,804 --> 00:03:10,844 had to be a far more moral endeavour. 47 00:03:13,044 --> 00:03:15,364 Central to Victoria and Albert's plans 48 00:03:15,364 --> 00:03:19,684 was their first son and heir, Bertie, Prince of Wales. 49 00:03:19,684 --> 00:03:21,764 To groom the boy for kingship, 50 00:03:21,764 --> 00:03:27,524 they subjected him to a gruelling programme of moral and intellectual enlightenment. 51 00:03:27,524 --> 00:03:30,484 Prince Albert had an idea 52 00:03:30,484 --> 00:03:33,484 that princes had to be kind of super-people. 53 00:03:33,484 --> 00:03:37,804 And he developed this educational regime for his children, 54 00:03:37,804 --> 00:03:40,844 whereby pretty much every waking moment 55 00:03:40,844 --> 00:03:44,764 was stuffed with improving educational experiences 56 00:03:44,764 --> 00:03:46,484 from the age of about three. 57 00:03:46,484 --> 00:03:50,404 Constantly impressed on Bertie was the fact that he was going to be king 58 00:03:50,404 --> 00:03:53,884 and he had to be good and he had to achieve 59 00:03:53,884 --> 00:03:56,004 and everything had to be improving. 60 00:03:56,004 --> 00:03:57,884 And it was suffocating. 61 00:03:57,884 --> 00:04:03,124 His whole day was parcelled out half hour by half hour into lessons 62 00:04:03,124 --> 00:04:07,244 from early in the morning until six o'clock at night. 63 00:04:07,244 --> 00:04:09,444 And he behaved appallingly. 64 00:04:09,444 --> 00:04:12,525 He behaved like the sort of legendary naughty boy. 65 00:04:12,525 --> 00:04:15,525 He stood in the corner and stamped and screamed, 66 00:04:15,525 --> 00:04:18,965 he behaved as abominably as he possibly could. He refused to work. 67 00:04:20,645 --> 00:04:24,445 "Today I had to do some arithmetic with the Prince of Wales. 68 00:04:24,445 --> 00:04:27,605 "Immediately the pencil was flung to the end of the room. 69 00:04:27,605 --> 00:04:29,805 "The stool was kicked away. 70 00:04:29,805 --> 00:04:33,845 "The Prince was very rude, throwing stones in my face." 71 00:04:36,485 --> 00:04:39,245 Bertie's parents were in despair. 72 00:04:40,805 --> 00:04:45,285 "I never in my life met such a thorough and cunning lazybones. 73 00:04:45,285 --> 00:04:48,685 "It does grieve me when it is my own son, 74 00:04:48,685 --> 00:04:51,085 "and that he might be called upon at any moment 75 00:04:51,365 --> 00:04:54,645 "to take over the reins of a country where the sun never sets. 76 00:04:56,805 --> 00:04:59,925 "His intellect, alas, is weak. 77 00:04:59,925 --> 00:05:05,245 "He listens to nothing you tell him, but seems in a sort of dreaminess, 78 00:05:05,245 --> 00:05:08,525 "which alarms us for his brain." 79 00:05:08,525 --> 00:05:12,965 Victoria and Albert are pretty upset, anxious and confused 80 00:05:12,965 --> 00:05:17,965 by their son's refusal to respond to this educational plan. 81 00:05:20,005 --> 00:05:24,366 They bring in a phrenologist, a man called George Coombe. 82 00:05:24,366 --> 00:05:28,326 Phrenology was this sort of mid-19th century pseudo-science 83 00:05:28,326 --> 00:05:32,646 that declared that if you felt the bumps on a person's head, 84 00:05:32,646 --> 00:05:35,726 then you could determine something about their character, 85 00:05:35,726 --> 00:05:37,766 about the way they were put together. 86 00:05:38,806 --> 00:05:42,446 Now, Combe felt all over young Bertie's head 87 00:05:42,446 --> 00:05:47,086 and declared that his centres of self esteem were too highly developed. 88 00:05:50,206 --> 00:05:54,606 "The boy is a nervous and excitable child with little power of endurance 89 00:05:54,606 --> 00:05:58,286 "or sustained action in any direction." 90 00:05:58,286 --> 00:06:00,806 "The brain is feeble and abnormal, 91 00:06:00,806 --> 00:06:05,206 "making him liable to fits of passion and obstinacy. 92 00:06:08,806 --> 00:06:11,446 Despite Bertie's lack of academic promise, 93 00:06:11,446 --> 00:06:14,246 at the age of 17 he was packed off to university. 94 00:06:16,166 --> 00:06:20,246 The Prince took every opportunity to give his royal minders the slip 95 00:06:20,246 --> 00:06:22,646 and applied himself enthusiastically 96 00:06:22,646 --> 00:06:27,166 to the study of gambling, horses and strong cigars. 97 00:06:28,686 --> 00:06:30,966 Bertie desperately wanted friends. 98 00:06:30,966 --> 00:06:35,446 He really wanted to meet boys of his own age. 99 00:06:35,446 --> 00:06:38,087 That's what he really wanted, he wanted friendship. 100 00:06:38,087 --> 00:06:41,287 He's not ever allowed to sort of rub shoulders with people 101 00:06:41,287 --> 00:06:46,167 as equals of his own age. He never goes anywhere near a school. 102 00:06:46,167 --> 00:06:50,327 And even when he goes to university, Albert is terribly careful to ensure 103 00:06:50,327 --> 00:06:54,207 that he is secluded, so he is brought up very much in isolation. 104 00:06:54,207 --> 00:06:56,447 And this for him was really difficult, 105 00:06:56,447 --> 00:06:58,927 because he was by nature an incredible extrovert. 106 00:07:04,807 --> 00:07:09,607 Despairing of his son's academic abilities, in 1861 Prince Albert 107 00:07:09,607 --> 00:07:13,327 decided to knock his son into shape with a taste of military life. 108 00:07:16,767 --> 00:07:20,647 Bertie was ordered to attend an army camp in Ireland. 109 00:07:26,327 --> 00:07:30,287 But if Albert hoped boot camp would be the making of his son, 110 00:07:30,287 --> 00:07:32,047 he was to be disappointed. 111 00:07:33,567 --> 00:07:35,687 Soon after Bertie's arrival, 112 00:07:35,687 --> 00:07:42,087 fellow officers smuggled a friendly young actress by the name of Nellie Clifden into his sleeping quarters. 113 00:07:44,567 --> 00:07:49,568 The Prince recorded the momentous event in his personal diary. 114 00:07:49,568 --> 00:07:54,008 "6th September, NC, first time. 115 00:07:54,008 --> 00:07:58,248 "9th September, NC, second time. 116 00:07:58,248 --> 00:08:04,248 "10th September, NC, third time." 117 00:08:04,248 --> 00:08:08,008 Temptation comes, and he's ready for it. 118 00:08:08,008 --> 00:08:12,808 He is brimming over with the desire to share the delights 119 00:08:12,808 --> 00:08:17,728 of this beautiful woman that pretty well is put in his bed. 120 00:08:17,728 --> 00:08:22,168 And when his father hears about this, of course horror strikes him. 121 00:08:22,168 --> 00:08:24,888 Bertie is weak in spirit and flesh 122 00:08:24,888 --> 00:08:30,248 and you have this terrible tension between the ideals of monarchy 123 00:08:30,248 --> 00:08:37,848 and this ideal of this bourgeois, mid-Victorian industrious, dutiful monarchy 124 00:08:37,848 --> 00:08:41,328 and what Bertie likes to get up to in the barracks. 125 00:08:42,368 --> 00:08:48,928 It's both an attack upon on their ideal of family but also crucially, I think, 126 00:08:48,928 --> 00:08:54,328 Albert is very worried that it is undermining politically of the monarchy. 127 00:08:55,848 --> 00:08:57,928 "I write to you with heavy heart 128 00:08:57,928 --> 00:09:01,209 "on a subject that has caused me the deepest pain. 129 00:09:03,249 --> 00:09:05,649 "I knew that you were thoughtless and weak, 130 00:09:05,649 --> 00:09:08,089 "but I could not think you depraved." 131 00:09:11,769 --> 00:09:15,969 Bertie couldn't have chosen a worse time to be caught in the act. 132 00:09:15,969 --> 00:09:17,889 His father, Prince Albert, 133 00:09:17,889 --> 00:09:23,249 already suffering the early symptoms of typhoid fever, was crushed with worry. 134 00:09:23,249 --> 00:09:29,209 When he died soon afterwards at Windsor castle, it was Bertie who took the blame. 135 00:09:29,209 --> 00:09:31,569 In the Queen's eyes he was a martyr 136 00:09:31,569 --> 00:09:35,129 who had died because of the wickedness of his son. 137 00:09:35,129 --> 00:09:37,449 He'd sacrificed his life 138 00:09:37,449 --> 00:09:42,009 and she never altogether forgave the Prince of Wales 139 00:09:42,009 --> 00:09:45,329 for what she saw as this appalling misdemeanour 140 00:09:45,329 --> 00:09:48,409 which led to the death of her beloved Albert. 141 00:09:48,409 --> 00:09:52,209 Albert's death has a profoundly negative affect 142 00:09:52,209 --> 00:09:56,169 on the relationship between Bertie and Victoria. 143 00:09:56,169 --> 00:09:59,609 Victoria was completely, well, shocked, 144 00:09:59,609 --> 00:10:02,769 and blames Bertie for Albert's death. 145 00:10:02,769 --> 00:10:07,209 Victoria, she says, "Whenever I see Bertie, I shudder. 146 00:10:07,209 --> 00:10:11,009 "I can't bear to have him in the room. I can't bear to be near him". 147 00:10:12,769 --> 00:10:16,370 The Prince had never enjoyed a warm relationship with his mother. 148 00:10:16,370 --> 00:10:20,530 For the next 40 years it would be positively frosty. 149 00:10:21,530 --> 00:10:24,330 To keep her son and heir from further trouble, 150 00:10:24,330 --> 00:10:27,890 the Queen now resorted to a desperate remedy - marriage. 151 00:10:28,850 --> 00:10:33,530 The royal houses of Europe were scoured for a suitable partner. 152 00:10:33,530 --> 00:10:37,770 The winning candidate was the beautiful, albeit penniless, 153 00:10:37,770 --> 00:10:40,850 Alexandra of Denmark. 154 00:10:40,850 --> 00:10:43,370 In the 18-year-old princess, 155 00:10:43,370 --> 00:10:48,090 it seemed the matchmakers had found the perfect bride. 156 00:10:48,090 --> 00:10:52,450 Alexandra was in fact an ideal wife for the Prince of Wales. 157 00:10:52,450 --> 00:10:58,010 Compared with the starchy correctness and the infinite tedium 158 00:10:58,010 --> 00:10:59,890 of Victoria's court, 159 00:10:59,890 --> 00:11:04,210 the Danish Royal court was a delight for the Prince of Wales 160 00:11:04,210 --> 00:11:06,490 because they took everything cheerfully. 161 00:11:06,490 --> 00:11:12,330 Their idea of relaxation was romps and practical jokes and jolly songs. 162 00:11:13,370 --> 00:11:15,810 It was said about the Danish Royal Family 163 00:11:15,810 --> 00:11:18,770 that nobody was ever allowed to read a book, 164 00:11:18,770 --> 00:11:21,490 and if they saw you reading a book in the sitting room 165 00:11:21,490 --> 00:11:24,330 they'd all run up after you and go, "boo!" 166 00:11:24,330 --> 00:11:29,731 And that was really not all right, they wanted to be galloping around 167 00:11:29,731 --> 00:11:33,971 and playing parlour games and throwing wet towels at each other. 168 00:11:35,491 --> 00:11:38,731 In 1863 the 21-year-old Prince of Wales 169 00:11:38,731 --> 00:11:41,891 married his fun-loving Danish bride. 170 00:11:41,891 --> 00:11:43,411 For the wedding photograph, 171 00:11:43,411 --> 00:11:46,971 Queen Victoria arranged for Albert to join them, 172 00:11:46,971 --> 00:11:49,211 to make sure that nobody had too much fun. 173 00:11:51,491 --> 00:11:55,131 Installed in their opulent marital home, Marlborough House, 174 00:11:55,131 --> 00:11:59,091 the newlyweds quickly became the centre of London's high society. 175 00:12:01,011 --> 00:12:05,651 Amid a ceaseless round of dances, dinner parties and entertainments, 176 00:12:05,651 --> 00:12:09,931 Bertie's true personality could now flourish. 177 00:12:09,931 --> 00:12:13,211 He knew that he wasn't clever like his father. 178 00:12:13,211 --> 00:12:16,931 He knew that he wasn't authoritative like his mother. 179 00:12:16,931 --> 00:12:21,851 What he had was a charm, an easy way of dealing with people. 180 00:12:21,851 --> 00:12:24,451 People found him good company. 181 00:12:24,451 --> 00:12:26,811 He was well behaved, he knew what to say. 182 00:12:26,811 --> 00:12:29,971 He was a good person to be sitting next to at dinner. 183 00:12:31,491 --> 00:12:35,651 It was an arranged marriage, and that was made completely plain. 184 00:12:35,651 --> 00:12:37,932 But I think that Alex, right from the start, 185 00:12:37,932 --> 00:12:39,052 fell in love with him, 186 00:12:39,052 --> 00:12:42,212 and in a way she remained in love with him for the rest of her life. 187 00:12:42,212 --> 00:12:44,252 She said to one of Bertie's sisters, 188 00:12:44,252 --> 00:12:47,932 "You think I'm marrying your brother because of his position, 189 00:12:47,932 --> 00:12:50,932 "but if he was a cowboy, I'd marry him just the same." 190 00:12:52,972 --> 00:12:57,692 The once lonely, isolated youth now had what he'd always craved, 191 00:12:57,692 --> 00:13:02,092 friendship, fun and the unquestioning devotion of a beautiful woman. 192 00:13:02,092 --> 00:13:06,572 But as the Royal Family's most senior male representative, 193 00:13:06,572 --> 00:13:09,332 he also had unfulfilled ambitions. 194 00:13:09,332 --> 00:13:12,572 The Prince of Wales felt, as the heir to the throne, 195 00:13:12,572 --> 00:13:17,372 he ought to be playing a prominent part in the affairs of state. 196 00:13:17,372 --> 00:13:22,012 And he was in fact very ready to do so. He was a man of considerable ability, great energy. 197 00:13:22,012 --> 00:13:26,812 The trouble was that his mother felt that he was irresponsible, 198 00:13:26,812 --> 00:13:30,812 frivolous and incapable a playing a serious role. 199 00:13:30,812 --> 00:13:33,292 Bertie thought what he wanted to do 200 00:13:33,292 --> 00:13:39,452 was to have access to government papers, particularly to Foreign Office dispatches, 201 00:13:39,452 --> 00:13:43,852 because he was always interested in foreign policy and saw that as his special area. 202 00:13:43,852 --> 00:13:48,972 Every time he asked for access to dispatches, what he always asked for was the key. 203 00:13:48,972 --> 00:13:52,733 There was a particular gold key that opened the box of secret papers 204 00:13:52,733 --> 00:13:55,493 from the Foreign Office, and that's what he wanted. 205 00:13:55,493 --> 00:13:59,053 And Queen Victoria, whenever he asked, Queen Victoria would say no, 206 00:13:59,053 --> 00:14:02,373 he can't have access, he's too indiscreet. 207 00:14:02,373 --> 00:14:09,013 Edward said late in his mother's life that everyone had an eternal father, 208 00:14:09,013 --> 00:14:13,013 but he himself was blessed with an eternal mother. 209 00:14:13,013 --> 00:14:14,813 The sort of remark, in fact, 210 00:14:14,813 --> 00:14:18,173 that the present Prince of Wales might actually make. 211 00:14:18,173 --> 00:14:22,533 And, of course, there is this permanent tension between the Prince of Wales, 212 00:14:22,533 --> 00:14:26,453 who is heir to the throne, and the person who's actually occupying it. 213 00:14:27,973 --> 00:14:30,453 Frustrated in his ambition by his mother, 214 00:14:30,453 --> 00:14:33,133 relations between Bertie and his wife 215 00:14:33,133 --> 00:14:35,093 also began to come under pressure. 216 00:14:35,093 --> 00:14:38,453 Three children in the first four years of marriage 217 00:14:38,453 --> 00:14:42,573 had taken the early sparkle out of married life. 218 00:14:42,573 --> 00:14:44,973 Eight months into her third pregnancy, 219 00:14:44,973 --> 00:14:49,373 the Princess fell gravely ill with rheumatic fever. 220 00:14:49,373 --> 00:14:53,493 The crisis was a turning point in the marriage. 221 00:14:53,493 --> 00:14:58,533 It really played, I think, to his worst, his least likeable qualities. 222 00:14:58,533 --> 00:15:01,133 It's said that they had to send three telegrams 223 00:15:01,133 --> 00:15:04,534 to get him to come away from the races to come to her sickbed, 224 00:15:04,534 --> 00:15:07,054 and when he did come he didn't want to stay. 225 00:15:08,574 --> 00:15:11,734 Bertie's reaction is not good. 226 00:15:11,734 --> 00:15:14,254 And he goes out night after night, 227 00:15:14,254 --> 00:15:18,414 saying he'd be back and she waits up and waits up 228 00:15:18,414 --> 00:15:22,254 and he says he'll be back at midnight, but he doesn't come back until three, 229 00:15:22,254 --> 00:15:26,254 and she's meanwhile weeping. You know, very dependent on him. 230 00:15:26,254 --> 00:15:32,934 The illness took a heavy physical toll on the Princess, leaving her lame and increasingly deaf. 231 00:15:34,454 --> 00:15:40,134 It had also opened up deep, underlying tensions in her relationship with the Prince. 232 00:15:40,134 --> 00:15:47,094 I think that he was mixed up, selfish and perhaps a self-obsessed figure. 233 00:15:47,094 --> 00:15:51,094 I think the trouble partly was that Bertie's conflicted 234 00:15:51,094 --> 00:15:54,374 because he was forced to marry her and he resented that. 235 00:15:54,374 --> 00:15:56,774 I mean, 21, forced into an arranged marriage, 236 00:15:56,774 --> 00:15:59,414 no time sow his wild oats, all of that kind of stuff. 237 00:15:59,414 --> 00:16:04,414 But on the other hand, he actually is very fond of her, 238 00:16:04,414 --> 00:16:08,574 so that he treats her badly but at the same time he loves her. 239 00:16:08,574 --> 00:16:10,894 It's quite complicated, I think. 240 00:16:12,414 --> 00:16:16,895 Over the coming years, Alexandra would increasingly retreat from society life 241 00:16:16,895 --> 00:16:19,495 behind the gates of her Sandringham home... 242 00:16:20,495 --> 00:16:26,935 ..While Bertie turned elsewhere to satisfy his emotional and physical needs. 243 00:16:26,935 --> 00:16:29,415 There's no doubt he liked the company of women, 244 00:16:29,415 --> 00:16:31,855 and there's no doubt he had lots of mistresses. 245 00:16:31,855 --> 00:16:35,255 There are all these stories about him going off to Paris 246 00:16:35,255 --> 00:16:38,055 and going to brothels where there were lovely ladies. 247 00:16:44,055 --> 00:16:47,815 He would haunt the Cafe Anglais, where orgies were said to occur. 248 00:16:47,815 --> 00:16:52,735 He would visit the Moulin Rouge, where one of the dancers said... 249 00:16:52,735 --> 00:16:55,295 "Hello Wales, will you pay for my champagne?" 250 00:16:55,295 --> 00:16:57,615 And he did pay for her champagne. 251 00:16:58,735 --> 00:17:04,815 There was this very celebrated brothel called Le Chabanais, where Bertie visited. 252 00:17:04,815 --> 00:17:09,215 There is a chair that was in that brothel 253 00:17:09,215 --> 00:17:13,175 that was displayed to people as Bertie's chair. 254 00:17:15,015 --> 00:17:20,175 And it's something that has been designed to allow a man 255 00:17:20,175 --> 00:17:24,495 to indulge in the sexual practices that he wanted to 256 00:17:24,495 --> 00:17:27,856 without breaking into a sweat really. 257 00:17:27,856 --> 00:17:30,296 He was at one point known as Kingky, 258 00:17:30,296 --> 00:17:33,496 which is kind of awful, isn't it? 259 00:17:33,496 --> 00:17:37,016 He would sit in this most incredible bath 260 00:17:37,016 --> 00:17:41,736 that had this sort of swan-necked, mythological figure 261 00:17:41,736 --> 00:17:46,216 and he would sit in this bath with a with a lady of his choice, 262 00:17:46,216 --> 00:17:49,416 not with water in there, but with champagne. 263 00:17:49,416 --> 00:17:52,896 And I guess they would both sit there and listen to the sound 264 00:17:52,896 --> 00:17:55,056 of his father spinning in his grave. 265 00:17:57,056 --> 00:18:01,896 Bertie's frequent trips to the Continent allowed him to indulge his peccadilloes 266 00:18:01,896 --> 00:18:04,536 at a safe distance from his wife, his mother 267 00:18:04,536 --> 00:18:07,136 and the prying eyes of the British press. 268 00:18:08,896 --> 00:18:13,576 But the Prince had also begun to play dangerous games closer to home. 269 00:18:13,576 --> 00:18:15,616 And in 1870, 270 00:18:15,616 --> 00:18:19,696 his secret life was exposed in a most shocking public manner. 271 00:18:21,816 --> 00:18:23,896 My great-great-grandmother 272 00:18:23,896 --> 00:18:26,736 was rather bubbly and rather frivolous, 273 00:18:26,736 --> 00:18:30,336 but obviously rather amusing company. 274 00:18:30,336 --> 00:18:32,496 Everyone seems to have loved her. 275 00:18:32,496 --> 00:18:34,056 She was very popular. 276 00:18:35,536 --> 00:18:39,016 In 1869, the Prince of Wales began a flirtation 277 00:18:39,016 --> 00:18:41,937 with the 21-year-old Lady Harriet Mordaunt, 278 00:18:41,937 --> 00:18:44,737 wife of a prominent Member of Parliament. 279 00:18:44,737 --> 00:18:47,817 He would pay her these afternoon visits. 280 00:18:47,817 --> 00:18:49,777 He would arrive in a hansom cab. 281 00:18:49,777 --> 00:18:54,337 He didn't come in his own carriage, so he obviously wanted to be discreet. 282 00:18:54,337 --> 00:19:00,017 Instructions were given to the servants that no-one else was to be admitted if they came to call. 283 00:19:00,017 --> 00:19:03,377 The visits usually lasted for about an hour and a half. 284 00:19:03,377 --> 00:19:07,817 There was certainly time to get up to mischief, if that's what they wanted to do. 285 00:19:10,097 --> 00:19:11,937 In the summer of 1869, 286 00:19:11,937 --> 00:19:16,817 Harriet's husband, a keen sportsman, went on a fishing trip to Norway. 287 00:19:18,057 --> 00:19:19,857 Bertie took the opportunity 288 00:19:19,857 --> 00:19:24,177 to enjoy Harriet's company at her country residence, Walton Hall. 289 00:19:25,177 --> 00:19:27,537 What they couldn't have known 290 00:19:27,537 --> 00:19:31,737 was that 1869 was a miserable year for the Norwegian salmon. 291 00:19:33,737 --> 00:19:35,897 Sir Charles was back. 292 00:19:35,897 --> 00:19:41,137 Sir Charles cuts short his holiday, arrives back unexpectedly 293 00:19:41,137 --> 00:19:45,897 he sees his wife driving around two white ponies, 294 00:19:45,897 --> 00:19:50,057 which Sir Charles had actually earlier bought from the Prince of Wales. 295 00:19:50,057 --> 00:19:53,258 And watching as they sort of prance around 296 00:19:53,258 --> 00:19:55,698 is the Prince of Wales himself. 297 00:19:55,698 --> 00:19:59,218 Sir Charles flies into the most appalling rage 298 00:19:59,218 --> 00:20:03,778 and instructs his gardener to take off these beautiful white ponies 299 00:20:03,778 --> 00:20:05,098 and shoot them, 300 00:20:05,098 --> 00:20:08,818 and he forces his wife to watch as they're shot. 301 00:20:08,818 --> 00:20:11,498 GUNSHOTS 302 00:20:12,658 --> 00:20:15,098 Bertie beat a hasty retreat. 303 00:20:15,098 --> 00:20:18,698 Soon afterwards, a tearful Harriet confessed 304 00:20:18,698 --> 00:20:23,418 to "sinning with the Prince of Wales and other men, often and in open day." 305 00:20:24,698 --> 00:20:29,658 Sir Charles was furious and vowed to divorce her. 306 00:20:29,658 --> 00:20:34,618 Bertie faced disgrace in the witness box of a public divorce trial. 307 00:20:34,618 --> 00:20:37,538 The case was front page news. 308 00:20:37,538 --> 00:20:40,898 But the Prince still had one supporter. 309 00:20:40,898 --> 00:20:45,298 Recently discovered letters reveal Princess Alexandra, at least, 310 00:20:45,298 --> 00:20:48,218 refused to see any ill in her husband. 311 00:20:52,018 --> 00:20:56,618 "My sweet Minny, I have to mention to you a terrible scandal 312 00:20:56,618 --> 00:20:59,938 "which has shocked everybody here more than words can tell. 313 00:20:59,938 --> 00:21:03,578 "It is a man, Charles Mordaunt, a terrible brute, 314 00:21:03,578 --> 00:21:05,779 "who wants to be separated from his wife, 315 00:21:05,779 --> 00:21:10,739 "who accused herself to be unfaithful, and mentioned my Bertie as her lover! 316 00:21:10,739 --> 00:21:15,459 "To see one's husband being accused in such a scandalous, mean way 317 00:21:15,459 --> 00:21:17,779 "is nearly more than one can bear." 318 00:21:19,299 --> 00:21:21,859 This was the first time for many centuries 319 00:21:21,859 --> 00:21:26,299 that the heir to the throne had appeared in court. 320 00:21:26,299 --> 00:21:28,899 I mean, this in itself was shocking, 321 00:21:28,899 --> 00:21:31,339 and the nature of the case was shocking, too. 322 00:21:31,339 --> 00:21:35,259 It opened a window. It was a revelation to the public 323 00:21:35,259 --> 00:21:38,419 of the goings on in the Prince of Wales's circles. 324 00:21:38,419 --> 00:21:41,379 I think it was a real crisis to Victorian public opinion, 325 00:21:41,379 --> 00:21:43,419 and it really did threaten the monarchy. 326 00:21:43,419 --> 00:21:48,099 The Tory politician Lord Stanley noted: 327 00:21:48,099 --> 00:21:51,419 "Another trial like that would create a Republican Party 328 00:21:51,419 --> 00:21:53,699 "bent on putting an end to the monarchy. 329 00:21:53,699 --> 00:21:57,059 "His folly almost amounts to insanity. 330 00:21:57,059 --> 00:21:59,659 "No warning seems to have any effect." 331 00:22:02,379 --> 00:22:08,059 On 23rd February 1870, a packed courtroom heard the Prince deny 332 00:22:08,059 --> 00:22:11,339 any impropriety with Lady Mordaunt. 333 00:22:11,339 --> 00:22:16,380 But the damage to the Prince and the Crown's reputation had been done. 334 00:22:17,900 --> 00:22:21,460 As for Harriet, a worse fate awaited her. 335 00:22:21,460 --> 00:22:24,340 Her family are thrown into a complete panic 336 00:22:24,340 --> 00:22:28,500 by the prospect of this sort of very lurid case. 337 00:22:28,500 --> 00:22:31,620 But her father decides that the thing to do 338 00:22:31,620 --> 00:22:33,860 is to say that Harriet's insane. 339 00:22:35,380 --> 00:22:39,540 They were very keen to preserve the family honour, 340 00:22:39,540 --> 00:22:42,900 and although you might think that it's a rather odd way to go about it 341 00:22:42,900 --> 00:22:45,860 by establishing you've got a lunatic in the family, 342 00:22:45,860 --> 00:22:49,580 somehow that was considered preferable to the fact 343 00:22:49,580 --> 00:22:52,380 that you had this very promiscuous young woman. 344 00:22:53,900 --> 00:22:57,180 Lady Harriet was committed to a lunatic asylum. 345 00:22:57,180 --> 00:23:01,300 She died there 36 years later. 346 00:23:01,300 --> 00:23:03,980 It's an absolutely appalling story. 347 00:23:03,980 --> 00:23:07,340 It is like something straight out of Wilkie Collins, 348 00:23:07,340 --> 00:23:09,940 a true gothic horror story. 349 00:23:09,940 --> 00:23:15,020 The fate of a young woman who steps out of line was very grim indeed, 350 00:23:15,020 --> 00:23:20,540 if that suited society and the men around her. 351 00:23:21,580 --> 00:23:26,100 Bertie's reckless behaviour had contributed to the ruin of a young woman 352 00:23:26,100 --> 00:23:30,941 and tarnished of the monarchy's image at a time of growing Republican sentiment. 353 00:23:32,861 --> 00:23:35,501 The jeers Bertie suffered in public 354 00:23:35,501 --> 00:23:38,341 were as nothing to the roasting he was about to receive 355 00:23:38,341 --> 00:23:39,941 from his mother. 356 00:23:40,941 --> 00:23:45,021 "He really is more and more careless, 357 00:23:45,021 --> 00:23:47,301 "being dragged into the dirt and mixed up 358 00:23:47,301 --> 00:23:51,261 "in one of the most disgusting and scandalous trials on record." 359 00:23:53,781 --> 00:23:58,181 Victoria was appalled to learn that the Prince of Wales was behaving badly. 360 00:23:58,181 --> 00:24:01,581 But on the other hand, the other side of it 361 00:24:01,581 --> 00:24:06,381 was that the more intelligence she could accumulate of Bertie's bad behaviour, 362 00:24:06,381 --> 00:24:10,221 the more she could say, well, he's absolutely not fit to be King. 363 00:24:10,221 --> 00:24:13,061 You know, he's a wastrel, he's completely no good. 364 00:24:13,061 --> 00:24:16,621 I must stay with all the power, he cannot be trusted. 365 00:24:16,621 --> 00:24:19,821 Queen Victoria wasn't very good at sharing responsibility. 366 00:24:19,821 --> 00:24:22,461 She didn't even like doing it with Albert very much, 367 00:24:22,461 --> 00:24:24,581 who she absolutely adored. 368 00:24:24,581 --> 00:24:29,901 So, she really did her best to try and prevent him from having 369 00:24:29,901 --> 00:24:34,821 any kind of serious duty, and some of the heads of the administrations 370 00:24:34,821 --> 00:24:36,621 that she dealt with agreed. 371 00:24:36,621 --> 00:24:40,261 Disraeli didn't want a sensitive document of any sort 372 00:24:40,261 --> 00:24:43,022 to be put into Bertie's hands, and he was probably right. 373 00:24:43,022 --> 00:24:47,982 Because when he was given things, he had the tendency to kind of pass them around at dinner parties 374 00:24:47,982 --> 00:24:50,062 and ask the guests what they thought. 375 00:24:50,062 --> 00:24:52,982 You know, this wasn't really very useful behaviour. 376 00:24:54,502 --> 00:24:56,942 Bertie grew increasingly disgruntled 377 00:24:56,942 --> 00:24:59,422 at his mother's refusal to share power. 378 00:24:59,422 --> 00:25:03,542 He poured out his anger in a letter to his private secretary. 379 00:25:05,062 --> 00:25:10,102 "The game is not to let me see any interesting or important dispatches. 380 00:25:10,102 --> 00:25:13,862 "This has been going on for years under successive governments 381 00:25:13,862 --> 00:25:17,462 "and it would be far better if the Foreign Office sent me no more, 382 00:25:17,462 --> 00:25:20,422 "which is preferable to the rubbish they do send." 383 00:25:24,182 --> 00:25:27,862 Because he's not trusted with this kind of material, 384 00:25:27,862 --> 00:25:30,142 he is more or less infantilised. 385 00:25:30,142 --> 00:25:35,862 Cartoons of the period will depict him as a baby in a pram. 386 00:25:35,862 --> 00:25:39,462 He's not going to be allowed to involve himself much 387 00:25:39,462 --> 00:25:41,582 in the serious business of state, 388 00:25:41,582 --> 00:25:44,502 so he turns pleasure into a serious business 389 00:25:44,502 --> 00:25:46,342 and commits himself to that. 390 00:25:46,342 --> 00:25:49,662 So that the complexities of his social diary 391 00:25:49,662 --> 00:25:52,342 and what parties he's going to 392 00:25:52,342 --> 00:25:54,623 actually in a way take the place 393 00:25:54,623 --> 00:25:58,903 of sitting there with a red box going through the documents. 394 00:25:58,903 --> 00:26:04,343 And it's almost as if his energies are diverted into that. 395 00:26:07,703 --> 00:26:11,823 As youth gave way to an increasingly corpulent middle age, 396 00:26:11,823 --> 00:26:15,543 the Prince threw himself body and soul into a life of leisure. 397 00:26:17,303 --> 00:26:20,783 He lived an extraordinary raffish existence. 398 00:26:20,783 --> 00:26:25,383 First of all there was the food, and he had... I mean, by modern standards 399 00:26:25,383 --> 00:26:29,103 Edwardian gluttony was simply something to amaze you. 400 00:26:29,103 --> 00:26:33,543 Huge breakfasts, mid-morning meals, 401 00:26:33,543 --> 00:26:36,823 eight-course lunches, tea, 402 00:26:36,823 --> 00:26:41,903 and 12-course dinners, and then sandwiches before you go to bed. 403 00:26:41,903 --> 00:26:47,543 But in the meantime, he would go out and he would attend the music hall. 404 00:26:47,543 --> 00:26:53,783 He would go to cockpits, he would go to billiard rooms that were showing pornographic photographs. 405 00:26:53,783 --> 00:26:55,703 He would go to brothels. 406 00:26:55,703 --> 00:26:59,543 A moment would not go by when he was not diverted. 407 00:26:59,543 --> 00:27:03,583 Bertie did have this sort of gargantuan appetite for everything. 408 00:27:03,583 --> 00:27:07,904 I think a lot of it does come out of having this miserable childhood 409 00:27:07,904 --> 00:27:10,824 where he feels that things are constantly denied him. 410 00:27:13,064 --> 00:27:17,064 When he wasn't devouring a favourite midnight feast of cold roast chicken, 411 00:27:17,064 --> 00:27:20,544 Bertie continued to work his way through a series of mistresses, 412 00:27:20,544 --> 00:27:25,784 including model turned actress, Lily Langtree, and Jennie Churchill, 413 00:27:25,784 --> 00:27:28,864 mother of a pushy young lad named Winston. 414 00:27:30,624 --> 00:27:35,064 Then, at the age of 48, something odd happened. 415 00:27:35,064 --> 00:27:38,624 Perhaps for the first time in his life, Bertie fell in love. 416 00:27:41,064 --> 00:27:43,504 Daisy Warwick was the original It girl. 417 00:27:43,504 --> 00:27:48,504 A combination of beauty and charm all rolled into one. 418 00:27:48,504 --> 00:27:53,224 She was one of those society beauties that had their likeness 419 00:27:53,224 --> 00:27:57,824 put onto these little cards, and you could buy them in the shops. 420 00:27:57,824 --> 00:28:02,104 Daisy, Countess of Warwick was 20 years younger than the Prince of Wales, 421 00:28:02,104 --> 00:28:05,904 fabulously rich and thoroughly scandalous. 422 00:28:05,904 --> 00:28:09,984 At her grand homes, Warwick Castle and Easton Lodge in Essex, 423 00:28:09,984 --> 00:28:13,584 she was famous for hosting lavish entertainments. 424 00:28:13,584 --> 00:28:19,025 Daisy Warwick was incredibly extravagant. She spent money like there was no tomorrow. 425 00:28:19,025 --> 00:28:25,345 She had her own railway branch built to bring guests to her house, luxury everywhere, 426 00:28:25,345 --> 00:28:32,665 and these were the famously racy house parties where Daisy sort of organised adultery really. 427 00:28:32,665 --> 00:28:35,825 There would be flowers on your dressing table, 428 00:28:35,825 --> 00:28:38,305 there were buttonholes for the men, 429 00:28:38,305 --> 00:28:41,305 there were printed lists of who was there for dinner, 430 00:28:41,305 --> 00:28:43,385 and who you were to take in to dinner. 431 00:28:43,385 --> 00:28:45,665 You didn't touch each other, 432 00:28:45,665 --> 00:28:49,385 but there were ways of little notes being left by the candles 433 00:28:49,385 --> 00:28:53,945 saying, "Come and see me, I'm in room...whatever." 434 00:28:53,945 --> 00:29:00,545 It was at one such house party in 1886 that Bertie was introduced to the Countess. 435 00:29:02,305 --> 00:29:05,905 Although their 10-year affair would become common knowledge, 436 00:29:05,905 --> 00:29:10,225 documentary evidence of the relationship has been scarce. 437 00:29:10,225 --> 00:29:11,785 Until now. 438 00:29:11,785 --> 00:29:15,945 The affair with Daisy Warwick was incredibly intense, 439 00:29:15,945 --> 00:29:21,105 but until recently nobody actually knew what went on between them. 440 00:29:21,105 --> 00:29:25,825 It was a puzzle because there was absolutely no evidence at all. 441 00:29:25,825 --> 00:29:29,225 But then, looking at the diary that Bertie kept, 442 00:29:29,225 --> 00:29:34,026 I suddenly realised there was a symbol that I didn't understand 443 00:29:34,026 --> 00:29:38,066 which seems to be occurring increasingly frequently, 444 00:29:38,066 --> 00:29:39,786 sometimes twice a day. 445 00:29:41,306 --> 00:29:44,066 Bertie's diaries reveal the philandering Prince 446 00:29:44,066 --> 00:29:46,266 was using code to cover his tracks. 447 00:29:46,266 --> 00:29:48,306 A letter D written backwards, 448 00:29:48,306 --> 00:29:52,546 signifying his increasingly frequent liaisons with Daisy. 449 00:29:54,706 --> 00:29:57,186 It's possible to see from this to see very clearly 450 00:29:57,186 --> 00:29:59,866 that this was an incredibly intense relationship. 451 00:29:59,866 --> 00:30:01,786 He would meet Daisy twice a day. 452 00:30:01,786 --> 00:30:04,546 He'd have tea with her every day when she was in London. 453 00:30:04,546 --> 00:30:08,226 He'd meet her in the morning, they'd have intimate suppers in the evening. 454 00:30:08,226 --> 00:30:12,866 He called her, "My darling Daisy wife." It was a sort of second marriage. 455 00:30:15,266 --> 00:30:19,866 I think she could fairly be described as the the love of his life. 456 00:30:19,866 --> 00:30:22,506 He wrote to her several times a day, 457 00:30:22,506 --> 00:30:25,786 he saw her all the time and went to stay with her. 458 00:30:25,786 --> 00:30:29,866 I think he was strongly, strongly devoted to her. 459 00:30:33,666 --> 00:30:38,146 "My own lovely little Daisy, tomorrow I go to the races. 460 00:30:38,146 --> 00:30:41,226 "I have two horses running, but I fear they are not any good. 461 00:30:41,226 --> 00:30:44,987 "Don't forget, my darling, to expect me from five on Sunday next. 462 00:30:44,987 --> 00:30:47,027 "I only wish it could be before. 463 00:30:47,027 --> 00:30:51,547 "Goodnight and God keep you, my adored little Daisy." 464 00:30:53,387 --> 00:30:56,587 Bertie's wife, Princess Alexandra 465 00:30:56,587 --> 00:30:58,907 had long since learned to turn a blind eye 466 00:30:58,907 --> 00:31:02,267 to her husband's stable of mistresses. 467 00:31:02,267 --> 00:31:07,307 But in the Countess of Warwick, she had come up against a real rival. 468 00:31:09,187 --> 00:31:10,667 Daisy Warwick 469 00:31:10,667 --> 00:31:14,707 was unlike the professional beauties and slightly marginal society ladies. 470 00:31:14,707 --> 00:31:19,867 Daisy Warwick was right in the middle of the court, a court insider. 471 00:31:19,867 --> 00:31:23,707 She was the mistress with whom Alex couldn't cope 472 00:31:23,707 --> 00:31:27,147 because she threatened Alex's whole world. 473 00:31:27,147 --> 00:31:31,227 Alexandra becomes increasingly distant and she punishes Bertie 474 00:31:31,227 --> 00:31:33,267 by going abroad and by staying abroad. 475 00:31:33,267 --> 00:31:35,147 She goes and stays with her family. 476 00:31:35,147 --> 00:31:40,747 She cables back laconically, "I'm so sorry, have got delayed." 477 00:31:40,747 --> 00:31:46,307 Doesn't show any indication of coming back. This was public humiliation for Bertie. 478 00:31:46,307 --> 00:31:50,947 Bertie had brought his relationship with the Princess to breaking point. 479 00:31:50,947 --> 00:31:53,587 Alexandra needn't have worried. 480 00:31:53,587 --> 00:31:57,988 The Prince's prodigious energies had begun to fail him 481 00:31:57,988 --> 00:31:59,628 in one crucial area. 482 00:31:59,628 --> 00:32:02,868 We know Bertie's health was poor at the time of his relationship 483 00:32:02,868 --> 00:32:03,948 with Daisy Warwick. 484 00:32:03,948 --> 00:32:07,548 And it's also true that in his diary, 485 00:32:07,548 --> 00:32:11,988 Bertie does talk about electrical treatment. 486 00:32:13,508 --> 00:32:16,388 Now what could this be? 487 00:32:16,388 --> 00:32:22,428 One of the things that a male patient might have visited a doctorto be cured for 488 00:32:22,428 --> 00:32:25,188 was impotence problems. 489 00:32:25,188 --> 00:32:28,548 Because it was thought that a shock of electricity 490 00:32:28,548 --> 00:32:33,468 could restore the body's sort of vital energy. 491 00:32:34,588 --> 00:32:37,708 For Daisy, I think the physical side of their relationship 492 00:32:37,708 --> 00:32:38,988 was hugely important. 493 00:32:38,988 --> 00:32:41,068 I think that she loved sex. 494 00:32:41,068 --> 00:32:47,068 She always worrying about it and wanting to meet people. 495 00:32:47,068 --> 00:32:51,268 I found a draft of her letters that said she "mated naturally 496 00:32:51,268 --> 00:32:53,828 "with physical strength or beauty." 497 00:32:55,748 --> 00:32:59,708 Beauty had never been an attribute Bertie could lay claim to. 498 00:32:59,708 --> 00:33:02,868 Now his strength was in question. 499 00:33:02,868 --> 00:33:06,628 In 1898, the still highly-charged Countess 500 00:33:06,628 --> 00:33:09,509 fell pregnant by another man. 501 00:33:09,509 --> 00:33:11,349 To Alexandra's delight, 502 00:33:11,349 --> 00:33:15,549 Daisy wrote to the Prince, ending the 10-year affair. 503 00:33:15,549 --> 00:33:18,029 Her letter is long-since destroyed. 504 00:33:18,029 --> 00:33:21,349 But Bertie's reply is on record. 505 00:33:22,909 --> 00:33:27,309 "My lovely little Daisy, you could not help, my loved one, 506 00:33:27,309 --> 00:33:30,829 "writing to me as you did, though it gave me a pang. 507 00:33:30,829 --> 00:33:33,629 "I gave your letter to the Princess. 508 00:33:33,629 --> 00:33:35,469 "She was moved to tears, 509 00:33:35,469 --> 00:33:38,349 "and said that out of evil, good would come." 510 00:33:42,109 --> 00:33:46,709 The Prince of Wales once again faced an empty existence, 511 00:33:46,709 --> 00:33:48,709 but all that was about to end. 512 00:33:50,989 --> 00:33:53,829 The Queen's health was failing. 513 00:33:55,349 --> 00:33:56,589 In January 1901, 514 00:33:56,589 --> 00:34:00,949 Bertie was summoned to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. 515 00:34:00,949 --> 00:34:05,309 For the first time in his life, he entered his mother's bedroom. 516 00:34:06,829 --> 00:34:09,749 When she saw Bertie, her eldest son, 517 00:34:09,749 --> 00:34:15,029 in whom for a great deal of her life she had not been best pleased, 518 00:34:15,029 --> 00:34:17,349 I don't think he expected to receive 519 00:34:17,349 --> 00:34:21,270 quite the warmth that some of his siblings got. 520 00:34:21,270 --> 00:34:23,550 But she completely opened her arms to him, 521 00:34:23,550 --> 00:34:27,870 by saying "Bertie" and pulling him forward and hugging him. 522 00:34:27,870 --> 00:34:29,830 And he was reduced to tears. 523 00:34:31,790 --> 00:34:34,550 The reconciliation had come too late. 524 00:34:34,550 --> 00:34:38,830 Minutes later his mother lapsed into unconsciousness and died. 525 00:34:38,830 --> 00:34:43,310 The moment Bertie had been waiting for all his life had arrived. 526 00:34:50,790 --> 00:34:54,110 The accession of an overweight 59-year-old philanderer 527 00:34:54,110 --> 00:34:57,430 hardly thrilled the public imagination. 528 00:34:58,950 --> 00:35:03,550 Few sovereigns have come to the throne with lower expectations. 529 00:35:03,550 --> 00:35:05,910 But from his first command as King, 530 00:35:05,910 --> 00:35:10,390 Bertie was determined to send a signal of intent to his doubters. 531 00:35:12,790 --> 00:35:17,150 He must have recognised that his sense of insecurity 532 00:35:17,150 --> 00:35:21,550 was also reflected by the whole nation's and Empire's view 533 00:35:21,550 --> 00:35:25,830 that he was not quite up to job as she, his mother, had been. 534 00:35:26,950 --> 00:35:30,750 And when he went down to join the yachts that were lined up 535 00:35:30,750 --> 00:35:35,111 to take Queen Victoria's body back from the Isle of Wight to Portsmouth, 536 00:35:35,111 --> 00:35:36,791 he looked up in the rigging 537 00:35:36,791 --> 00:35:39,751 and saw that the Royal Standard was flying at half mast. 538 00:35:39,751 --> 00:35:42,631 And he asked the captain why that was the case, 539 00:35:42,631 --> 00:35:46,311 and the captain, perplexed, said, "Well, the Queen is dead." 540 00:35:46,311 --> 00:35:49,391 And he said "No, the King is alive." 541 00:35:50,711 --> 00:35:54,311 And I think that was a sort of florid way where, 542 00:35:54,311 --> 00:35:59,511 with the spectacular nature of using a symbol, 543 00:35:59,511 --> 00:36:02,711 he was able to show that no, this show goes on. 544 00:36:07,911 --> 00:36:10,071 On January 21st, 1901, 545 00:36:10,071 --> 00:36:12,751 Bertie followed the late Queen's funeral cortege 546 00:36:12,751 --> 00:36:17,831 on its journey towards its final resting place at Windsor. 547 00:36:17,831 --> 00:36:22,111 But even as the King bade farewell to his mother, Bertie was determined 548 00:36:22,111 --> 00:36:28,551 to break with the traditions of her reign and forge his own distinctive brand of monarchy. 549 00:36:30,071 --> 00:36:31,831 After the death of Prince Albert, 550 00:36:31,831 --> 00:36:35,071 Queen Victoria had led an increasingly reclusive existence 551 00:36:35,071 --> 00:36:37,151 behind the walls of Windsor Castle 552 00:36:37,151 --> 00:36:40,151 and her forbidding Highland retreat, Balmoral. 553 00:36:44,072 --> 00:36:46,432 These 20 seconds of film footage, 554 00:36:46,432 --> 00:36:50,272 showing Victoria taking a carriage ride at Balmoral, 555 00:36:50,272 --> 00:36:53,392 are one of the rare glimpses into royal life 556 00:36:53,392 --> 00:36:55,672 the Queen was prepared to allow. 557 00:36:57,192 --> 00:37:02,832 There was great and growing deal of concern about Victoria's withdrawal from public life. 558 00:37:02,832 --> 00:37:07,712 Obviously, her mourning was profound and everyone respected that, 559 00:37:07,712 --> 00:37:09,912 but when it went on, and on, and on 560 00:37:09,912 --> 00:37:12,832 and she didn't open Parliament, she didn't appear, 561 00:37:12,832 --> 00:37:17,992 it fed into a growing Republican move within Britain. 562 00:37:17,992 --> 00:37:22,832 There were these royals taking salaries and not doing the job. 563 00:37:22,832 --> 00:37:29,072 In the 1870s, Britain came closer to becoming a Republic than at any time 564 00:37:29,072 --> 00:37:32,752 in the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries. 565 00:37:32,752 --> 00:37:35,632 The Queen had become extremely unpopular. 566 00:37:35,632 --> 00:37:39,832 She was viewed as being a kind of selfish, extravagant figure, 567 00:37:39,832 --> 00:37:43,952 just sulking in her castle, doing nothing for the country. 568 00:37:46,392 --> 00:37:51,992 In stark contrast to his mother, the Prince of Wales couldn't have been more visible. 569 00:37:53,512 --> 00:37:59,393 Bertie's response to this criticism was basically to say that the monarch needs to be seen in public. 570 00:37:59,393 --> 00:38:05,353 To go and open hospitals, lay foundation stones, to cut tapes, 571 00:38:05,353 --> 00:38:10,033 to launch ships - all of the things that members of the Royal Family do today. 572 00:38:10,033 --> 00:38:14,433 By doing these things, I think Bertie was conscious that he was fighting back. 573 00:38:14,433 --> 00:38:18,113 That this was a new role that the monarchy must perform. 574 00:38:19,953 --> 00:38:21,913 Installed in Buckingham Palace, 575 00:38:21,913 --> 00:38:24,313 and free from his mother's apron strings, 576 00:38:24,313 --> 00:38:26,913 the new King threw himself into preparations 577 00:38:26,913 --> 00:38:28,513 for a dazzling coronation 578 00:38:28,513 --> 00:38:32,313 that would put the Royal Family back at heart of national life. 579 00:38:35,353 --> 00:38:39,673 But Bertie's lack of experience in dealing with affairs of state 580 00:38:39,673 --> 00:38:40,953 soon began to tell. 581 00:38:44,193 --> 00:38:49,593 He was completely overwhelmed with all the things, all his projects, all the things that he wanted to do. 582 00:38:49,593 --> 00:38:52,073 The work itself was something completely new. 583 00:38:52,073 --> 00:38:55,633 All these boxes full of documents that he had no training of going through. 584 00:38:55,633 --> 00:38:59,393 He read everything. He hadn't learnt how to delegate at all. 585 00:38:59,393 --> 00:39:03,633 All the sort of detail, even down to what tune the soldiers played 586 00:39:03,633 --> 00:39:07,793 outside his window at Windsor Castle, he had to decide everything. 587 00:39:07,793 --> 00:39:11,234 He is overwhelmed by all this responsibility. 588 00:39:14,354 --> 00:39:17,674 Dangerously overweight, and chain smoking cigars, 589 00:39:17,674 --> 00:39:22,714 the King appeared to be sinking beneath the burden of responsibility. 590 00:39:22,714 --> 00:39:26,194 Doctors began to fear for his health. 591 00:39:26,194 --> 00:39:29,794 "I saw the King every morning in his bedroom at nine. 592 00:39:29,794 --> 00:39:33,714 "I found him surrounded by letters, telegrams and papers 593 00:39:33,714 --> 00:39:35,794 "which covered the whole bed. 594 00:39:35,794 --> 00:39:38,154 "He was evidently greatly perturbed 595 00:39:38,154 --> 00:39:43,074 "and drew attention to the litter around him with a gesture of despair." 596 00:39:45,114 --> 00:39:48,474 He begins to do things like eating far too much. 597 00:39:48,474 --> 00:39:54,154 I mean, he'd always eaten far too much, but to eat in a sort of bulimic way, sort of stuff. 598 00:39:54,154 --> 00:39:56,874 Alexandra complained that at meals he just stuffed. 599 00:39:56,874 --> 00:40:01,074 He never sort of chewed, he just stuffed himself with food. 600 00:40:01,074 --> 00:40:05,554 So he does seem at the beginning to be going through a kind of mental crisis. 601 00:40:07,074 --> 00:40:11,554 The King's mental crisis was about to trigger a national drama. 602 00:40:13,074 --> 00:40:15,554 A few days before the coronation ceremony, 603 00:40:15,554 --> 00:40:19,354 the King collapsed with abdominal pains. 604 00:40:19,354 --> 00:40:22,595 Doctors diagnosed acute appendicitis, 605 00:40:22,595 --> 00:40:26,755 a potentially fatal condition at the turn of the 20th century. 606 00:40:26,755 --> 00:40:29,835 The top doctors are called in to deal with it. 607 00:40:29,835 --> 00:40:32,595 It's a guy called Frederick Treves, 608 00:40:32,595 --> 00:40:38,315 the man who looked after the Elephant Man at the hospital in Whitechapel. 609 00:40:38,315 --> 00:40:44,075 Here, called in to deal with another sort of 19th century monster, 610 00:40:44,075 --> 00:40:50,755 Bertie, who is lumbering around in pain, in this sort of dyspeptic agony. 611 00:40:50,755 --> 00:40:55,515 You know, this organ is swelling inside him and demanding attention 612 00:40:55,515 --> 00:40:58,195 and causing him the most exquisite pain. 613 00:40:58,195 --> 00:41:03,195 The royal surgeon insisted that the coronation be delayed. 614 00:41:03,195 --> 00:41:05,915 The King raged. 615 00:41:05,915 --> 00:41:09,035 "The coronation cannot be postponed. 616 00:41:09,035 --> 00:41:12,075 "I cannot and will not disappoint the people. 617 00:41:12,075 --> 00:41:14,715 "I will go the Abbey at any cost. 618 00:41:14,715 --> 00:41:18,995 "I will go to the Abbey if I die there." 619 00:41:18,995 --> 00:41:22,115 Being crowned, having the holy oil poured on him, 620 00:41:22,115 --> 00:41:25,155 this was an enormously important event for him. 621 00:41:25,155 --> 00:41:28,315 The thing that he had been waiting for all his life, 622 00:41:28,315 --> 00:41:33,996 much as Prince Charles has been waiting for his mother to depart this life so that he can become King. 623 00:41:33,996 --> 00:41:39,876 This was the purpose in life, and so when he got ill and the coronation, 624 00:41:39,876 --> 00:41:43,796 all the plans had been made, all the invitations had been sent, 625 00:41:43,796 --> 00:41:45,876 all the china had been produced, 626 00:41:45,876 --> 00:41:50,236 the dishcloths, everything had been ready, and he got ill. 627 00:41:50,236 --> 00:41:52,916 And so he was determined to try and keep it up. 628 00:41:54,436 --> 00:41:56,316 The assumption of power, 629 00:41:56,316 --> 00:42:01,036 after having waited for so long, is incredibly important to him. 630 00:42:01,036 --> 00:42:03,756 But Treves presents him with an ultimatum. 631 00:42:03,756 --> 00:42:06,356 He says, if you don't postpone the coronation 632 00:42:06,356 --> 00:42:09,236 you will be going to Westminster Abbey in a box. 633 00:42:10,996 --> 00:42:13,836 Finally the King gave way. 634 00:42:13,836 --> 00:42:15,636 At noon on 24th June, 635 00:42:15,636 --> 00:42:18,716 he climbed onto an operating table in Buckingham Palace 636 00:42:18,716 --> 00:42:21,756 and submitted to the surgeon's knife. 637 00:42:24,316 --> 00:42:26,956 The flags are all up, it's all been paid for 638 00:42:26,956 --> 00:42:30,156 and everybody is made to wait while the King undergoes 639 00:42:30,156 --> 00:42:32,876 this very difficult and dangerous operation. 640 00:42:32,876 --> 00:42:36,236 You know, a lot of people died of appendicitis in this period. 641 00:42:36,236 --> 00:42:40,996 This is a new procedure, and it doesn't go well. 642 00:42:42,836 --> 00:42:47,157 The King stops breathing. The King turns blue in the face. 643 00:42:48,677 --> 00:42:53,517 And you can imagine the whole Empire holding its breath at this moment, 644 00:42:53,517 --> 00:42:58,797 because this man has been waiting for decades to be the king of this country 645 00:42:58,797 --> 00:43:02,157 and it looks as if he's not going to get his chance 646 00:43:02,157 --> 00:43:04,917 to prove what he's capable of doing. 647 00:43:11,717 --> 00:43:13,757 The doctors did their job. 648 00:43:13,757 --> 00:43:15,797 Bertie WOULD go to the Abbey, 649 00:43:15,797 --> 00:43:17,517 not in a box, 650 00:43:17,517 --> 00:43:21,117 but the golden state coach of his ancestor, King George III. 651 00:43:22,797 --> 00:43:25,317 On 9th August 1902, 652 00:43:25,317 --> 00:43:29,117 the one-time prodigal prince was crowned King Edward VII 653 00:43:29,117 --> 00:43:32,077 in a dazzling display of pomp and pageantry. 654 00:43:34,277 --> 00:43:39,357 Edward VII expected the ceremony to be delivered absolutely perfectly. 655 00:43:39,357 --> 00:43:43,917 He watched every detail of it with care and concern. 656 00:43:43,917 --> 00:43:46,437 He wanted to send a message to the whole Empire 657 00:43:46,437 --> 00:43:50,557 that they had a new emperor with all the panoply he could muster. 658 00:43:50,557 --> 00:43:54,637 And he looked into the great dressing-up box of British history 659 00:43:54,637 --> 00:43:58,758 and he opened all the files and papers going back in time 660 00:43:58,758 --> 00:44:02,358 to conjure a coronation of fabulous splendour 661 00:44:02,358 --> 00:44:05,918 in order to deliver utter impact. 662 00:44:09,558 --> 00:44:14,238 Bertie was very much ahead of his time as monarch because he was one of the first to understand 663 00:44:14,238 --> 00:44:18,278 that if the monarchy was to survive in the 20th century, 664 00:44:18,278 --> 00:44:19,918 it must be ornamental. 665 00:44:19,918 --> 00:44:24,878 It must be something that people could identify with, that they could see. 666 00:44:24,878 --> 00:44:26,878 He is becoming the kind of monarch 667 00:44:26,878 --> 00:44:29,398 that England needed in the 20th century. 668 00:44:30,918 --> 00:44:32,198 Almost overnight, 669 00:44:32,198 --> 00:44:35,958 Edward VII transformed the public face of the monarchy. 670 00:44:35,958 --> 00:44:38,918 Now he set about sweeping away the physical evidence 671 00:44:38,918 --> 00:44:40,798 of Queen Victoria's reign. 672 00:44:42,718 --> 00:44:46,758 Determined to bring light into his mother's fusty apartments, 673 00:44:46,758 --> 00:44:49,878 he hired technicians to install electric lights 674 00:44:49,878 --> 00:44:53,958 and theatre designers to transform Buckingham Palace 675 00:44:53,958 --> 00:44:55,998 into a sea of white and gold. 676 00:44:58,078 --> 00:45:02,078 Bertie embarks on a full scale clear-out. 677 00:45:02,078 --> 00:45:03,678 He marches around, 678 00:45:03,678 --> 00:45:08,078 pictures of Albert, pictures of her dogs, all of it is swept aside. 679 00:45:08,078 --> 00:45:12,479 All the old clutter that Victoria had accumulated is swept aside 680 00:45:12,479 --> 00:45:15,319 and the place is made into a palace. 681 00:45:18,759 --> 00:45:22,559 This was a statement about what he thought the monarchy should be. 682 00:45:27,039 --> 00:45:31,959 That it must be grandly, some people would say slightly vulgarly, 683 00:45:31,959 --> 00:45:35,439 but it must be grand, and it must give a sense of theatre. 684 00:45:37,119 --> 00:45:39,759 Edward VII realised that, on its own, 685 00:45:39,759 --> 00:45:42,159 the restoration of traditional ceremonial 686 00:45:42,159 --> 00:45:44,359 wasn't enough to preserve the monarchy. 687 00:45:48,319 --> 00:45:50,799 In an era of rapid social change, 688 00:45:50,799 --> 00:45:54,559 Bertie believed the Crown should move with the times. 689 00:46:01,759 --> 00:46:04,279 Edward VII was very much aware 690 00:46:04,279 --> 00:46:10,639 that the monarchy needed to reach out beyond the aristocracy to other classes. 691 00:46:10,639 --> 00:46:13,559 In a way, he is the first democratic king. 692 00:46:13,559 --> 00:46:19,759 He didn't judge people on the basis of your position in Burke's Peerage. 693 00:46:19,759 --> 00:46:25,960 He was somebody who invited Americans, Jews, people like that 694 00:46:25,960 --> 00:46:29,640 who might not have been welcomed in the most blue blooded circles. 695 00:46:32,480 --> 00:46:35,760 With trades unions and the Labour movement on the march, 696 00:46:35,760 --> 00:46:41,480 the People's King even extended the hand of friendship to sworn enemies of the Crown. 697 00:46:41,480 --> 00:46:43,960 He wants to be a symbol of unity. 698 00:46:43,960 --> 00:46:49,640 For example, there's a story about him meeting Keir Hardie, the Labour MP, 699 00:46:49,640 --> 00:46:53,560 who at the time was the absolute bete noire of all royalty 700 00:46:53,560 --> 00:46:56,200 and all the aristocracy and the Tory Party, 701 00:46:56,200 --> 00:47:00,600 because he was highly critical of privilege and very vociferous about saying so. 702 00:47:00,600 --> 00:47:02,880 And Edward VII meets Keir Hardie 703 00:47:02,880 --> 00:47:07,680 and he is extraordinarily charming and polite to this class enemy. 704 00:47:07,680 --> 00:47:11,480 And one of his friends looks at him and says rather sarcastically, 705 00:47:11,480 --> 00:47:13,560 "Well, you were very nice to him." 706 00:47:13,560 --> 00:47:16,800 And Edward turns to him very quickly and very sharply says, 707 00:47:16,800 --> 00:47:20,680 "No, you don't understand. I mean to be King of all the people." 708 00:47:22,560 --> 00:47:26,240 To the surprise of many of his contemporaries, 709 00:47:26,240 --> 00:47:30,560 Edward VII was proving himself a more than capable monarch. 710 00:47:30,560 --> 00:47:34,841 But much as he relished his new public responsibilities, 711 00:47:34,841 --> 00:47:38,721 the King saw no reason to change the private habits of a lifetime. 712 00:47:38,721 --> 00:47:42,561 Even at the sacred moment of his coronation, 713 00:47:42,561 --> 00:47:47,481 the King signalled his intent with his unconventional choice of guests. 714 00:47:47,481 --> 00:47:51,001 Pride of place in the Abbey was given to a special box 715 00:47:51,001 --> 00:47:57,281 for his lady friends past and present, including new mistress Alice Keppel. 716 00:47:57,281 --> 00:48:01,961 He made sure that all the women who were important to him, 717 00:48:01,961 --> 00:48:04,161 some of whom he slept with, 718 00:48:04,161 --> 00:48:08,881 were close at hand at this prime moment of his life. 719 00:48:08,881 --> 00:48:11,681 He made sure that those women, 720 00:48:11,681 --> 00:48:14,961 without trying put out his wife in any way, 721 00:48:14,961 --> 00:48:19,721 were accorded a position around him whenever he could provide that. 722 00:48:19,721 --> 00:48:23,721 And no less so than at the coronation. 723 00:48:23,721 --> 00:48:27,881 Edward VII was made like that. He loved his Queen, 724 00:48:27,881 --> 00:48:31,281 he adored his children, but he just needed a little bit of extra. 725 00:48:32,801 --> 00:48:38,241 Edward VII worked out for himself a new style of monarchy 726 00:48:38,241 --> 00:48:44,881 which involved a lot of public appearances, doing the ceremonial job perfectly. 727 00:48:44,881 --> 00:48:51,242 And yet at the same time, he drew a very, very strict line between that and his private life. 728 00:48:51,242 --> 00:48:54,082 I think he had this very realistic idea, 729 00:48:54,082 --> 00:48:58,362 in a way much more realistic than putting the whole Royal Family on show, 730 00:48:58,362 --> 00:49:01,362 of saying, "I'm King, I will do my job as King, 731 00:49:01,362 --> 00:49:05,042 "but the deal is that I'm allowed a private life." 732 00:49:06,562 --> 00:49:09,482 For the rest of his life, the King continued to enjoy 733 00:49:09,482 --> 00:49:15,482 all the luxuries of his position, with Mrs Keppel never far from his side. 734 00:49:15,482 --> 00:49:19,522 Queen Alexandra had little choice but to put up with her husband's behaviour. 735 00:49:19,522 --> 00:49:22,442 But nobody else seemed to mind much, 736 00:49:22,442 --> 00:49:26,842 and in 1903 the King's passion for beautiful women 737 00:49:26,842 --> 00:49:30,442 would even prove the key to his greatest political triumph. 738 00:49:32,842 --> 00:49:39,602 In the early years of the 20th century, one issue dominated British foreign policy over all others. 739 00:49:39,602 --> 00:49:44,362 Germany under the King's troublesome nephew, Kaiser Wilhelm, 740 00:49:44,362 --> 00:49:47,842 was building up its armed forces at terrifying speed. 741 00:49:52,002 --> 00:49:57,522 As Prince of Wales, Bertie had been blocked in his ambition to influence foreign and military affairs. 742 00:49:58,162 --> 00:50:03,803 Now he was determined to put his inside family knowledge to good use. 743 00:50:03,803 --> 00:50:08,523 The Kaiser is a very difficult man and very paranoid. 744 00:50:08,523 --> 00:50:12,323 Bertie understood that in a kind of intuitive way. 745 00:50:12,323 --> 00:50:15,963 Bertie understood very clearly it was not going to be possible for him 746 00:50:15,963 --> 00:50:18,803 to restrain Germany, or anybody to restrain Germany. 747 00:50:18,803 --> 00:50:20,483 And he also understood 748 00:50:20,483 --> 00:50:24,563 that the Kaiser was never going to be a reliable friend, 749 00:50:24,563 --> 00:50:26,363 so he saw, 750 00:50:26,363 --> 00:50:31,563 and saw incredibly clearly that war was a real danger. 751 00:50:31,563 --> 00:50:32,963 He didn't want war. 752 00:50:32,963 --> 00:50:36,603 But he felt if war was going to come, Britain must be prepared. 753 00:50:38,243 --> 00:50:40,963 Britain needed allies. 754 00:50:40,963 --> 00:50:43,843 Finding them wasn't going to be easy. 755 00:50:43,843 --> 00:50:49,323 The recent war in South Africa against the Boers had made Britain highly unpopular in Europe. 756 00:50:52,363 --> 00:50:53,603 But the King had a plan. 757 00:50:55,043 --> 00:51:02,883 In May 1903, he set out on a mission of diplomacy to one of the favourite haunts of his youth, Paris. 758 00:51:06,363 --> 00:51:09,003 Bertie didn't tell them his plans. 759 00:51:09,003 --> 00:51:13,524 He makes this a completely secret agenda. 760 00:51:13,524 --> 00:51:16,124 He didn't even tell his secretaries. 761 00:51:16,124 --> 00:51:20,364 And when the Royal train arrives and Bertie gets out at the station, 762 00:51:20,364 --> 00:51:24,044 he's met with incredibly hostile French crowds. 763 00:51:24,044 --> 00:51:27,484 Bertie turns up in Paris, a place where the British 764 00:51:27,484 --> 00:51:32,404 are incredibly unpopular at the time, and when he arrives he's booed. 765 00:51:33,924 --> 00:51:37,444 There are newspaper editorials saying "Go back to England" 766 00:51:37,444 --> 00:51:43,724 and basically listing every English insult since the burning of Joan of Arc. 767 00:51:44,884 --> 00:51:53,684 Faced with a French mob, the English King's love of Parisian culture and women was about to pay dividends. 768 00:51:53,684 --> 00:52:01,124 He goes to the theatre, and the audience in the theatre is incredibly unfriendly and sullen. 769 00:52:01,124 --> 00:52:07,844 And to the dismay of the French police, the King insists during the interval on going into the foyer 770 00:52:07,844 --> 00:52:11,844 and he spots an actress, and he goes up to her. 771 00:52:11,844 --> 00:52:14,484 And kisses her hand and says, 772 00:52:14,484 --> 00:52:19,684 "Mademoiselle, when I last saw you in London you were superb." 773 00:52:21,804 --> 00:52:25,285 Edward really does have a magic touch. 774 00:52:25,285 --> 00:52:29,245 Immediately the rumour mill in Paris puts this about, 775 00:52:29,245 --> 00:52:32,365 he'd been incredibly charming to this famous actress. 776 00:52:32,365 --> 00:52:36,965 The next day he walks out into the crowds, he shakes hands, 777 00:52:36,965 --> 00:52:41,085 he says how he loves Paris, he looks happy, 778 00:52:41,085 --> 00:52:44,405 and he charms the pants off the French. 779 00:52:44,405 --> 00:52:48,285 The mood changes like this, you know, it just flips. 780 00:52:50,205 --> 00:52:53,525 Suddenly, there's outbursts of cheering wherever he goes. 781 00:52:53,525 --> 00:52:58,845 There's a real sense that he is one of them. 782 00:52:58,845 --> 00:53:00,925 You need to remember, 783 00:53:00,925 --> 00:53:03,685 no English politician spoke French like that. 784 00:53:03,685 --> 00:53:07,685 none of them knew Paris like that and that is critically important 785 00:53:07,685 --> 00:53:10,405 in causing a huge change in French opinion. 786 00:53:10,405 --> 00:53:14,125 The King's weakness for French wine, women and song 787 00:53:14,125 --> 00:53:19,125 had helped him pave the way for a crucial strategic alliance with the old enemy. 788 00:53:20,565 --> 00:53:23,565 There's a sort of French love of an English Milord, 789 00:53:23,565 --> 00:53:30,965 I mean, Milord is what they called English, upper class aristocrats who came to Paris to have a good time. 790 00:53:30,965 --> 00:53:36,566 And as Prince of Wales, Edward VII had come a lot in the '80s and '60s and '70s 791 00:53:36,566 --> 00:53:40,886 and was famous for his great enjoyment of the theatre, 792 00:53:40,886 --> 00:53:43,686 and also his use of French brothels. 793 00:53:43,686 --> 00:53:48,566 And I'm sure that Milord reputation 794 00:53:48,566 --> 00:53:52,326 didn't do him any harm when he came back in 1903 as King. 795 00:53:53,966 --> 00:53:58,686 Next, Bertie threw his support behind admirals arguing 796 00:53:58,686 --> 00:54:04,886 for a new generation of warships, the Dreadnoughts, to keep pace with the German naval threat. 797 00:54:08,886 --> 00:54:12,006 The King was, if anything, ahead of his ministers 798 00:54:12,006 --> 00:54:18,206 in realising how vitally important it was that the British Navy must, at all costs, be built up. 799 00:54:18,206 --> 00:54:22,566 And I think that the King made a very serious contribution 800 00:54:22,566 --> 00:54:26,526 in pressing his ministers to build new, better ships, 801 00:54:26,526 --> 00:54:28,126 to look to the future. 802 00:54:30,166 --> 00:54:35,246 It was a future the 69-year-old King would not live to see. 803 00:54:35,246 --> 00:54:39,486 The 12-course dinners and the trademark cigars were catching up with him. 804 00:54:41,206 --> 00:54:44,646 Already seriously ill with chronic emphysema, 805 00:54:44,646 --> 00:54:48,326 in 1910 the King suffered a series of heart attacks. 806 00:54:50,367 --> 00:54:54,767 As he slipped in and out of consciousness at Buckingham Palace, 807 00:54:54,767 --> 00:54:56,567 he was joined by two women - 808 00:54:56,567 --> 00:55:00,607 his long-suffering wife, Queen Alexandra, 809 00:55:00,607 --> 00:55:03,527 and his mistress, Alice Keppel. 810 00:55:09,887 --> 00:55:16,807 Alexandra remained devoted to Bertie, very close to him throughout his life. 811 00:55:16,807 --> 00:55:18,727 After Bertie's death, 812 00:55:18,727 --> 00:55:22,167 the undertakers were always making appointments 813 00:55:22,167 --> 00:55:24,047 to come and put the body into a coffin 814 00:55:24,047 --> 00:55:27,487 and it was always announced in The Times that this was going to happen. 815 00:55:27,487 --> 00:55:31,407 And day after day, Alexandra would say, "No, I can't bear to part with him." 816 00:55:31,407 --> 00:55:37,487 People who came said that for the first time she had Bertie to herself. 817 00:55:39,367 --> 00:55:43,727 For eight days the Queen clung to her husband. 818 00:55:43,727 --> 00:55:46,847 But even in death, Bertie was a People's King. 819 00:55:48,367 --> 00:55:50,927 In recognition of his unique popularity, 820 00:55:50,927 --> 00:55:54,527 it was decided that his body would lie in state at Westminster 821 00:55:54,527 --> 00:55:56,607 for the public to pay its respects. 822 00:55:56,607 --> 00:56:00,167 The first British Monarch ever to do so. 823 00:56:01,808 --> 00:56:06,368 I think only when King Edward VII died 824 00:56:06,368 --> 00:56:11,728 did the British people realise how much they liked having him around. 825 00:56:13,488 --> 00:56:16,648 He'd been around for so long, 826 00:56:16,648 --> 00:56:19,048 and then suddenly he'd gone, 827 00:56:19,048 --> 00:56:22,248 and so they surged out in their hundreds of thousands 828 00:56:22,248 --> 00:56:25,528 to show they mourned his passing. 829 00:56:30,288 --> 00:56:35,048 Queues of people, humble people, poor people, 830 00:56:35,048 --> 00:56:39,088 they snaked round Westminster, something like seven mile queues. 831 00:56:40,688 --> 00:56:44,888 This really does show to a much greater extent than when Queen Victoria died, 832 00:56:44,888 --> 00:56:49,648 just how successful he had been in making this connection 833 00:56:49,648 --> 00:56:52,408 between the monarchy and the people. 834 00:56:55,488 --> 00:57:02,328 He is this sort of libertine figure. He does seem like a fragment of an earlier age. 835 00:57:02,328 --> 00:57:05,728 You can imagine him careering about 18th century London 836 00:57:05,728 --> 00:57:07,808 with a big wig on and a beauty spot. 837 00:57:07,808 --> 00:57:13,889 And I think in a way, although he seems to be the absolute opposite of his father, 838 00:57:13,889 --> 00:57:18,809 he also seems like the right man for the job in the early part of the 20th century. 839 00:57:20,329 --> 00:57:26,689 Edward VII's creation of a modern public monarchy, together with his fast-living lifestyle, 840 00:57:26,689 --> 00:57:32,969 earned him the affection of his people, and raised the Royal Family to new levels of popularity. 841 00:57:34,489 --> 00:57:38,569 His vision of monarchy as a showy theatre of pageantry 842 00:57:38,569 --> 00:57:40,289 continues to this day. 843 00:57:49,409 --> 00:57:54,689 But the example the King set in his personal life would be rejected. 844 00:57:54,689 --> 00:57:59,329 Bertie's descendants would attempt, with mixed results, 845 00:57:59,329 --> 00:58:03,969 to return to the family values of his mother, Queen Victoria. 846 00:58:09,009 --> 00:58:12,369 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 847 00:58:12,369 --> 00:58:14,409 Email subtitling@bbc.co.uk 77412

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