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Watch Princess Margaret drag a dictator for 31 seconds

Watch Princess Margaret drag a dictator for 31 seconds
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Look, I like a good period drama. While I was psyched for the main highlights like Lady D, “The Crown’s” fourth season had another thing coming for us: an Imelda Marcos namedrop.

Played by actual-aristocrat-slash-Death-Eater Helena Bonham-Carter, Queen Elizabeth II’s sister Princess Margaret recalls a certain state visit to Manila in season four’s third episode, “Fairytale.” To set the scene, this all happens just before the young Lady Diana enters the scene—with most of the British royals standing in a circle, chatting.

“So there we are, in Manila, in the middle of a state banquet, when who barges into the room?” Margaret says. Yes, you guessed it—“None other than Imelda. Marcos. She makes a beeline straight for me, saying she’s desperate to show me her—wait for it—”

“Shoe collection,” Princess Anne interjects. Margaret corrects her to say “shell collection,” causing the others to cackle, wondering if she misunderstood Marcos.

“So now the whole dinner party decants into a convoy of limousines, we’re rushed through the streets of Manila,” Margaret continues. “Yes, in Madame Marcos’ private aquarium, where she keeps a vast portrait of herself wearing…”

The anecdote featured in “The Crown” was based on Princess Margaret’s state visit to the Philippines back on April 2, 1980. Margaret did get the grand tour of Manila, dropping by Luneta Park, children’s hospitals and the British Embassy, with a Malacañang dinner party as one highlight of the visit. As to whether Margaret got the ol’ tour of Marcos’ shell collection, it can only be surmised from the one photo below—which does show Marcos showing off something, at least.

While the internet is raving about the so-called shade Princess Margaret gave the then-First Lady, let’s not shrug off the fact that the whole situation is the Spider-Man meme dressed as a historical drama. Just as some have raised the scene’s possible racist undertones, the British monarchy isn’t exactly innocent, with the whole monarchy itself criticized for being an “absurd” and “anachronistic” system. And while we’re all for a good diss when it comes to dictators—we really shouldn’t be so quick to say “stan!” to the next person who drags ’em.

Read more:

Glimpse at the childhood of a ‘socially detached’ Imelda Marcos in this film
A power-obsessed Imelda Marcos takes the spotlight in this new documentary
These award-winning docus reveal the real state of our nation

Still from “The Crown”

 


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