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The White Princess

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Book by Philippa Gregory
For the television series based on the book, seeThe White Princess (TV series).

The White Princess
First UK edition cover
AuthorPhilippa Gregory
Audio read byBianca Amato
LanguageEnglish
SeriesThe Cousins' War
GenreHistorical fiction
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Publication date
1 August 2013
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media type
Pages544
ISBN978-0-85720-751-7
Preceded byThe Kingmaker's Daughter 
Followed byThe King's Curse 

The White Princess is a 2013historical novel byPhilippa Gregory, part of her seriesThe Cousins' War. It is the story ofElizabeth of York, daughter ofEdward IV of England andElizabeth Woodville, and later wife ofHenry VII and mother ofHenry VIII.[1][2]

In October 2013,The Telegraph reported thatStarz was planning to develop aminiseries based onThe White Princess. This adaptation would be a sequel toThe White Queen, a 10-part 2013 television series which adapted Gregory's novelsThe White Queen (2009),The Red Queen (2010) andThe Kingmaker's Daughter (2012). Production on the eight episode limited series began in June 2016.[3]

Plot

[edit]

Richard III has been killed in theBattle of Bosworth, and his devastated niece and loverElizabeth of York must marry Richard's conquerorHenry Tudor, the new king of England, to finally end the longrunningWars of the Roses between the houses ofLancaster andYork. As queen, Elizabeth can assure the safety of her mother, the Queen DowagerElizabeth, and the rest of her family. However, she believes that Henry—who openly despises her for her former alliance with his fallen enemy—may be responsible for the presumed murder of her brotherEdward, the former heir. As suggested by his mother, the imperiousMargaret Stanley, Henry insists that Elizabeth get pregnant by him before he commits himself to marry her. She does, and they wed. Elizabeth bears him a son,Arthur, but Henry's rule remains less than secure. He imprisons youngEdward (called "Teddy"), the son ofGeorge, Duke of Clarence and a potential York claimant to the throne, in theTower of London as public support for the fallen Yorks seems to surge. Henry discovers that Elizabeth's mother has been secretly rallying and financing York supporters in exile, and sends her toBermondsey Abbey. Elizabeth is torn between her mother's Yorkist cause and her own loyalty to Henry and their son, and is tortured by a secret. Though the Dowager Queen has purposely kept her daughter in the dark about her plots, Elizabeth knows that her mother had sent her younger brotherRichard to safety in Flanders, while an impostor went missing and was presumably murdered in the Tower.

Elizabeth and Henry have a daughter,Margaret and a son,Henry. Elizabeth's mother dies. Rebellion builds as a boy claiming to be the lost Richard appears and is acknowledged byMargaret, Duchess of Burgundy, the sister of Elizabeth's father,Edward IV. His claim is embraced byJames IV of Scotland and other monarchs, and lords supposedly loyal to Henry begin to escape to Scotland. With the forces against him growing and his support waning, a volatile Henry grows increasingly mistrustful of Elizabeth and her extended family. Despite the odds, Henry is ultimately triumphant and takes the pretender Richard prisoner. The charismatic young man renounces his claims and is welcomed at the English court asPerkin Warbeck, kept unharmed until Henry can determine how best to deal with him. Warbeck is clearly the presumed dead York heir, but Elizabeth dare not acknowledge him. Meanwhile, Henry has fallen in love with Warbeck's wifeKatherine Huntly, who indulges the king's attentions to keep her husband alive. On his own merits, Warbeck begins to gain allies and influence at court, so when an assassination attempt on Warbeck fails, Henry first imprisons him in the Tower with Teddy, and then arranges for them both to be caught trying to escape. Charged as traitors, Warbeck and Teddy are executed.

Critical reception

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In 2013, Helen Brown ofThe Telegraph wrote that "withThe White Princess, [Gregory] makes a psychologically involving page-turner of the reign that Shakespeare skipped." Of Elizabeth Woodville and Margaret Beaufort, the title characters of Gregory'sThe White Queen (2009) andThe Red Queen (2010) respectively, Brown wrote, "it’s good to have them back." She also praised the novel's support of the controversial theory that Elizabeth of York's brother Richard survived his imprisonment in theTower of London.[1]Publishers Weekly noted, "Gregory believably depicts this mostly forgotten queen, her moody husband, and the future Henry VIII, shown here as a charmingly temperamental child. Something about the Tudors brings out the best in Gregory’s portraiture."[4]

AudioFile magazine gave itsEarphones Award to theaudiobook recording ofThe White Princess, calling the novel "thrilling" and "richly imagined" and noting that "Philippa Gregory and [narrator]Bianca Amato have another winner."[5]

Adaptation

[edit]
Main article:The White Princess (TV series)

The 10-part 2013 television seriesThe White Queen adapted Gregory's previous novelsThe White Queen (2009),The Red Queen (2010) andThe Kingmaker's Daughter (2012).[6] The series was broadcast onBBC One in the United Kingdom and onStarz in the United States, and featuresFreya Mavor as a young Elizabeth of York.[6] Despite initial plans for a second series, on 20 August 2013 the BBC announced they were not commissioning one, possibly due to the lukewarm reception the series received.[7]

However, in October 2013,The Telegraph reported that Starz was planning to develop a sequel miniseries calledThe White Princess, based on Gregory's novel.[8] Starz CEO Chris Albrecht announced in January 2014 that the network was working withWhite Queen screenwriter Emma Frost on the project.[9] Starz would produce theWhite Princess miniseries without involvement from the BBC.[9] Gregory confirmed that the project was underway in August 2015.[10] On 7 February 2016, Gregory announced onFacebook that the sequel was officially confirmed to be in production, with the scripts being written.[11] Production on the eight episode limited series began in June 2016.[12][13]

References

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  1. ^abBrown, Helen (1 August 2013)."The White Princess by Philippa Gregory: Review".The Telegraph. Retrieved7 October 2014.
  2. ^"The White Princess (Official site)". PhilippaGregory.com. Retrieved7 October 2014.
  3. ^Bradley, Laura (13 June 2016)."Two MoreGame of Thrones Actors Just Joined Starz'sThe White Queen Follow-Up".Vanity Fair. Vanity Fair. Retrieved30 December 2016.For those who already dearly miss Essie Davis as Lady Crane, who got assassinated in the show's most recent installment, great news: you'll soon see her again inThe White Princess.
  4. ^"The White Princess".Publishers Weekly. 6 May 2013. Retrieved8 October 2014.
  5. ^"Audiobook Review:The White Princess (2013)".AudioFile. Retrieved8 December 2014.
  6. ^ab"BBC – Media Centre:The White Queen, a new ten-part drama for BBC One".BBC. 31 August 2012. Retrieved6 October 2014.
  7. ^"Reign over forThe White Queen".Belfast Telegraph. 20 August 2013. Retrieved20 August 2013.
  8. ^Walker, Tim (17 October 2013)."The White Queen is to make a comeback".The Telegraph. Retrieved6 October 2014.
  9. ^abAndreeva, Nellie (10 January 2014)."TCA: Starz's Chris Albrecht On 2014 Plans,White Queen Sequel,Magic City Demise".Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved8 December 2014.
  10. ^Walker-Arnott, Ellie (10 August 2015)."A sequel toThe White Queen is definitely in the works".Radio Times. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  11. ^"Philippa Gregory".Facebook. 7 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  12. ^Bradley, Laura (13 June 2016)."Two MoreGame of Thrones Actors Just Joined Starz'sThe White Queen Follow-Up".Vanity Fair. Retrieved14 June 2016.
  13. ^Petski, Denise (13 June 2016)."The White Princess: Essie Davis, Joanne Whalley, More Join Cast".Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved14 June 2016.

External links

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TheWideacre trilogy
Plantagenet and
Tudor novels
Novels
Adaptations
Other novels
Non-fiction
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