The Netflix series starring Meghan Markle and Prince Harry will debut on that day.
The first volume of Harry & Meghan, a six-episode docuseries on the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, will start streaming on Netflix on December 8. The second volume will debut on December 15.
The close-up first look at the documentary series will highlight the couple’s love story’s highs and lows. It’s incredibly difficult to look back on it now and wonder, “What on earth happened?” Harry says in a new trailer that was released in conjunction with the launch date.
Harry says, “There’s a hierarchy in the family.” “You know, leaks happen, but stories are also deliberately planted.”
It’s a dishonest game, he claims.
I realized they’re never going to protect you, Meghan continues.
Harry remarks, in reference to his late mother Princess Diana: “I was in fear. I didn’t want the past to be repeated.”
No one is fully aware of the reality, Harry continues. The whole truth is known to us.
Harry & Meghan. A Netflix Global Event.
Volume I: December 8
Volume II: December 15 pic.twitter.com/WpFzVEC7Yx— Netflix (@netflix) December 5, 2022
Liz Garbus, an Oscar-nominated director whose earlier films focusing on famous people include Love, Marilyn, What Happened, Miss Simone?, and Becoming Cousteau, is the creator of the idea.
The series “explores the covert days of their early relationship and the difficulties that drove them to feel compelled to step back from their full-time responsibilities in the institution,” according to Netflix.
The series “does more than illuminate one couple’s love story; it paints a picture of our world and how we treat each other with commentary from friends and family, most of whom have never spoken publicly before about what they witnessed, and historians who discuss the state of the British Commonwealth today and the royal family’s relationship with the press.”
In September 2020, Meghan, 41, and Harry, 38, agreed to a multi-year contract with Netflix. The Sussex’s production center, later known as Archewell Productions, was said to be exclusively producing documentaries, docuseries, feature films, scripted series, and children’s programming for the well-known platform at the time, according to The New York Times.
In an interview with Variety in October, Meghan gave a brief overview of what viewers may anticipate seeing in the docuseries.
The Archetypes host said of working with Garbus: “It’s good to be able to trust someone with our tale — a seasoned director whose work I’ve long liked — even if it means it may not be the way we would have presented it. “But that isn’t the reason we’re informing you. Our narrative will be seen through their eyes since we trusted them with it.”
“It’s fascinating. My husband has never had a job in this field before “She went on, mentioning the entertainment industry. “Having worked on Suits, I find it to be incredibly inspiring to be surrounded by so much creative energy and to witness how people can collaborate while expressing their individual viewpoints. That has been a lot of fun.”
When asked if their love story would be included in the upcoming special in her August interview with The Cut, Meghan answered in a similarly evasive manner.
At the time, she remarked, “What’s so hilarious is I’m not trying to be cagey,” and went on to praise Garbus’ success. “I never read the news. So I’m not sure what’s been verified. I’ll tell you right now that Liz Garbus is amazing.”
At the Invictus Games in The Hague in April, cameras were spotted following Meghan and Harry about. They probably did this to document the prince’s adaptive sports competition for injured, ill, and wounded service members and veterans.
The Invictus Games Foundation announced in April 2021 that Archewell Productions would be producing a Netflix docuseries about the historic event. The project’s working title, Heart of Invictus, would track participants as they trained for the 2022 Games in The Hague.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will have a busy winter because Prince Harry’s memoir will be released on January 10, 2023. The prince will tell his story in Spare, a 416-page memoir where Harry reflects with “raw, unflinching honesty,” Penguin Random House announced late last month.