Frankie Boyle's Farewell to the Monarchy explained

Genre:Documentary
Starring:Frankie Boyle
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Runtime:47 minutes
Channel:Channel 4

Frankie Boyle's Farewell to the Monarchy is a 2023 television documentary that aired on Channel 4 about British kings and queens. Scheduled around Charles III's coronation, Boyle explores the reigns of William the Conqueror, Richard III, Henry VIII, Lady Jane Grey, Elizabeth I and Queen Victoria.

Synopsis

In light of Charles III's coronation in 2023, Frankie Boyle explores the history of the British monarchy. He makes jokes linking historical royals with the modern-day institution, focusing on accusations of sexual violence by Prince Andrew and Prince Harry's reduced role as a royal.

Boyle speaks to an expert on combat about William the Conqueror and the Battle of Hastings. He draws connections between William's views on land ownership and the Crown Estate, including Regent Street and much land in Scotland, which makes the royals "the world's largest landowners". Moving onto Richard III, the documentary details portrayals of the king in Shakespeare's play and his 2010s exhumation. Boyle visits Hever Castle, an occupancy of Anne Boleyn, to talk about Henry VIII, and consults with experts on Lady Jane Grey's execution as a teenager, within a fortnight of becoming queen.

He sees Elizabeth I as establishing the symbolic role of the monarchy and consults with Emma Dabiri on the monarchy's role in slavery and colonialism. Boyle believes that institutional misogyny of the monarchy can be seen in Queen Victoria's reign.

Production

A 75-minute documentary titled Frankie Boyle: Monarchy was announced in August 2022, as part of Channel 4's Truth or Dare series to commemorate its 40th anniversary. Set to be Boyle's first Channel 4 programme in 10 years, it was shelved following the death of Elizabeth II in September 2022.[1] [2]

The 60-minute Farewell to the Monarchy premiered on 30 April 2023, in a Sunday 10p.m. timeslot, shortly before Charles III's coronation.[3] [4] It aired on Channel 4 alongside other specials critical of the monarchy, including the two-part Andrew – The Problem Prince, an episode of The Windsors and a repeat broadcast of .[5] [6]

The British regulator Ofcom dismissed over 100 complaints about the programme, most focused on a line in which Boyle encouraged viewers to "raise a bottle" to the royal family that was "filled with petrol and a burning rag".[7]

Reception

The programme won the Entertainment category of the 2023 British Academy Scotland Awards (BAFTA Scotland).[8]

Stuart Jeffries of The Guardian gave the show five out of five stars, lauding it for speaking "comedy truth to power" and having an "excellent take on the monarchy". Jeffries suggested the programme could continue as a series and Boyle could explore the Scottish monarchy.[9] Chortles Steve Bennett rated it four stars, finding its critical perspective "welcome" in contrast to other media coverage of the coronation. Bennett critiqued its format as an "odd hybrid" of stand-up comedy, republican polemic and historical documentary.[10] The Heralds Alison Rowat described the humour as predictable, though sometimes breathtaking, and the documentary as "pacey" and "enlightening".[11] Writing for Radio Times, Jack Seale commented that the documentary had many factual insights and showed Boyle's "uncompromising" anti-royalist perspective.[12]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frankie Boyle's New World Order back but Monarchy special in doubt. British Comedy Guide. Richardson. Jay. 14 September 2022. 16 September 2022.
  2. Web site: Frankie Boyle focuses on the monarchy for Channel 4 special. British Comedy Guide. Richardson. Jay. 21 August 2022. 16 October 2022.
  3. Web site: Frankie Boyle praised for delivering 'home truths' in Farewell to the Monarchy. The Independent. Vassell. Nicole. 1 May 2023. 6 May 2023.
  4. Web site: TV tonight: Frankie Boyle's fist-bitingly funny swipe at the royal family. The Guardian. Richardson. Hollie. 30 April 2023. 6 May 2023.
  5. Web site: Channel 4 announces programmes to counter Coronation 'forelock-tugging'. The Daily Telegraph. Simpson. Craig. 16 April 2023. 6 May 2023. limited.
  6. Web site: King's coronation: Frankie Boyle to host Farewell to the Monarchy show. The National. 18 April 2023. 6 May 2023.
  7. Web site: Ofcom clears Frankie Boyle's royal family gag. Chortle. 8 June 2023. 23 December 2023.
  8. Web site: Winners announced: 2023 BAFTA Scotland Awards . BAFTA Scotland. 19 November 2023. 23 December 2023.
  9. Web site: Frankie Boyle's Farewell to the Monarchy review – looks like he's blown his chance of an OBE. The Guardian. Jeffries. Stuart. 30 April 2023. 6 May 2023.
  10. Web site: Frankie Boyle's Farewell To The Monarchy. Chortle. Bennett. Steve. 1 May 2023. 6 May 2023.
  11. Web site: Frankie Boyle; Charles R; The Windsors; Blue Lights, reviewed. The Herald. Rowat. Alison. 6 May 2023. 6 May 2023.
  12. Web site: Frankie Boyle's Farewell to the Monarchy. Radio Times. Seale. Jack. 6 May 2023.