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Review: 'Queen Charlotte' is sexier than 'Bridgerton' Did King George III have a mental illness? There is a historical myth about her that persists (read more here), that was part of what inspired the depiction of the character in both series. In real life, there is no evidence that this Queen Charlotte, the wife of King George III (whom you remember from your seventh-grade textbook on the American revolution), was Black or descended from Black people. In the series, Charlotte (played by India Amarteifio in one timeline and Golda Rosheuvel in a later one and in "Bridgerton"), is described as "very brown" by her mother-in-law and of the "Moorish race" (Amarteifio identifies as mixed race). We separate the history from the fantasy in the six-episode Netflix series. The series' narrator, Lady Whistledown (Julie Andrews), says as much herself in the opening moments, calling it "fiction inspired by fact."Īmid all the fiction in "Charlotte" – which tells the origin story of a real British queen but takes extensive liberties – there are a few facts sprinkled in here and there. And while it's a great romance and soap opera, it's not a very good history lesson. Netflix's "Bridgerton" spinoff "Queen Charlotte" (now streaming) has captured our hearts and binge-watching hours since its May 4 premiere on the streaming service. Spoiler alert! The following contains significant details from Netflix's "Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story."
