Home movie footage from the Royal Family’s private archives is to feature in special new BBC documentary on the King to mark his coronation.
The 60-minute special ‘Charles R: The Making of a Monarch’, which will be aired on Sunday, also includes never seen before film from the rushes of the infamous 1969 documentary ‘Royal Family’.
The programme, which followed the family for over a year and was watched by three quarters of the population at the time, was made to humanise what Prince Philip worried was becoming an ‘over-stuffy’ monarchy.
But Queen Elizabeth got cold feet as she worried it could destroy their mystique and it has – officially at least – never been shown in public again.
Uniquely the documentary will be narrated not by a voice-over actor but by King Charles III himself, using excerpts taken from existing interviews and speeches over the years.
One of the scenes from the upcoming documentary (pictured) shows the then Prince Charles during an engagement at the Royal Mint
Spanning the seven decades of his life, the BBC Studios-produced film offers a rare and deeply personal glimpse into the royal’s life as heir to the throne, and now king.
Its producers have been given access to reels of film held at the BFI National Archive, responsible for the preservation and digital restoration of the Royal Collection of films.
The team were also behind 2022’s hugely popular Elizabeth: The Unseen Queen to mark the late Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.
Five never before seen images from the programme were released today/last night including shots of the then Prince flying a plane solo.
Other images portray a visit to the Royal Mint with Queen Elizabeth II, a trip to Malta when he was young, and a shot of The Prince decorating a Christmas tree at Windsor.
Footage yet to be released from the 1969 documentary shows the Royal Family enjoying a bonfire at Sandringham, sitting down to dinner onboard The Royal Yacht Britannia and taking a hovercraft.
Clips from the Royal Family’s private home movie footage will illuminate The Prince’s formative years by capturing his early love of nature, gardening and animals, as well as other rare footage of Queen Elizabeth II driving her Land Rover.
Audiences will hear The King discuss his childhood years, including his memories of Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation, as well as his school days, adolescence, and investiture as Prince of Wales.
Among the previously unseen footage in the documentary is this clip showing Charles (right) and the Queen (left) visiting the Royal Mint
The documentary will feature Charles talking about his childhood, including his memories of the Queen’s coronation among other memories (pictured here flying a plane solo in 1968 in Malta)
This image shows a young Charles in Malta in 1968. It is one of the five previously unseen images released today
According to the BBC’s head of history, the documentary ‘will give audiences a fresh insight’ into the ‘remarkable’ life of the monarch
It also contains recollections of The King’s military service and personal commentary of his commitment to charitable work, as well as his private passions and the role of the institution he now heads up.
Simon Young, the BBC’s Head of History said: ‘It’s a real privilege to be trusted with such rare, unseen archive material to create a new and distinctive portrait of someone so famous and photographed.
‘As Their Majesties’ Coronation approaches, this film will give audiences a fresh insight into his remarkable life.’
Claire Popplewell, Creative Director for BBC Studios Events Productions added: ‘This documentary brings audiences a treasure trove of scenes filmed across seven decades in the life of The King.
‘Unique and unseen moments with contemporary archive sources and the spoken words of His Majesty, Charles R: The Making of a Monarch tells the story of how a Prince became a King.’
As the BBC points out, some of these unseen moments come from the rushes of the 1969 documentary ‘Royal Family’.
After airing a handful of times on television, the film was hidden away from the eyes of the public for years.
In 2021, the full 110 minutes were leaked onto YouTube, with thousands of people watching footage of the documentary.
Speaking about the leak, a royal source told the Telegraph: ‘This is a matter for the BBC. We always exercise our copyright where we can. From time to time, things pop up on the internet that should not be there. We will assume it’s going to be taken down.’
It was quickly removed, which once again opened the debate around why the Palace has been so secretive around the footage.
There is some debate over whether the Firm wanted the film locked away because Buckingham Palace feared it ‘let the magic out’ about the royals, or whether it wasn’t aired again simply due to a copyright issue.
What isn’t up for debate was how keenly watched the documentary was.
The documentary was viewed by 45million people when first broadcast, ahead of Prince Charles’ investiture, and was initially created to help the Windsors connect with their subjects.
It showed the family in a number of scenarios.
One scene shows Elizabeth rejecting a speech her Private Secretary has drafted and complaining: ‘There’s too much, you know, history.’
In another, Margaret meets the 1968 British Olympic team and asks them where they train.
The documentary also showed more mundane details of daily life, such as how the family had lunch, at 1pm, with food being pushed on a trolley from the Buckingham Palace basement through more than ‘200 yards of corridors’ and then up in a lift two floors to the Queen’s residence.
The idea for the film came from the Palace’s royal press secretary William Heseltine.
In a recent series of The Crown, the Netflix drama inaccurately portrayed the film being the brainchild of Prince Philip.
But in fact, it was the communications specialist who suggested the movie, in a bid to improve public opinion of the monarchy.
He felt it could encourage public support for an organisation that was increasingly seen as out-of-touch.
It was first aired in June 1969. The programme was met with praise and proved so popular that it was aired again that same year and once more in 1972.
But it hasn’t been broadcast in full since, though short clips from the documentary were made available as part of an exhibition for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee 2012.
However, for the most past the original documentary remains under lock and key.
The Queen (pictured in the documentary) took part in the film on the advice of press secretary William Heseltine, who felt it might encourage support for the monarchy
Researchers who want to watch it have to pay to view it at BBC HQ, only after getting permission from Buckingham Palace first.
Sharing his view of the documentary in 1969, then BBC 2 controller David Attenborough wrote to its producer-director.
He said: ‘You’re killing the monarchy, you know, with this film you’re making. The whole institution depends on mystique and the tribal chief in his hut,’ continued Attenborough, then BBC 2 controller.
‘If any member of the tribe ever sees inside the hut, then the whole system of the tribal chiefdom is damaged and the tribe eventually disintegrates.’
Charles R: The Making of a Monarch will debut on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on Sunday April 30.
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