Though The Crown‘s third season won’t premiere on Netflix until 2019, we’re already starting to piece together a picture of what to expect from Olivia Colman’s on-screen reign.
Details of plot and cast are scarce so far: as yet, Colman’s is the only name to receive an official announcement from the show’s producers, while Helena Bonham Carter has been as good as confirmed as the next Princess Margaret in an Instagram post from outgoing Crown star Vanessa Kirby.
What we do know, however, is that season three will introduce a twenty-something Prince Charles, Camilla Parker-Bowles and, briefly, a young Lady Diana Spencer, as major players as the drama’s focus expands to encompass a new generation of royals.
The apocryphal story of Camilla’s first encounter with the Prince of Wales has the pair meeting at a polo match in 1971, with the future Duchess of Cornwall reminding Charles that their ancestors had history: Alice Keppel, her great-grandmother, was a famous mistress of King Edward VI.
Whether or not you believe this to be Camilla’s exact opening line, she and the Prince soon struck up a relationship, despite her not being considered the ‘right’ sort of woman by Palace elders, one which would persist, on and off, through their respective marriages (to Andrew Parker-Bowles in 1973, and Diana in 1981.)
It’s not hard to see why playing the People’s Princess might be an appealing proposition for any young actress, but the role of Camilla is a trickier one.
The Charles-Camilla-Diana dynamic, after all, will cast a shadow over at least two future seasons of The Crown: for this royal love triangle to work, each of its three points must be compelling enough to avoid falling into a black hole of ’80s tabloid headlines (a fate that Ryan Murphy’s Feud: Charles and Diana will either side-step or lean into when it tackles the same territory).
Whether the show’s producers chose to pick an established name, a rising star or a relative newcomer, we have plenty of suggestions…
So, who will be The Crown’s Camilla Parker-Bowles?
Sophie Turner
The Game of Thrones star has already been touted as a top choice for The Crown‘s Princess of Wales, but she’d be a strong contender when it comes to picking Diana’s arch rival, too.
What’s important is our familiarity with 21-year-old Sophie: we’ve spent seven seasons rooting for her as Sansa Stark, so for better or worse, we’d probably be better disposed to her Camilla than, say, a total unknown in the same role.
Saoirse Ronan
A disclaimer: after watching three-time (yes, that’s three-time) Oscar nominee Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird, we’re firmly of the opinion that she should be cast in absolutely everything – The Crown included. Like the show’s departing Queen, Claire Foy, the 23-year-old can convey a seemingly unlimited number of emotions with just a glance, and while she’d be equally qualified to play a young Lady Di, she’d certainly make the role of Camilla a compelling one.
Juno Temple
Honestly, we’re surprised that Juno Temple hasn’t already joined the cast of The Crown, given that she has a habit of popping up in each and every British period drama made from 2007 onwards. It only seems right, then, that she should get a look in for season three. Given that she’s done the whole posh school girl thing in St Trinian’s and Wild Child, it’s not such a stretch to see her as a young, polo-mad Camilla.
Laura Carmichael
Downton Abbey alum Laura Carmichael not only bears a striking resemblance to the Duchess of Cornwall, but she’s well-versed in playing roles that involve challenging aristocracy (looking at you, Lady Edith Crawley).
Bonnie Wright
Remember Bonnie Wright? She played Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter franchise that you, like us, may or may not have watched on repeat every other holiday break. The role of young Camilla could be the big break post-Potter Bonnie could be waiting for…
Lucy Boynton
Maybe it’s just us, but couldn’t British actress Lucy Boynton pass as a younger, Hollywood-ified Camilla in this snap from the premiere of Murder on the Orient Express? Passing resemblances aside, the 24-year-old already has one Netflix role to her name (in the short-lived psychological drama Gypsy), along with a string of films (including the brilliant but overlooked musical Sing Street and the forthcoming Freddie Mercury biopic, Bohemian Rhapsody).
Florence Pugh
BAFTA Rising Star nominee Florence Pugh is a formidable and captivating presence on screen – just watch her in Lady Macbeth for proof. Next up are roles in Fighting with My Family, a WWE dramedy co-starring Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, John Le Carré adaptation The Little Drummer Girl and a BBC take on King Lear, so she’s nothing if not versatile.
Holliday Grainger
Holliday Grainger is one of those stars who are reliably great in all that they do, whether that’s bringing a much-needed human element to the screen version of posh boy drama The Riot Club or as an upbeat foil to the grizzled lead detective in the BBC’s Strike series. She has even already acted alongside rumoured The Crown actress Helena Bonham Carter in Cinderella. Fun fact: she hails from Manchester, just like Claire Foy.