The celebrity told about the image of the death scene of the princess
Everyone is aware of the fate of Princess Diana’s spontaneous 1997 trip to Paris. However, Elizabeth Debicki had to overcome that understanding in order to represent the People’s Princess in her last days on The Crown. “Beyond the character, as an individual performing their duties, I would experience profound sadness over the narrative we were narrating when I left the set to go home, for example. She tells ELLE.com, “But while I was inside of it, I am just very present in the moment.”
The Emmy candidate describes the experience as odd while attempting to avoid giving anything away. It was important to her that there were moments of genuine warmth and kindness, and a genuine humanness to someone who is going through something that, as Peter [Morgan, the creator] portrayed in the script, is just sort of an unbearable merry-go-round of choices that are being made for her, and that she really just wants to be able to do this simple yet almost completely out-of-reach thing, which is to call her kids, have an evening somewhere, and then leave.
However, she made sure to highlight the things that people find most endearing about Diana. And due to what we understand to be a fairly realistic depiction of that media frenzy, doing those tasks simply becomes impossible, regardless of how many hours it was.