New York
Much has been made of the royal proportions of Josh OâConnorâs ears: Like those of Prince Charles, whom he plays in 'The Crown,' they stick out.
But ears do not a king-in-waiting make. Rather, the actor concluded, itâs his posture.
Mostly upright when he debuted in Season 3, playing Charles as a Cambridge student, OâConnor has since charted the princeâs emotional state through a progressively pronounced stoop, inching his neck forward as expectations from the House of Windsor gnawed at Charlesâ contentment. By the time Mummy â Queen Elizabeth II, played by Olivia Colman â places the coronet upon her sonâs head at his investiture as the Prince of Wales, you wonder if he has the strength to support it.
âIt has to do with the more weight on his shoulders, the more it brings him down, the more his neck comes out,â OâConnor said. âBy the end heâs pathetic, sort of like a crumpled man.â
It gets even worse in Season 4 of 'The Crown,' now on Netflix, which brings a less sympathetic Charles, surly and sniveling as he bridles at his marriage to the limelight-stealing Princess Diana (Emma Corrin) while not so secretly yearning for Camilla Parker Bowles (Emerald Fennell), the love that never quite got away. (And who will presumably marry Charles in some future season, as she did in real life in 2005.)
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For OâConnor, 30, this season is the end of his run in a role he never really sought. A self-described liberal left-winger, the actor declined to read for Charles when he was initially asked.
âI thought, I canât add anything to this,â he said in a video call from London. âIâm a republican. Iâm not interested in the royal family.â
But he eventually acquiesced, and Peter Morgan, the showâs creator and writer, presented him with a scene. In it, Charles compares himself to a character in Saul Bellowâs âDangling Man,â waiting to be drafted because going to war will give his life meaning.
âAnd then he says, âIâm essentially waiting for my mother to die in order for my life to take meaning,ââ OâConnor said. âI read that line and I was like, âWell, thatâs enough to get your teeth into.ââ
The current season finds the prince increasingly exasperated with these circumstances, in terms of both the unhappy marriage that was thrust upon him and his continuing insignificance within the realm.
âWe were telling a kind of unheard, voiceless Charles,â OâConnor said. âBut thatâs the beauty of it, thatâs where he struggles: He doesnât feel listened to.â
Charles isnât imagining things. As his mother icily informs him in one gutting encounter, no one wants to hear his voice. No one.
OâConnor and Colman had a running joke that all of their scenes together were variations on the same sad theme. âCharles comes in, says, âMummy, I need to talk to you,â and she says, âNo,â and then he leaves,â he explained. Over and over.
As the queen, Colman said, âmy job was to be quite strong, but I found it quite hard not to give him a cuddle.â Method actors they were not. âThe second theyâd say cut, weâd go: âShould we have a cup of tea? There are biscuits on the craft table!â Weâd much rather have a giggle.â
âHeâs one of the most beautiful actors to work opposite,â she added. âHeâs out there with the greats, in my mind.â
OâConnor grew up happily as the middle of three brothers in Cheltenham, a spa town on the edge of the Cotswolds. He trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, whose alums include two of his idols, Pete Postlethwaite and Daniel Day-Lewis.
âMaybe it was a match made in heaven, I donât know,â he said. âBut I did love it.â
Not long after graduation, small TV roles in âPeaky Blindersâ and âRipper Streetâ trickled in. Eventually he snagged a lead as the oldest son in âThe Durrells in Corfu,â a period drama by ITV and Masterpiece, about a British familyâs move to the titular Greek island in the 1930s.
But his real breakthrough came in Francis Leeâs 2017 feature debut, âGodâs Own Country.â OâConnor is scarcely recognizable as Johnny Saxby, a gay, brooding binge drinker toiling on his familyâs Yorkshire farm, whose calcified heart is pried open by a Romanian migrant worker.
Lee had invited OâConnor to audition based on a photograph. âI liked his ears a lot,â he said. But the tape OâConnor sent was worrisome.
âHe delivered this incredibly brilliant portrayal of an emotionally repressed and difficult man, and I thought he must just be playing himself,â he said. âAnd that concerned me slightly.â
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When the two finally met, Lee was shocked âbecause in walks this incredibly funny, upbeat, polite, middle-class boy, which was a million miles away from the character that he was going to play,â he said. âHeâs one of those rare actors that is a real shape-shifter.â
âGodâs Own Countryâ earned OâConnor a British Independent Film Award for best actor in 2017. Two years later, he won another for âOnly You,â about a couple struggling with infertility.
OâConnor debuted in âThe Crownâ in late 2019. Morgan canât recall having considered anyone else for this iteration of Charles â or noticing OâConnorâs ears, although he imagines he must have.
Rather, âI was drawn to his sensitivity and the fact that he was complex but likable, and I just felt instantly intrigued,â Morgan said. âAnd the minute he started doing some readings for us, it was a no-brainer. He was a list of one.â
OâConnor had watched âThe Crownâ in support of his good friend Vanessa Kirby, who played Princess Margaret in Seasons 1 and 2. âAnd then I became a loyal fan,â he said. While he has difficulty aligning his belief in a classless society with the royal family, he doesnât think âThe Crownâ glamorizes them, despite its pageantry and splendor.
âWhat Peter does is he strips all that back,â he said. âItâs about humans who struggle and have very odd relationships with their parents and power and politics. Thatâs the juice.
âBut I think you can have those beliefs and have great respect and affection and love even for these people. I think the queen is an extraordinary woman. Time after time, lots of men have failed, and this one woman in power has been consistent and remained dutiful and generally apolitical.
âIn that sense, I have huge respect for her â and for Charles, to be honest. I mean, Charles is another level of someone whoâs literally been waiting his entire life for this moment that still hasnât come.â