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The final episode of Harry and Meghan’s Netflix series reveals the moment Prince Harry shared a text from his brother Prince William with his wife amid the fallout from their ‘truth bomb’ interview with Oprah Winfrey.
In footage filmed in the days after the bombshell discussion with Winfrey in March last year, Harry is seen showing his wife his phone, before Meghan says: ‘Wow, H just got a text from his brother.’
Earlier in the episode, Harry accuses the Palace of ‘institutional gaslighting’ and likens his and Meghan’s experience to that of his mother, Princess Diana.
The episode opened with a video selfie in which the Duke of Sussex says ‘We are on the freedom flight’ as they fly from Canada to Los Angeles in March 2020, after they split from the royal family.
The final episode of Harry and Meghan’s Netflix series reveals the moment Prince Harry shared a text from his brother Prince William with his wife amid the fallout from their ‘truth bomb’ interview with Oprah Winfrey
In footage filmed in the days after the bombshell discussion with Winfrey in March last year, Meghan is seen reading out the statement Buckingham Palace gave in response whilst on the phone to their friend Tyler Perry. Harry then shows her the message from his brother
The three new episodes come after last week’s initial releases, which were largely focused on Harry and Meghan’s personal lives and their complaints about the media.
Footage in the final episode of Harry & Meghan apparently filmed by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex shows them preparing for Archie’s first birthday, making a balloon arch and baking, followed by a picture of the toddler in his highchair, wearing a party hat and surrounded by his mother, father and grandmother, Doria Ragland.
‘We were there for six weeks and no-one knew,’ Harry said, referring to Tyler Perry’s house.
‘My family still thought I was in Canada.’
Footage filmed by Meghan on the day of Archie’s birthday shows Harry sitting outside the house in front of an impressive sunset.
Meghan can be heard saying: ‘And it’s not our home, but we’re grateful.’
Harry then says: ‘But there’s a world in which it could be our home.’
He then laughs before Meghan turns the camera around to film them as they share a kiss.
In the aftermath of the racism claims made in their interview with Oprah, Buckingham Palace released a statement on behalf of the Queen which said ‘some recollections may vary’ but insisted the couple remained much loved members of the family.
Meghan is seen in the episode reading out the statement whilst on the phone to their friend Tyler Perry, before Harry shows her his phone as it displays a message from his brother.
Meghan says: ‘What am I looking at? Wow. H just got a text from his brother.’
After Meghan ends the call with Perry, Harry puts his arms above his head and says: ‘I wish I knew what to do,’ before his wife comes and hugs him.
The episode also footage from days before, when William was asked by reporters if he had spoken to his brother following the Oprah interview, and he said: ‘I haven’t spoken to him yet, but I will do.’
William also insisted: ‘We are very much not a racist family.’
Asked later in the episode about the Oprah interview, Meghan says: ‘Oprah had originally reached out to us through the communications director when we were at Kensington Palace.
‘There was excitement. I remember that.’
Harry says: ‘We were here for a year until we actually did it. And sitting down with Oprah was a reaction to what had happened that year.’
Meghan says: ‘The more distance that came between us having a smaller role with the institution and coming over here, the more of a vacuum was being built, and people just genuinely didn’t understand why we left.’
Harry then says: ‘We thought that was the beginning of our year of transition which turns out was anything but a transition. It was just a beating.’
The final episode refers to reports about bullying allegations against Meghan, with the timing of that reporting shortly before the Oprah Winfrey interview.
James Holt, executive director of Harry and Meghan’s Archewell Foundation, tells the show: ‘The timing of the bullying story has even been admitted by the journalist that wrote it that it was done explicitly because of the Oprah interview.’
Harry adds: ‘I can’t think what my mum went through all those years ago by herself. To see this institutional gaslighting that happens… it’s extraordinary.
‘And that’s why everything that’s happened to us was always going to happen to us. Because if you speak truth to power, that’s how they respond.’
After Meghan ends the call with Perry, Harry puts his arms above his head and says: ‘I wish I knew what to do,’ before his wife comes and hugs him
The sixth episode shows footage of when Prince William was asked if he has spoken to his brother in the aftermath of the Oprah Winfrey interview. William then insisted: ‘We are very much not a racist family’
The final three Netflix episodes also reveal:
Elsewhere in the final three episodes, Harry accused Prince William of having ‘screamed and shouted’ at him in front of his father and grandmother when he tried to thrash out a deal to leave the UK.
Near the end of the final episode of the documentary, Harry and Meghan talk about their children Archie and Lilibet.
Meghan said: ‘A part of what’s beautiful here is the freedom to have family moments out in the world.
‘And I want our kids to be able to do that and to be able to travel and to fall in love. I just want them to be happy.’
Harry said: ‘The world that they see is how I would love the world to be.
‘They don’t worry about, they don’t need to worry about the things that we worry about.’
In episode five, Harry also accused his father of lying to his face and Her Majesty saying nothing at the now infamous ‘Sandringham Summit’.
He said: ‘It was terrifying to have my brother scream and shout at me and my father say things that just simply weren’t true. And my grandmother, you know, quietly sit there and take it all in’.
The Duke of Sussex also claimed that the royal institution ‘blocked’ Harry from seeing his grandmother, the Queen, after they decided to step back.
And in episode four, Meghan said it was ‘really important’ for the King to walk her down the aisle at her wedding to Harry.
The Duchess recalled thinking about taking her own life, saying: ‘It was like “All of this will stop if I am not here”.’
Harry also said it was ‘heartbreaking to see his brother’s communications office ‘copy’ the behaviour of their father’s by ‘trading’ stories with the press.
Harry also opens up about his grandfather Prince Philip’s funeral in the sixth episode.
He says: ‘I was actually really happy for my grandfather. He went quietly. He went peacefully. He went happily.’
Asked about what it was like returning to the UK for the funeral, Harry adds: ‘It was hard, especially spending time having chats with my brother and my father who just were very much focussed on the same misinterpretation of the whole situation.
‘So none of us really wanted to have to talk about it at my grandfather’s funeral, but we did.
‘I’ve had to make peace with the fact that I’m probably never going to get genuine accountability or a genuine apology.
‘You know, my wife and I, we’re moving on. We were focused on what’s coming next.’
Meghan speaks about wanting ‘peace’.
She says: ‘Part of that, for me, is reclaiming, when you’ve lost a huge piece of yourself, getting that back includes getting back those relationships and those friendships, and things that anchor you to who you are.’
She says her niece Ashleigh was a huge part of the process for her, adding that she came back into her life at the end of 2021.
‘I texted her and she was immediately just happy to be reconnected,’ Meghan says.
Ashleigh says: ‘I was there at Christmas. I missed so much of Archie’s life but it doesn’t necessarily feel like it. I think we immediately kind of had this bond.’
She adds it is ‘really good’ to experience Meghan’s children growing up and feeling like she is in their life.
The final episode of Harry and Meghan’s Netflix series opens with a gleeful video selfie in which the Duke of Sussex says: ‘We are on the freedom flight’. Episode six of the bombshell series begins with the couple on their flight from Canada to Los Angeles in March 2020, after they split from the royal family
Harry and Meghan have released the final three episodes of their Netflix series, after a trailer claimed the Duchess of Sussex was made a ‘scapegoat’ for the firm
Another clip also shows Meghan with their son Archie on the private plane
Footage is shown of Ashleigh with Meghan and the children.
Speaking of the moment he and Meghan stopped being working royals, Harry says at the beginning of the sixth episode: ‘I wonder what would have happened to us, had we not got out when we did.’
Meghan’s mother Doria Ragland is seen on the plane to Los Angeles, as are their dogs.
Meghan says: ‘Our location was exposed, we knew our security was being pulled. Everyone in the world knew where we were.’
Another clip also shows Meghan with their son Archie on the private plane.
Doria says: ‘I just knew the stress they were under. It felt like they were running.’
Actor and comedian Perry, the owner of the Beverly Hills mansion where Harry and Meghan lived for a few months before they bought their $14.65million home in Montecito, California, tells how he ‘immediately empathised’ with Meghan, despite never having met her.
Episode six of the Netflix series also shows Archie playing a miniature grand piano
There is lots of footage from the grounds of the couple’s Montecito home. Some shows Harry pushing his daughter around their garden and Meghan is seen playing with her on the grass
At a party to mark Lilibet’s first birthday, the family are seen helping to blow out a single candle on the cake, with Archie climbing on to the table to help
Lilibet is seen crawling on grass in the episode, which reveals a lot of personal footage shot from the couple’s home
Lilibet is seen shortly after being born, wearing pyjamas that have ‘petitie lili’ emblazoned on them
A moment in the documentary shows a newborn Lilibet lying on her mother’s chest
Meghan says Perry sent her a message saying he was praying for her and if she ever needed anything, he would be there.
‘One day when we were in Canada, I called him, finally after years at that point. The first time we ever spoke. And I was just a wreck, I was just crying and crying,’ she says.
Reading aloud the speech she gave at her wedding reception after tying the knot with Prince Harry, Meghan says in the final episode of their Netflix series: ‘Once upon a time there was a girl from LA, some people called her an actress, and there was a guy from London, some people called him a prince.
‘All of those people didn’t fully get it, because this is the love story of a boy and girl who are meant to be together.’
She continues: ‘They meet on July 3 2016 in London and they giggle endlessly, so the next day they have their second date and he brings her cupcakes because it’s fourth of July, a bittersweet celebration he says, ironic really, her country’s independence from his country, yet in this moment they know they don’t want to be independent of each other.
‘And after a month of long distance courtship they settle into the quiet of Botswana, and amidst whatever momentary worries that creep in, they look at each other and think ‘Whatever world, we’re in’.
‘They would love and garden and travel and laugh and rack up more airmiles than any couple could have.
‘And when the tides were rough, they squeezed each other tighter, nothing can break us, they’d say, for this love she was a fighter.
‘I appreciate, respect and honour you my treasure, for the family we will create, and our love story that will last forever.
‘So I ask you to raise a glass to the astounding assurance that now life begins and the everlasting knowing that, above all, love wins.’
‘Sometimes it is easier just to open up to someone who knows nothing at all, and that was that moment with me and Tyler.’
Perry says: ‘I said to her, every one of your fears are valid.’
He then says that everything he knew about the Royal Family was surrounding Princess Diana’s death in 1997.
The show then reveals footage of Harry’s mother Princess Diana walking through and airport and holding a tennis racket in front of her face to stop photographers from taking pictures of her.
Perry says: ‘I realised after her marriage ended, she was thrown to the wolves.’
He adds: ‘To tell Meghan that I felt her feelings were valid, hurt. I didn’t want to have to say that to her. I didn’t want her to feel that, but I didn’t want to lie to her.’
‘She is afraid of them destroying her, or going crazy, or making her think she was crazy.’
‘This woman was abused, and so was he,’ he continues.
He goes on to compare the Palace to the behaviour of a wife beater, saying: ‘To use the institution to try and do all the things that a batterer would do.
‘Like ‘here’s what we are gonna do, we are gonna cut off the money, we are gonna not leave you security, we are gonna do all those things to make you comply and come back.’
‘And for the both of them to have the wherewithal to say ‘I don’t give a damn if it’s the palace, I’m out of here, I applauded that.’
Asked if he misses aspects of his life when he was in the ‘institution’ of the royal family, Harry says: ‘Yeah I miss the weird family gatherings, when we are all sort of brought together under one roof for certain times of the year.
‘Being part of the institution meant I was in the UK. So I miss the UK, I miss my friends.
‘And I’ve lost a few friends in this process as well.’
He adds while driving: ‘I came here because I was changed. I changed to the point that I had outgrown my environment.
‘Therefore this was the most obvious place to come. This is one of the places where I think my Mum was probably going to end up living, potentially.’
The show reveals footage from the garden of Tyler Perry’s home, when Perry says he had to build a fence to stop the Paparazzi from taking images. And Harry is seen filming a helicopter flying overhead
Meghan’s lawyer Jenny Afia, in a trailer released on Wednesday for the final episodes, alleged she had seen evidence of briefing from the Palace against the couple to suit other people’s agenda.
The duchess herself was seen saying: ‘You would just see it play out, like a story about someone in the family would pop up for a minute and they’d go ‘We’ve got to make that go away’.’
Her friend Lucy Fraser added: ‘Meg became this scapegoat for the Palace. And so they would feed stories on her whether they were true or not to avoid other less favourable stories being printed.’
Ms Afia said: ‘There was a real kind of war against Meghan and I’ve certainly seen evidence that there was negative briefing from the Palace against Harry and Meghan to suit other people’s agendas.’
Harry, in another trailer, said ‘They were happy to lie to protect my brother (William). They were never willing to tell the truth to protect us’, while Meghan said she was ‘fed to the wolves’.
The three new episodes come after last week’s initial releases, which were largely focused on Harry and Meghan’s personal lives and their complaints about the media
Prince Harry has said in his new Netflix series that dressing as a Nazi was one of the ‘biggest mistakes’ of his life
Buckingham Palace and Kensington Palace have declined to comment.
Claims made in the documentary will face intense scrutiny, with questions raised ahead of the streaming over whether the evidence Ms Afia referred to will be produced in full, which stories they were talking about, and exactly which royals were allegedly being protected.
As Meghan spoke, footage was played of newspaper front pages featuring the headlines ‘Meghan Made Kate Cry’ and ‘Heir Heads’ – about Kate and Meghan’s flower dress dispute and the Sussexes’ use of private planes.
In her Oprah Winfrey interview, Meghan said Kate, now the Princess of Wales, made her cry ahead of her wedding at a flower girl dress fitting – not the other way round as had been reported – and that ‘everyone in the institution knew that wasn’t true’ but it was not corrected.
The looming attack on The Firm by the Sussexes – expected to be unprecedented in nature – will be laid out in full from 8am today, when the second half of their six-part docuseries is finally released
Meanwhile, the royal family, including Harry’s father and brother, will be out in force together on Thursday, putting on a united front as the King, the Queen Consort and the Prince of Wales join Kate for her Christmas carol concert in Westminster Abbey.
More than 1,800 people will gather in the Abbey for some festive cheer, staged to recognised the ‘selfless efforts of individuals, families and communities across the UK, and celebrate and showcase the joy that human connection and togetherness can bring’.
Kensington Palace said the second carol service Kate has held was dedicated to the late Queen Elizabeth II and the values she demonstrated throughout her life, including ‘duty, empathy, faith, service, kindness, compassion and support for others’.
A trailer released by Netflix showed the couple making claims that the Palace briefed against the Sussexes to deflect attention from less favourable coverage of other royals
The Sussexes’ six-part show – which forms part of their multimillion-pound deal with Netflix – has become the streaming giant’s most-watched documentary in a premier week, debuting with 81.55 million hours viewed.
The last three episodes look set to explore the Megxit crisis, when Harry and Meghan stepped down from royal life to move to the US, with the duke heard saying: ‘There was no other option at this point…I said ‘we need to get outta here’.’
In the first instalment on December 8, Harry accused the royals of having a ‘huge level of unconscious bias’ and Meghan said the media wanted to ‘destroy’ her.
The duke also said members of his family questioned why Meghan needed more protection from the media than their wives had been given, but that they failed to grasp the ‘race element’.
Meghan also alleged she was given guidance not to invite her niece Ashleigh Hale to her royal wedding.
In a teaser clip, Meghan’s lawyer Jenny Afia said: ‘There was a real kind of war against Meghan and I’ve certainly seen evidence that there was negative briefing from the Palace against Harry and Meghan to suit other people’s agendas’
Yet sources told The Sunday Times it was Meghan’s choice not to include her niece and she was not told who she should invite.
Former Suits actress Meghan insisted she was not prepped on royal matters or conduct, but the newspaper said she was given a 30-point dossier on royal life with information and details of experts she could approach for help.
One matter not yet explored is the accusation Meghan bullied Palace staff, with the story published in March 2021 just days before the Oprah interview was aired.
Buckingham Palace said it was ‘very concerned’ and began an investigation into claims in The Times that the duchess drove out two personal assistants and ‘humiliated’ staff, leaving them in tears, which she denies.
The investigation into the handling of the claims has never been published.
Highlighting the personal footage and photos that featured in the episodes last week, ITV’s royal editor Chris Ship said the couple ‘basically video diaried their way out of the royal family’, despite having complained about media intrusion in their lives.
Harry also admitted that he felt ‘so ashamed’ for a 2005 gaffe in which he went to a fancy dress party wearing a mock uniform that featured the Nazis’ infamous swastika on his arm and the badge of the German Wehrmacht on his collar.
The story made global headlines after an image of then 20-year-old Harry in the uniform featured on the front page of The Sun newspaper.
Speaking in the third episode of his and his wife Meghan Markle‘s new Netflix show, Harry expressed his regret and said ‘all I wanted to do was make it right.’
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group