Archives for August 2016
Jewels on Film: Trailer for Victoria (2017)
Victoria, airing this autumn/spring (Screencap: ITV) |
A new eight-episode miniseries about the early reign of Queen Victoria is coming to ITV and PBS soon. We’ll be covering the show when it airs on Masterpiece in January 2017, but we’ve already got a new trailer from ITV to enjoy!
She was every inch a Queen…Victoria, our major new drama. Coming to @ITV soon. #VictoriaITVhttps://t.co/MfnEZjHWsE
— ITV (@ITV) July 29, 2016
Jenna Coleman (of Doctor Who fame) plays Victoria, with Rufus Sewell as Lord Melbourne and Tom Hughes as Prince Albert. The miniseries was written by the novelist Daisy Goodwin. Here’s a look at some of the jewelry we saw featured in the trailer…
Screencap: ITV |
Because Victoria is a teenager in this miniseries, many of her jewels are on the daintier side. Above, she wears a pair of drop earrings and a delicate pendant necklace.
Screencap: ITV |
Here, you can just see a brooch pinned at the center of her neckline.
Screencap: ITV |
She’s wearing a bit more bling in this scene: a double row of diamonds that weirdly reminds me of the Congo necklace from the Luxembourgish collection. You can also catch a glimpse of something pinned in her hair…
Screencap: ITV |
…which you can see a bit more clearly here. Also: I’m not entirely sure, but that adjustable-length necklace clasp looks awfully modern to me.
Screencap: ITV |
And we’ve got tiaras! No clear look at any of these yet, but we’ve got a tiara here…
Screencap: ITV |
…and here…
Screencap: ITV |
…and here! (She’s also wearing earrings in this blurry, in-motion shot, plus another jewel in her hair.)
Screencap: ITV |
Without a doubt, though, the most glittering moments from this trailer are related to Victoria’s coronation. Here’s the production’s version of the George IV State Diadem. Victoria is also presumably supposed to be wearing Queen Charlotte’s diamond necklace, which was lost in the Hanoverian claim and later replaced by the Coronation Necklace. Probable source material for these jewels: the Thomas Sully portrait from 1838.
Screencap: ITV |
And here’s the production’s version of Victoria’s Imperial State Crown. You can see the Black Prince’s Ruby (actually a spinel) on the right side.
Screencap: ITV |
Here’s Victoria wearing the crown (as she does in the coronation portrait by Sir George Hayter). This version of the crown looks strange to our modern eyes, because today’s version features the Cullinan II mounted below the Black Prince’s Ruby, with the Stuart Sapphire on the opposite side. Note that the Hayter coronation portrait shows Victoria without a necklace.
The Baden Palmette Tiara
The Baden Palmette Tiara (Photo: Ian Gavan/Getty Images) |
The Danish royal family has one of the biggest and widest-ranging tiara collections in Europe. Today, we’re looking at one of the older and more traditional tiaras in the bunch. The Baden Palmette Tiara, an heirloom with a long history, is a petite diadem that still packs a big, sparkly punch.
Queen Margrethe wears the tiara at the Norwegian royal wedding in 2001 (Photo: Anthony Harvey/Getty Images) |
The tiara is originally a German piece, made in the mid-nineteenth century, probably by Koch. It was reportedly a wedding gift from King Wilhelm of Prussia (who later became the first German kaiser) to his daughter, Princess Louise, who married Grand Duke Frederick of Baden in 1856.
Queen Margrethe wears the tiara at the Norwegian royal wedding in 2002 (Photo: Sion Touhig/Getty Images) |
Frederick and Louise’s daughter, Victoria, married King Gustaf V of Sweden in 1881. She brought the tiara with her to Stockholm (along with another rather familiar diadem, the Baden Fringe, which is generally worn today by Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden). When Victoria died in 1930, her granddaughter, Princess Ingrid, inherited the tiara, and when Ingrid married Frederik IX of Denmark five years later, she brought the tiara with her to her new country.
Queen Margrethe wears the tiara in 2010 (Photo: KELD NAVNTOFT/AFP/Getty Images) |
Queen Ingrid died in 2000, and her impressive jewel collection has filtered through the royal and princely families of Denmark, Greece, and Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg. Queen Margrethe was the lucky inheritor of this lovely tiara, and she wears it often. As it’s a rather romantic tiara, with its heart-shaped palmette motifs, she often dons it for romantic occasions.
Queen Margrethe wears the tiara at Prince Joachim’s wedding in 2008 (Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images) |
She’s worn it to numerous royal weddings, including the nuptials of both Crown Prince Haakon and Princess Martha Louise of Norway, the wedding of her godson, Prince Carl Philip of Sweden, and the second wedding of her own son, Prince Joachim. It’s easy to see why the sparkler is one of Daisy’s favorites: it’s elegant, playful, and (most importantly for a tiara) small and therefore likely quite comfortable.