
An American audience will see a raunchier version of historical drama The White Queen, star Max Irons has disclosed, as he claims the cameras were “kept rolling” during sex scenes.
The actor, who plays King Edward IV in the new BBC drama, claimed the US cut of the show included more footage of intimate scenes and “a lot more a---“
The series, which was premiered on the BBC last night, tells the story of Elizabeth Woodville, a Lancastrian commoner who attracted the eye of the Yorkist soldier-king Edward.
The story, based on novels by Philippa Gregory, will be broadcast on both BBC One and American commercial channel Starz.
Lead actor Max Irons has now disclosed the differences between the two shows, hinting: “There’s the BBC cut and the Starz cut.
He told Metro's Life&Style supplement: “You get a lot more a--- in the Starz version – the cameras kept rolling after the BBC stopped the scene.
“The other funny thing with Starz was that you had to do extra lines. For the BBC, I’d say to my brother: ‘Come here, George.’ But for Starz it would be: ‘Come here George, Duke of Clarence,’ so they’d know what I was on about.”
A spokeswoman for the series confirmed the camera had been kept rolling for an additional 30 seconds on “two or three” occasions, but emphasised no extra scenes had been written or filmed.
Starz advertises the programme as a “riveting tale of love and lust, betrayal and murder”, with a trailer online billing it “sizzling”.
It is believed to contain extended footage of love scenes, including one after the marriage of Edward and Elizabeth.
Previous successes for the channel include a version of Spartacus with full-frontal male nudity, as well as scenes of partial female nudity or sex in Boss, Camelot and Crash.
Irons added he is “comfortable” with intimate scenes, saying he goes to the gym regularly to avoid appearing too “skinny”.
A producer for The White Queen has previously told the Telegraph the sex scenes in the show would be limited and tasteful.
Gina Cronk said: “There won’t be lots of it, but there will be some. Part of the contemporary critique of her [Elizabeth] at the time is that she was a bit wanton. She was very sensuous at a time when the Church was in the ascendancy and the feeling was that you had sex to have children.”
This post has been edited by robertngo: Jun 17 2013, 10:45 PM
Jun 17 2013, 10:39 PM, updated 13y ago
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