Meghan Markle ‘takes everything for granted,’ says royal biographer Angela Levin

Meghan Markle ‘takes everything for granted,’ says royal biographer Angela Levin


Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, has come under fire from a royal biographer for her recent disclosures about the royal family that she made in an interview with The Cut.

The Duchess of Sussex delivered a new round of criticisms of the royal family, Britain, and the media in her shocking interview with The Cut, a division of New York magazine.

According to Meghan, what she and Harry requested during the Megxit discussions was not “reinventing the wheel,” and she complained that other senior royals had been given comparable permission.

Harry was quoted in the newspaper as saying that certain Royal Family members “aren’t able to work and live together” and describing his wife as a “model and a mum.”

In an interview with GB News, author Angela Levin of “Harry: Conversations with the Prince” referred to the duchess’ “arrogance” as “breathtaking.”

She remarked: “It’s breathtaking—her haughtiness, arrogance, attitude of taking nothing for granted and not contributing in any way. It seems too surprising to me.

“I didn’t find her appearance to be at all appealing,” I said.

It had an intimidating, furious face that seemed to be saying, “Don’t mess with me or else you’ll pay for it.”

And I think it’s tragic that she was able to persuade Harry of how dreadful his family is. They might have come at a different time; when you said they saw the Queen at the Jubilee, it was just for 15 minutes since she was so busy.

And now, to suggest that they won’t visit her at Balmoral is, in my opinion, nasty.

He doesn’t need security around-the-clock since it is not unsafe up there and there is nothing to see for miles.

“She will battle to the latter end,” some people may say. “In certain instances, it’s perfectly wonderful,” but “you don’t do that with family.”

When Meghan was talking about the painful consequences from their Oprah appearance, it was one of the most memorable parts of the interview in The Cut.

Meghan reportedly remarked: “Harry confessed to me, “I lost my dad in this process,”” as reported by author Alison P. Davies. Although he has the option, it need not be the same for them as it was for me.

The duchess was really talking to her own father and not Prince Harry’s connection with the Prince of Wales, according to her friend and unofficial spokesperson Omid Scobie.

In another section of the essay, Meghan made the claim that she was using Instagram again after giving up all social media when she wed Harry in 2018. Davies did say that she would “later convey” that “she was no longer sure” about doing that, however.

A South African Lion King cast member once told Meghan that after she married Harry, “people cheered in the streets the like we did when Mandela was liberated from jail.” This was just one of several instances in the conversation that raised eyebrows.

At another point in the discussion, Meghan, a duchess, claimed that despite her resignation as a senior royal, people still thought of her as a “princess.”

It’s crucial to consider this because, she added, “Even throughout the interview, I was aware of the fact that there are small girls I meet who are simply like, “Oh my God, it’s a real-life princess.”

There’s no need for her to hold back at this point since it is post-royal, Davies wrote, “[…]instead of answering a question, she will suggest how I might translate the noises she is making: “She’s making these guttural sounds, and I can’t quite articulate what it is she is feeling in that moment because she has no word for it; she’s just moaning.”

According to reports, Harry and Meghan will not visit the Queen at Balmoral during their visit to Britain next week due to a security dispute.

The article was also published just days after Meghan complained on her new Spotify podcast about having to continue engagements on a royal tour in South Africa following a fire in Archie’s bedroom.

Meghan was also seen during the interview:

Because they “always move together,” she and Harry are compared to salt and pepper. Despite the fact that she has “never had to sign anything that prevents me from communicating,” she is “still recuperating,” she says.
• Suggest that she had issues in the UK just because she is an American, not necessarily a black American;
Declare that she has “actively tried” to “forgive.”

“Upsetting the Royal Family dynamic”

Before resigning from their positions as leading royals and relocating to North America, Meghan remarked that she and Prince Harry were “glad” to leave Britain and were “upsetting the dynamic of the hierarchy… simply by existing.”

Despite the fact that none of these royals are mentioned in the article, The Cut stated today that 41-year-old Meghan cited a “handful of princes and princesses and dukes who had the precise arrangement they desired.”

Germany and the UK visits by Harry and Meghan
The One Young World Summit, which brings together young leaders from more than 190 nations, will take place in Manchester on Monday, September 5. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will attend.
Wednesday, September 8: The Sussexes will return to the UK for the WellChild Awards in London after travelling to Germany on Tuesday, September 6 for the Invictus Games Dusseldorf 2023 One Year to Go event.

In response, Meghan remarked, “That, for whatever reason, is not something that we were permitted to do, even though numerous other members of the family do that same thing,” in an interview with New York-based features writer Allison P Davis.

She just responded, “Why do you think that is?” when asked why. According to the interviewer, Ms. Davis, she did so “straight back with a side-eye that says I should understand without having to be told.”

The article states that Harry and Meghan suggested to ‘The Firm’ that they should be allowed to work on behalf of the monarchy but make their own money, with the Duchess saying: ‘Then maybe all the noise would stop.’

The article says: ‘They also thought it best to leave the U.K. (and the U.K. press) to do it. They were willing to go to basically any commonwealth, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, anywhere.

”Anything to just … because just by existing, we were upsetting the dynamic of the hierarchy. So we go, ‘Okay, fine, let’s get out of here. Happy to,’ ‘ she says, putting her hands up in mock defeat.

‘Meghan asserts that what they were asking for wasn’t ‘reinventing the wheel’ and lists a handful of princes and princesses and dukes who have the very arrangement they wanted.

”That, for whatever reason, is not something that we were allowed to do, even though several other members of the family do that exact thing.’

‘Why do you think that is? I ask. ‘Why do you think that is?’ she says right back with a side-eye that suggests I should understand without having to be told.’

Meghan says she has made an ‘active effort’ to ‘forgive’

The Duchess was asked during the interview whether forgiveness can exist between her and her own family as well as members of the Royal Family.

She told The Cut: ‘I think forgiveness is really important. It takes a lot more energy to not forgive. But it takes a lot of effort to forgive. I’ve really made an active effort, especially knowing that I can say anything.’

The article also refers to Meghan’s estranged father Thomas Markle, a retired lighting director who now lives in Mexico.

The report said that Meghan discussed how two families had been ‘torn apart’.

And it quotes Meghan as saying: ‘Harry said to me, ‘I lost my dad in this process.’ It doesn’t have to be the same for them as it was for me, but that’s his decision.’

Meghan says she can say what she wants but is ‘still healing’

The Duchess says towards the end of interview that she has ‘never had to sign anything that restricts me from talking’.

She also says: ‘I can talk about my whole experience and make a choice not to.’

The interviewer then asks Meghan why she does not talk, and she replies: ‘Still healing,’.

Harry says ‘many’ of his family ‘can’t work together’

Harry and Meghan run Archewell from their shared home office at their mansion in Montecito, California.

The article in The Cut refers to them having ‘two plush club chairs placed side by side behind a single desk, facing into the room like thrones’.

And it quotes Harry as saying: ‘Most people that I know and many of my family, they aren’t able to work and live together,’

The article also refers to him enunciating the word family ‘with a vocal eye roll’.

Harry added: ‘It’s actually really weird because it’d seem like a lot of pressure. But it just feels natural and normal.’

It comes after a royal expert said today that Harry and Meghan are very unlikely to visit the Queen at Balmoral when they return to Britain for a trip next week, and warned that the ‘family rift is getting worse, not better’.

The Sussexes have an ongoing row about their security with the Home Office – and tensions with the Royal Family have been deepened by mounting concerns over what will be published in Harry’s upcoming biography.

These issues will no doubt worsen after Meghan’s latest comments published in The Cut today, in addition to her making veiled criticisms of the family in her new Spotify podcast released last week.

Royal expert Phil Dampier told MailOnline today that he would be ‘very surprised’ if the Sussexes visit the Queen at Balmoral, where she is likely to remain for the next few weeks as concerns grow over her mobility issues.

He added that there is little ‘goodwill on both sides’ and that the royals will be ‘wary’ of Harry amid what could be in his book. Mr Dampier also said that a ‘visit to Scotland would create awkward family tensions for everyone’.


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