Dame Judi Dench has written an open letter to The Times UK criticising Netflix's The Crown for being "cruelly unjust" in its depiction of the British royal family.
In the letter, the 87-year-old actress urged the streaming service to add a disclaimer before each episode, to remind audiences that the show is a fictionalised account of historical events.
"No one is a greater believer in artistic freedom than I, but this cannot go unchallenged," she wrote in the letter.
Dench's address to the show comes ahead of its fifth-season premiere, launching on Netflix in November.
The new season follows the breakdown of Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s marriage in the late 80s and 90s, played by Dominic West and Elizabeth Debicki respectively.
Although the streaming service has said it will not depict the fatal accident that ended Diana's life, they have faced backlash over the upcoming season from others besides Dench.
Former Prime Minister Sir John Major called the series a "barrel-load of nonsense" after it was reported that season five will contain a fictionalised scene in which Prince Charles propositions the former MP with a plan to get his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, to abdicate.
"Discussions between the Monarch and Prime Minister are entirely private and – for Sir John – will always remain so. But not one of the scenes you depict are accurate – in any way whatsoever. They are fiction, pure and simple," the spokesperson for Major told CNN in October.
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