A Royal Paradox: Harry and Meghan Seek Both
Privacy and Publicity
Their pursuit by paparazzi in New York shows that
neither leaving Britain nor having a police escort shields them from unwanted
attention.
Mark
Landler
By Mark
Landler
Reporting
from London.
May 18,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/18/world/europe/harry-meghan-paparazzi-media.html
When Prince
Harry and his wife, Meghan, decamped Britain for the United States in 2020, he
portrayed it as an act of survival against a relentlessly intrusive British
press. On Tuesday, after a chaotic encounter with photographers in New York
City, Harry found the media glare can be just as intense in his adopted home.
With
details continuing to filter out about what exactly happened to Harry, Meghan
and her mother, Doria Ragland, as photographers pursued them in Midtown
Manhattan, the episode underscored a basic paradox in the lives of this
celebrity couple: they plead for privacy, but also seek publicity, with a
Netflix documentary, a tell-all memoir by Harry and public appearances that
will inevitably draw cameras.
The frenzy
in New York is a reminder of the grievances that Harry has held for decades
against the British press, which remains the primary market for paparazzi shots
of him and Meghan. In 1997, his mother, Princess Diana, died in a car crash in
Paris while fleeing photographers; Harry has blamed them for her death and
expressed fears that history could repeat itself with his wife and family.
But the
episode also illustrates a dilemma for Harry: Even the involvement of the New
York Police Department did not spare his family being swarmed by paparazzi, who
pursued them even after they took refuge in a police station.
The role of
the police in Tuesday’s incident is drawing attention in London because Harry
has filed a legal challenge against Britain’s Home Office, after it rejected
his request for the Metropolitan Police to provide protection to him and his
family when they visit Britain.
“The
example of what happened in New York suggests that the kind of police
protection Harry wants in London is not going to be enough to protect him or
his family,” said Ed Owens, a historian who has studied relations between the
monarchy and the media. “He’s not engaging with this reality.”
In
California, where they now live, Harry and Meghan employ private security
guards who are licensed to carry guns. But they are not allowed to travel with
armed guards in Britain, which is one reason Harry has asked for police
protection, and has offered to pay for it himself. Lawyers for the Home Office
argued in court that police officers should not be hired out to paying
customers.
Harry has
described the loss of his security detail as one of the most worrisome
consequences of his bitter split from his family and his withdrawal from royal
duties. In his memoir, “Spare,” he wrote that from childhood, he had never
traveled without three armed bodyguards. During negotiations with palace
officials over his new status, Harry said, he begged for the bodyguards to be
left in place, even if he lost all the other royal perks.
“I offered
to defray the cost of security out of my own pocket,” he wrote. “I wasn’t sure
how I’d do that, but I’d find a way.”
The burden
of paying for round-the-clock security, say people who know the couple, is one
of the reasons Harry and Meghan have struck lucrative publishing and
programming deals with Netflix and Penguin Random House.
In a
statement on Wednesday, the couple’s spokeswoman suggested that the threat
posed by the photographers was as much to pedestrians, other motorists, and
police officers as to the couple or Ms. Ragland. It described “a near
catastrophic car chase at the hands of a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi.”
That is
more dramatic than the account given by the New York police as well as the taxi
driver who picked up the couple and Ms. Ragland.
The driver,
Sukhcharn Singh, said he would not characterize it as a chase and added that he
was not afraid, though his passengers clearly were. A police spokesman
acknowledged that the photographers posed a challenge, but said the three
arrived at their destination on the Upper East Side without “reported
collisions, summonses, injuries, or arrests.”
The New
York Police Department declined to comment on security deployment for
high-profile visitors to the city. But an official with knowledge of the
process said the police do their own independent research and analysis of such
visits, before deciding whether to provide additional security.
News
coverage of the encounter, which was extravagant on both sides of the Atlantic,
pointed out the discrepancies in the accounts of the episode. But on this
occasion, the New York tabloids made more of it than their London counterparts,
which ran front-page photos of the couple but not judgmental headlines.
The New
York Post’s front-page banner said “Duke (and Duchess) of Hazard,” while The
Daily News said, “Scary Echo of Diana.”
Harry has
lawsuits pending against the publishers of three London tabloids, The Daily
Mail, The Daily Mirror, and The Sun, which he accuses of invading his privacy
by hacking his cellphone and other illicit methods. Meghan won a case against
the publisher of the Mail on Sunday for publishing a private letter she sent to
her estranged father, Thomas Markle, at the time of her wedding.
In one of
Harry’s cases, against Rupert Murdoch’s British newspaper group, Harry said the
company paid a “huge sum of money” in 2020 to settle claims that its
journalists hacked the cellphone of his older brother, Prince William. The
company and Kensington Palace, William’s office, declined to comment.
The
evidence of systematic hacking of the phones of celebrities, royals and others
led to the Leveson Inquiry, a judicial inquest that resulted in publishers
ending the practice of phone hacking. They also curbed the aggressiveness of
photographers who follow celebrities and members of the royal family.
While
paparazzi have shown a degree of restraint since being publicly shamed in
Britain, they still have a fairly free hand in the United States, where they
have faced less of a backlash against their methods.
Mr. Owens,
the historian, said the British press accepted these measures because they
worried that if they did not, the government would impose compulsory curbs. For
the royal family, that set off a period of relative calm with the press that
only ended when Harry began dating an American actress named Meghan Markle.
“The royal
family’s lives should have gotten easier in the U.K,” after press coverage
calmed, Mr. Owens said. “At the same time, the toxicity of the relationship
between the royal family and the media has continued. There has been both a
softening of the press’s approach and a more aggressive approach by the family
to how they are covered.”
In the
Netflix documentary, “Harry & Meghan,” the couple are depicted peering
nervously out the windows of their S.U.V. for photographers pursuing them, as
they leave a parking garage and head to an event. The scene is set in
Manhattan.
Maria
Cramer contributed reporting from New York
Mark
Landler
Mark
Landler is the London bureau chief. In three decades at The Times, he has been
bureau chief in Hong Kong and Frankfurt, White House correspondent, diplomatic
correspondent, European economic correspondent, and a business reporter in New
York. More about Mark Landler




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