Bridgerton Universe Expands: Season 3 Ties into Queen Charlotte’s Origin

  • Lady Danbury’s affair in Queen Charlotte empowers her to reclaim control of her sexuality and explore her honest emotions.
  • The affair teaches Lady Danbury to pursue authentic desires and have meaningful conversations.
  • Lady Danbury and Violet choose understanding and compassion in Bridgerton Season 3, highlighting the importance of female friendships.

The Bridgerton cinematic universe feels like it’s constantly expanding. With the recent release of the back half of Season 3, the show has at last revealed how the latest batch of Bridgertons fared in their introduction to society, solidifying Colin (Luke Newton) and Penelope’s (Nicola Coughlan) love story while also teasing a queer future for Francesca (Hannah Dodd). Last year’s Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story likewise explored the life and love of the show’s incomparable monarch, connecting the events of Bridgerton‘s spin-off to its main characters by showcasing the backstories of supporting roles like Brimsley (Hugh Sachs), but one of the show’s most surprising plotlines was that of the affair between Violet Bridgerton’s (Ruth Gemmell) father and Lady Danbury (Adjoa Andoh). And while Queen Charlotte hints at the Bridgerton matriarch’s suspicions, the Bridgerton Season 3 finale has finally confirmed that Violet knows about her father’s infidelity.

Beginning just after Agatha’s first husband, Lord Herman Danbury (Cyril Nri), dies on the night of their first successful ball, Queen Charlotte plants the first seeds of Lady Danbury’s (Arsema Thomas) affair when she meets Lord Ledger (Keir Charles) on walks around her property during her mourning period. The two begin by making mundane observations about the songs of starlings, but their conversations quickly grow to encapsulate Lady Danbury’s dissatisfaction with her life and culminate with Lord Ledger gifting Agatha one of his famous paper hats for her birthday. A series of intimate encounters follow and abruptly end, causing Agatha to hide her lover’s hat as a closely guarded secret, but Bridgerton Season 3 finally acknowledges Lady Danbury’s empowering relationship in a way that reaffirms the show’s focus on positive female friendships.

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