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Every documentary about Princess Mary tells you she was the last surviving child of King George V. They're wrong.The Duke of Windsor—that's Edward VIII, the one who abdicated—died on 28 May 1972. The Duke of Gloucester, Prince Henry, died on 10 June 1974. Princess Mary? She died on 28 March 1965. Seven years before one brother. Nine years before another. Basic arithmetic. Readily available death dates. And yet documentary after documentary gets this wrong.If they can't manage simple chronology, what else have they gotten wrong?Quite a lot, as it turns out.To understand the lies of omission that have plagued Princess Mary's story for decades, we must first examine the man at the center of her misery. His name was Henry Lascelles—pronounced LAA-sulls, rhyming with hassles, not LAS-cells like you've heard in other documentaries. He was the Viscount Lascelles, heir to the Earldom of Harewood—that's Har-Wood, not HAIR-wood. These pronunciations matter. They're a signal. A signal that we're not another sloppy content mill churning out half-researched royal fluff.We're here to tell you what actually happened to Princess Mary.And to understand what happened, you need to look at a photograph. Actually, you need to look at two photographs side by side. One of Princess Mary in her twenties. One of Princess Anne at the same age.The resemblance is extraordinary.