![]() ![]() John Monro ( Rob Maloney) proposes that the problem isn't physical but rather one of "disorganized nerves," and claims to be able to treat it. Augusta gets frustrated at the lack of viable options until a new candidate, Dr. Still another wants to adjust his diet to cure his mental illness, and it's nice (or not) to see how much times haven't changed at all. ![]() One suggests drilling holes in George's head, while another wants to remove the ill humors from his legs. One of those things entails calling on a team of medical experts to deem a course of treatment for George, and each one is more horrifying than the last. RELATED: 'Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story' Episode 3 Recap: I Just Can't Get You Out of My Bed The way the show chooses to depict it avoids leaning too hard into any real life diagnosis, choosing instead to have it manifest primarily as something like an extreme panic attack, occasionally growing into something more serious. Whether it was porphyria or bipolar disorder, or something else lost to the storm inadequate mental health research, the key here is that he needed the sort of help the 18th century was unable to provide. Those familiar with history - or at the very least the 1994 film The Madness of King George - know that George III suffered from some sort of mental illness. She got her first true glimpse at it at the end of Episode 3, and while Brimsley ( Sam Clemmett) wants to smooth things over and Reynolds ( Freddie Dennis) won't divulge what's going on, Episode 4, "Holding the King," finally gives the audience a peek at what's been going on inside George's head. Up until now, the central mystery on Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Storyhas been what exactly is this secret of King George's ( Corey Mylchreest) that everyone is working so hard to keep from Queen Charlotte ( India Amarteifio). ![]()
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